'We've definitely got a chance' - Dan Evans holds key as Great Britain dream of Davis Cup glory

Great Britain are dreaming of more Davis Cup glory after pulling off a remarkable victory over France to book their spot in the quarter-finals.

Needing victory in their final tie at a sold-out AO Arena in Manchester om Sunday to reach the knock-out stages, it went all the way to a final-set tie-break in the last rubber, with Dan Evans and Neal Skupski saving four match points against Nicolas Mahut and Edouard Roger-Vasselin before triumphing 1-6 7-6 (4) 7-6 (6).

When a final French return flew long, Evans and Skupski fell to court before leaping into each others’ arms then celebrating with the rest of the team.

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Evans was Britain’s key man across the three ties, winning four rubbers, including two against France having battled from behind to see off teenager Arthur Fils in the opening singles.

Dan Evans of Great Britain celebrates helping Great Britain reach the finals week of the Davis Cup (Picture: Jan Kruger/Getty Images for ITF)Dan Evans of Great Britain celebrates helping Great Britain reach the finals week of the Davis Cup (Picture: Jan Kruger/Getty Images for ITF)
Dan Evans of Great Britain celebrates helping Great Britain reach the finals week of the Davis Cup (Picture: Jan Kruger/Getty Images for ITF)

“It was nuts,” said the 33-year-old, pictured. “The singles is the singles and I feel comfortable on that court but the doubles was chaos. I just kept saying to Neal, ‘We’ve got a chance, we’ve got a chance’. We both kept going. We stuck together.

“It was an amazing day, an amazing feeling. Emotional more than anything. You want to be with these guys in the finals and you know what happens if you lose, it’s not ideal being at home as well. You feel that. It’s an immensely proud moment for me and the team.”

Evans talked after beating Fils about how attending Davis Cup matches as a boy in Birmingham had made him want to play professional tennis and this was his 25th tie across 14 years.

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His has been one of the more tumultuous careers in British tennis and last year he annoyed captain Leon Smith and his team-mates by publicly airing his grievances about not being picked in doubles after Britain crashed out in the group stage in Glasgow.

Dan Evans and Neal Skupski of Great Britain in action during day two of the 2023 Davis Cup finals group stage match at Manchester AO Arena (Picture: Jan Kruger/Getty Images for ITF)Dan Evans and Neal Skupski of Great Britain in action during day two of the 2023 Davis Cup finals group stage match at Manchester AO Arena (Picture: Jan Kruger/Getty Images for ITF)
Dan Evans and Neal Skupski of Great Britain in action during day two of the 2023 Davis Cup finals group stage match at Manchester AO Arena (Picture: Jan Kruger/Getty Images for ITF)

Smith gave the 33-year-old a chance alongside Skupski in February’s play-off in Colombia, where they claimed an important victory, and two wins in decisive rubbers this time have seen him put his money where his mouth is.

Smith remains unhappy with the way Evans made his point, saying: “Am I glad he did it? No I’m not glad he did it and he knows that.

“You can’t get every decision right as captain. What’s important I think is how we came together not just here but when we were in Colombia together.”

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Tuesday’s draw will determine who Britain face of the remaining eight teams in the final week in Malaga from November 21-26, although they already know it will either be Italy or Novak Djokovic’s Serbia.

Whoever they come up against, Smith will believe that his team, with its improved strength in depth, can have a chance of matching their historic 2015 title run, when Andy and Jamie Murray made it virtually a family affair.

“It’s absolutely brilliant we’re going to Malaga,” said Smith. “We’ve definitely got a chance. We’ve got a really good team.

“We had the benefit at one point of having the best player in the world in our team. We’ve got a chance against anybody. It’s really tight, matches can go either way.”