Russia captain chasing Davis Cup milestones
2006/11/28 by Gennady Fyodorov
俄羅斯DAVIS CUP 隊長尋求里程埤
MOSCOW, Nov 28 (Reuters) - With a powerful line-up featuring Nikolay Davydenko, Marat Safin and Dmitry Tursunov, Russia are considered the overwhelming favourites when they host Argentina in this weekend's Davis Cup final.
Team insiders say, however, that
The Russian is fast approaching the Davis Cup record of former
Tarpishchev, who doubles as
"This must be some kind of record, worthy of being in the Guinness Book of Records," Tarpishchev, who keeps a log of all his matches on the bench, told Reuters.
"I don't think anybody else has more wins," said the man dubbed a "tennis genius" by
Although the International Tennis Federation (ITF) does not keep official statistics for team captains in Davis or Fed Cup play, Tarpishchev has reached several coaching milestones.
Two years ago, the Muscovite became only the third person to win both trophies, matching the feat of Frenchmen Yannick Noah and Guy Forget, when
UNIQUE DOUBLE
Tarpishchev also got the better of his old rival Forget in 2002 when he steered
Last year,
Tarpishchev, however, narrowly missed a unique double of winning both titles in the same year after losing to eventual winners
If
Tarpishchev said he began plotting strategy for the Argentina clash the minute Tursunov beat Andy Roddick in an epic five-set battle to put Russia into the Davis Cup final.
"Choosing the right surface is crucial to winning the tie," said Tarpishchev, who needs five more Davis or Fed Cup ties to reach a century mark in the coach's chair.
"The hosts always have an advantage because they can pick the surface that gives them the biggest edge."
The Russians laid a slow clay court at
"Both Marat and Dmitry like a high bounce, so will make sure the court fits them perfectly," Tarpishchev said.
PARQUET FLOOR
"Years ago the Davis Cup rules regarding the playing surface were not as clearly defined as they are now so home teams often went to extremes to give themselves an edge," recalled Tarpishchev, who coached his first Davis Cup tie in 1974.
"Playing matches in Central and
"I remember a Davis Cup tie was once held on an asphalt court while another took place on a parquet floor, which was also waxed with paraffin to unsettle a visiting team."
Tarpishchev, who has not lost a home time in the Davis Cup since taking the Russian job in 1997, said he might borrow a few ideas from his
Then, after beating
"No, we want to play them on an ice rink if that's possible," Teterin snapped back with a wry smile.
The cool-headed Tarpishchev, who also coached the
When a reporter asked Safin how he would prepare for
http://sport.guardian.co.uk/breakingnews/feedstory/0,,-6243389,00.html
On an unrelated note...it looks like Marat is trying to sneak into Misha's pocket for some reason, in one of the posted photos.
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