Roddick loses again as Moya clinches Davis Cup title for Spain
SEVILLE, Spain (AP) – Andy Roddick searched out Carlos Moya in the throng of jumping, screaming Spanish tennis players, hoping to shake hands. Moya had just beaten Roddick 6-2, 7-6 (1), 7-6 (5) Sunday to clinch Spain’s second Davis Cup title – and extend the U.S. team’s drought in tennis’ top team competition.
“When someone accomplishes something like the Spanish team did today, you have to respect that and give them their due credit,” Roddick said. “They did a great job.”
Holding back tears, Moya ran over and reached up through a rail to greet Prince Felipe, heir to the Spanish throne, and his wife, Princess Letizia.
“The Davis Cup is my dream,” Moya said. “I can’t ask for more. There is nothing bigger than what I’ve lived today.”
His victory over Roddick on the slow, red clay that dulls the American’s powerful serves and forehands put Spain up 3-1 in the best-of-five series. In the closing match, Olympic silver medalist Mardy Fish defeated Tommy Robredo 7-6 (8), 6-2 to make it 3-2.
U.S. captain Patrick McEnroe was counting on getting two wins in singles from Roddick, who won the 2003 U.S. Open and finished that year atop the rankings. Spain figured to have the edge, because of the surface and the drum-thumping din of 27,200 red-and-yellow-clad fans at Olympic Stadium.
Instead, Roddick went 0-2; he lost in four sets Friday to 18-year-old Rafael Nadal. While nothing Nadal or Moya did should have been particularly surprising to Roddick, he was startled in Sunday’s third set when a man known in Spain for self-promotion ran onto the court. He tried to put a red hat on Moya’s head but was quickly taken away.
“My heart jumped when I first saw it,” Roddick said.
Spain took a 2-0 lead in Friday singles, and only one team – Australia in 1939 – has come back from that deficit to win the Davis Cup. But twins Bob and Mike Bryan took the doubles Saturday, giving the United States a shot.
“We could have won it this year,” McEnroe said. “We needed the swing of just a few points. But the ultimate goal – we haven’t quite reached it yet.”
McEnroe asked Andre Agassi to play this final, but he declined.
“For Andre, the door is always open,” McEnroe said. “He’s never completely shut the door, at least to me.”
The Americans have won the Davis Cup 31 times, but not since 1995 – their longest gap since the one between titles in 1926 and 1937.
Moya, a former No. 1 and the 1998 French Open champion, missed Spain’s 2000 Davis Cup championship with an injury. He lost three times before to Roddick – all on hard courts – but played the match of his life Sunday.
He broke in Roddick’s first two service games. After that it was even, but Moya’s steady groundstrokes and deft drop shots kept Roddick guessing. When Roddick tried to come in, Moya lobbed him or passed him.
At times, Roddick had to serve with drums thumping and fans screaming.
“You look up and there are people for as far as you can see going nuts and cheering,” Roddick said. “This weekend is unlike anything I have experienced before.”
Moya breezed through the first set in 36 minutes. In the second, Roddick broke Moya in the fourth game to lead 3-1. But during that game, Roddick slipped and fell heavily at the baseline, wrong-footed by Moya.
Roddick limped slightly and later called it a “minor groin strain.” McEnroe said it was worse than that.
“I was actually, at one point, considering stopping the match late in the second set … because I worried he was going to get hurt,” McEnroe said. “It seemed to get better. But he tweaked it pretty good.”
In the second-set tiebreaker, Roddick double-faulted as Moya pulled ahead 4-1. The Spaniard went up 5-1 with another lob winner, and Moya closed out the tiebreaker when Roddick netted a backhand, ending the 59-minute set.
Moya had a match point in the 10th game when Roddick double-faulted, but the American redeemed himself with an ace on the next serve, taking the game to make it 5-5. In the tiebreaker, Moya raced ahead 6-3, but Roddick took the next two points before Moya closed him out, with Roddick netting a backhand return of Moya’s serve.
“It’s just tough because I felt like I was in it the whole time against one of the top three clay-courters in the world. I had my chances and just didn’t convert them,” Roddick said. “The bottom line is they were just better than us this weekend. They came out, took care of business and they beat us. It’s as simple as that.”