2008 Fed Cup

The 2008 Fed Cup was the 46th edition of the most important competition between national teams in women's tennis.

The final took place at the Club de Campo Villa de Madrid in Madrid, Spain, on 13–14 September. The home team, Spain, lost to the defending champion Russia, 0–4, giving Russia their fourth title in five years.

World Group

Participating Teams

China

France

Germany

Israel

Italy

Russia

Spain

United States

Draw

  Quarterfinals
2–3 February
Semifinals
26–27 April
Final
13–14 September
                           
  Ramat HaSharon, Israel (Outdoor hard)
  1   Russia 4  
    Israel 1     Moscow, Russia (Indoor clay)
    1   Russia 3  
  La Jolla, United States (Outdoor hard)   4   United States 2  
    Germany 1
  4   United States 4     Madrid, Spain (Outdoor clay)
    1   Russia 4
  Beijing, China (Indoor hard)       Spain 0
  3   France 2  
    China 3     Beijing, China (Indoor hard)
      China 1
  Naples, Italy (Indoor hard)     Spain 4  
    Spain 3
  2   Italy 2  

World Group Play-offs

The four losing teams in the World Group first round ties (France, Germany, Israel and Italy), and four winners of the World Group II ties (Argentina, Czech Republic, Japan and Ukraine) entered the draw for the World Group Play-offs.

Date: 26–27 April

VenueSurfaceHome TeamScoreVisiting Team
Ramat HaSharon, IsraelOutdoor hard Israel2–3 Czech Republic
Buenos Aires, ArgentinaOutdoor clay Argentina3–2 Germany
Tokyo, JapanIndoor hard Japan1–4 France
Olbia, ItalyOutdoor clay Italy3–2 Ukraine

World Group II

The World Group II is the second highest level of Fed Cup competition in 2008. Winners advanced to the World Group Play-offs, and losers played in the World Group II Play-offs.

Date: 2–3 February

VenueSurfaceHome TeamScoreVisiting Team
Kharkov, UkraineIndoor clay Ukraine3–2 Belgium (1)
Miki-shi, JapanIndoor hard Japan (4)4–1 Croatia
Brno, Czech RepublicIndoor carpet Czech Republic (3)3–2 Slovakia
Buenos Aires, ArgentinaOutdoor clay Argentina4–1 Austria (2)

World Group II Play-offs

The four losing teams from World Group II (Croatia, Slovakia, Belgium and Austria) played off against qualifiers from Zonal Group I. Two teams qualified from Europe/Africa Zone (Serbia and Switzerland), one team from the Asia/Oceania Zone (Uzbekistan), and one team from the Americas Zone (Colombia).

Date: 26–27 April

VenueSurfaceHome TeamScoreVisiting Team
Zagreb, CroatiaIndoor hard Croatia2–3 Serbia
Bratislava, SlovakiaIndoor clay Slovakia5–0 Uzbekistan
Mons, BelgiumIndoor hard Belgium5–0 Colombia
Dornbirn, AustriaIndoor hard Austria2–3  Switzerland

Americas Zone

  • Nations in bold advanced to the higher level of competition.
  • Nations in italics were relegated down to a lower level of competition.

Group I

Venue: Club Deportivo El Rodeo, Medellín, Colombia (outdoor clay)

Dates: 30 January – 2 February

Participating Teams

Group II

Venue: Country Club Cochabamba, Cochabamba, Bolivia (outdoor clay)

Dates: 23–26 April

Participating Teams

Asia/Oceania Zone

Group I

Venue: National Tennis Development Centre, Bangkok, Thailand (outdoor hard)

Dates: 30 January – 2 February

Participating Teams

Group II

Venue: National Tennis Development Centre, Bangkok, Thailand (outdoor hard)

Dates: 30 January – 2 February

Participating Teams

Europe/Africa Zone

Group I

Venue: SYMA Sportközpont, Budapest, Hungary (indoor carpet)

Dates: 30 January – 2 February

Participating Teams

Group II

Venue: Coral Tennis Club, Tallinn, Estonia (indoor hard)

Dates: 30 January – 2 February

Participating Teams

Group III

Venue: Master Class Tennis and Fitness Club, Yerevan, Armenia (outdoor clay)

Dates: 22–26 April

Participating Teams

Rankings

The rankings were measured after the three points during the year that play took place, and were collated by combining points earned from the previous four years.[1]

4 February
RankNationPoints[2]Move
1  Russia36,050.0Steady
2  Italy23,202.5Steady
3  France11,397.5Steady
4  Spain10,452.5Increase 2
5  United States10,405.0Decrease 1
6  China9,625.0Increase 1
7  Belgium7785.0Decrease 2
8  Germany5,112.5Increase 1
9  Israel5,012.5Decrease 1
10  Japan4,857.5Increase 2
28 April
RankNationPoints[2]Move
1  Russia36,050.0Steady
2  Italy21,687.5Steady
3  Spain15,032.5Increase 1
4  United States10,405.0Increase 1
5  France8,895.0Decrease 2
6  China8,267.5Steady
7  Belgium6,795.0Steady
8  Czech Republic6,150.0Increase 3
9  Argentina5,442.5Increase 4
10  Israel4,225.0Decrease 1
15 September
RankNationPoints[2]Move
1  Russia37,895.0Steady
2  Italy19,642.5Steady
3  Spain15,032.5Steady
4  United States10,405.0Steady
5  France8,895.0Steady
6  China8,267.5Steady
7  Belgium6,795.0Steady
8  Czech Republic6,150.0Steady
9  Argentina5,442.5Steady
10  Israel4,225.0Steady

References

  1. "Rankings Explained". fedcup.com. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
  2. 1 2 3 Fed Cup Nations Ranking History. ITF. 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.