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United States Davis Cup team
Davis Cup team representing the USA From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The United States men's national tennis team represents the United States in Davis Cup tennis competition, and is governed by the United States Tennis Association.
The U.S. competed in the first Davis Cup in 1900, when a group of Harvard University students challenged the British. They are the most successful team ever to compete in the Davis Cup, winning the coveted title on 32 separate occasions closely followed by Australia with 28 victories.
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History
The U.S. Davis Cup Team won the very first Davis Cup title in 1900. Their most recent win was in 2007, defeating Russia in the final.
The United States played in the World Group in all but one year (1988) since it was created in 1981, sharing this record with the Czech Republic, and holds the record for ongoing consecutive years in the World Group at 30 as of 2018.
Current squad
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Win–loss records and rankings are correct as of 17 September 2023.
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Recent performances
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Here is the list of all match-ups since 1981, when the competition started being held in the current World Group format.
1980s
1990s
2000s
2010s
2020s
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Captains
- Prior to 1958 most U.S. Davis Cup captains were player-captains.[1]
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Statistics
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Player records
Team records
The statistics reflect results since the 1900 Davis Cup, and are up-to-date as of the 2025 Davis Cup Qualifiers first round.
Key to eras and positions result
- Challenge Round era (1900–1971): The previous Davis Cup Champion would have a bye to and host the Challenge Round Final. Thus the losing team in the Final (or Inter-zonal final) was the third-placed team. For the purposes of this table, the third placed team is grouped as semifinalists and the Zonal finalists (fourth and fifth placed teams) are grouped as quarterfinalists.
- 1972–1980: The previous Davis Cup Champion now had to compete in all rounds. There were four zones consisting of America, Eastern, Europe A and Europe B, with the competition culminating in a four team knockout between zonal winners. The zonal finalists were the equivalent of Davis Cup quarterfinalists.
- Since 1981: World Group (1981–2018), Davis Cup Finals (from 2019) consisting of 16 or 18 teams.
- Abbreviations: POW = Winner of World Group Playoff (1981–2018); POL = Lost in World Group Playoff (1981–2018); GS = Did not advance past the Group Stage of the Davis Cup Finals (from 2019)
Results table
- Home and away records (since 1981)
- Performance at home (53 match-ups): 45–8
- Performance away (60 match-ups): 35–25
- Performance neutral (13 match-ups): 6–7
- Total: 86–40
- Only 8 home losses: Germany: 2–3 (1987, PO), Italy: 1–4 (1998, SF), Australia: 1–4 (1999, QF), Croatia: 2–3 (2005, 1R) + 2–3 (2016, QF), Spain: 1–3 (2011, QF), Serbia: 1–3 (2013, QF), Great Britain: 1–3 (2014, 1R)
- Has a losing record against only 5 nations: Croatia (1–5), Finland (0–1), Germany/West Germany (2–3), Serbia (1–2), Spain (3–5)
- Has never played against 8 countries which, at one point or another, played in the World Group: Denmark, Indonesia, Israel, New Zealand, South Africa, South Korea, Soviet Union, SFR Yugoslavia.
Head-to-head records
The statistics reflect results since the 1981 Davis Cup, and are up-to-date as of the 2025 Davis Cup Qualifiers first round.
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Junior Davis Cup
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The United States won the Junior Davis Cup four times, most recently in 2024.[2]
Final results
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See also
Notes
References
External links
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