Former world number one
Andy Roddick has pointed out that one of the primary reasons behind the Team World's recent defeat in the
Laver Cup was down to poor team selection on the final day. The
two-team competition ended on Sunday in Germany, Berlin, where Team Europe came out on top in a tense battle with a score of 13-11 and reclaimed the title after a gap of two years.
On the last day of the match, Team World had an advantage as
they had to win just two out of four matches to lift the title. However, they ended
up winning just one and lost three, including the doubles clash where American
pair of Ben Shelton and Frances Tiafoe came second-best against Spain’s Carlos
Alcaraz and Norway’s Casper Ruud in
straight sets with a score of 6-2, 7-6.
Former world number one Roddick was recently quoted in a
report where he expressed his opinion about the team selection of Team
World on the last day of the contest. The one-time Grand Slam winner was of the
opinion that the Team World should have gone with both left-handed players in
the match against Alcaraz and Ruud. Roddick took the reference of Shelton and
Chile’s Alejandro Tabilo’s impressive performance a day before against the pair
of Ruud and Greece’s Stefanos Tsitsipas, where they came out on top in straight
sets with a score of 6-1, 6-2.
“A few questions maybe around the doubles lineup,” he said. “I
probably would have gone with the lefties again, Tabilo and Shelton, and they
flipped the doubles on the last day against Alcaraz and Ruud when Ruud had
consistently proven before, when he played with Tsitsipas against Shelton and
Tabilo, that he actually couldn’t take any returns early against a lefty. Shelton
made himself bigger than he actually normally is. I don’t know why all of a
sudden you would give them a righty serve with a gettable second serve with
Frances in that next match.”