Prague: Marin Cilic, Dominic Thiem and Alexander Zverev won their opening singles to put Team Europe ahead of Team World after day one of the inaugural Laver Cup here Friday. Nick Kyrgios and Jack Sock then handed Team World their first point by beating Tomas Berdych and World No.1 Rafael Nadal in the day’s closing doubles rubber to round off the score at 3-1 for Europe.
“I’m happy the way the day went, we had a couple of wins that were super close and we could lose,” said Roland Garros and US Open champion Nadal. “We have a good result for our team. Happy to go to back to bed with 3-1 and tomorrow is another day.”
With four matches a day – three singles and a doubles, the players can earn a point for each win Friday, two Saturday and three Sunday.
World No. 5 five Cilic beat 72nd-ranked Frances Tiafoe, a replacement for the injured Argentinian Juan Martin del Potro, 7-6 (7/3), 7-6 (7/0) in the tournament opener.
The big-serving Croat and the 19-year-old American held on to their serves in the first set before earning a break apiece in the second, with Cilic showing better nerves in both tie-breakers.
Seventh-ranked Austrian Thiem then put Europe 2-0 ahead, beating World N0.17 John Isner 6-7 (15/17), 7-6 (7/2), 10/8.
Isner offered his regular dose of aces as both held on to their serves throughout the rubber, taking it to the 10-point super tie-break used to decide games tied after two sets. Isner went 4-0 up in the super tie-break, but the patient Austrian came back to win the rubber.
In a clash of the teams’ youngest players, the 20-year-old World No.4, Zverev, overpowered 18-year-old Canadian Denis Shapovalov 7-6 (7-3), 7-6 (7-5) in another rubber without breaks.
In the doubles, Berdych lost his serve halfway through the first set as off-court friends Kyrgios and Sock seemed far more comfortable on the black court of Prague’s O2 Arena.
Berdych and Nadal regained some momentum in the second set, but the Team World duo grabbed the super tie-break.
Skippering Team Europe, Bjorn Borg decided to rest World No.2 Roger Federer, Friday while John McEnroe decided not to use his highest-ranked player, 16th-ranked Sam Querrey.
As in their storied on-court battles in their playing days, McEnroe painted an animated figure courtside as he frequently sprung from his chair to rally his players while Borg remained mostly seated.
His calm demeanour, however, belied his nerves. “I was more nervous today (Friday) than when I was playing because, I mean, of course when you play you have control,” Borg said.