With Prague Castle in the background, tennis players (L-R) Lukas Rosol, Radek Stepanek, Tomas Berdych, Ivo Minar, Prague Mayor Bohuslav Svoboda and non-playing captain Jaroslav Navratil pose with the Davis Cup in Prague, Monday. — AP
PRAGUE — The Czech Republic beat holder Spain 3-2 to win the Davis Cup when Radek Stepanek overcame Nicolas Almagro 6-4, 7-6, 3-6, 6-3 in front of a raucous home crowd in the final rubber Sunday. Stepanek, who jumped the net and waved his arms in triumph to the 14,580 packed into the arena, was hugged by teammates before going to his wife with tears rolling down his cheeks. The result meant the Czech Republic had claimed the Davis Cup for the first time as an independent nation 32 years after Czechoslovakia won the trophy with a team led by Ivan Lendl. It also made the Czech Republic the first country to win the Davis Cup and Fed Cup team trophies for men and women respectively and the mixed Hopman Cup event in one year. “I was dreaming about it my whole life and now we're standing here as Davis Cup champion, it's amazing,” said Stepanek after clinching the 100th Davis Cup final. His triumph delighted a home crowd that had earlier been silenced when Spain's David Ferrer cruised to a 6-2, 6-3, 7-5 win over Tomas Berdych to level the final at 2-2 after the Czechs won a bruising four-set doubles rubber on Saturday. World No. 5 Ferrer's victory over sixth-ranked Berdych put Spain, without injured former world No. 1 Rafa Nadal, back in the hunt for a fourth Davis Cup crown in five years. But 33-year-old Stepanek, ranked 37th in the world, used all his guile and experience to unnerve the 11th-ranked Almagro, who was appearing in his first final, and took the first set. Stepanek, who became the first man aged 30 or above to win a decisive fifth rubber in 100 years, then forced Almagro into some costly errors in the second set tiebreak which he won 7-0. The beginning of the third set was tight but Almagro served well and managed to win it before Stepanek clinched the fourth to send the Czech supporters into raptures inside the 02 arena. “I can't describe what I'm feeling right now,” said an emotional Stepanek whose victory helped avenge a 5-0 drubbing by Spain in the 2009 showpiece on the clay courts of Barcelona - the only other time the Czech Republic had reached the final. “I came on the court with the mindset that I had to stay calm, hungry, motivated and concentrate.” The Czechs became the first country in 22 years to win the Davis Cup and Fed Cup in the same year, but were pushed all the way by a Spanish team missing the talismanic Nadal. — Agencies