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September 20, 1997

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DEAR REDIFF

India 2-1 ahead in Davis Cup tie

Leander Paes and Mahesh Bhupathi, the world number five doubles team, beat Marcelo Rios and Nicolas Massu 3-6, 6-3, 6-4, 6-7 (3-7), 6-3 to give India a 2-1 lead over Chile in the Davis Cup World Group play-off tie in New Delhi on Saturday.

Paes takes on world number seven Marcelo Rios in the first of the reverse singles on Sunday, while Bhupati will in the last game of the match go up against Gabriel Silbestein.

Amidst high drama and nerve wracking tension, the Paes-Bhupati team got over a scare from the makeshift Chilean combination and won in five sets in a tie lasting three hours and 27 minutes.

''We did not not expect such a tough resistance from the Chileans,'' admitted Peas after the match.

He lavishly praised 17-year old Massu for playing a tremendous game and added that "this proves that in a Davis Cup tie a player who is under no pressure can bring out his best''.

That Paes and Bhupati were not expecting much resistance was obvious from the way they played. Rather relaxed in the first set, the two woke up only after the Chilean combination went through the set with ease. In the second and third sets, the Indian combination pulled out all the stops, and the results were obvious as they proved a class and a half above the scratch Chilean pair. Then again, over confidence appeared to get the better of them in the fourth set, with both Paes and Bhupati trying too many fancy stop volleys and dinky little drop shots and, in the process, committing seven unforced errors at crucial points to surrender the set. That proved the wakeup call, and the Indian pair tightened their game to waltz through the fifth set with relative ease.

After the two pairs exchanged leads with the Chileans winning the first and the fourth sets and the Indians the second and third,the fifth set was a tense affair. In the eighth game, after both pairs held on to their service, Massu's service was returned by Bhupathi and the linesman called it ''good'', but the Chileans hotly disputed the call saying it was wide off the court.

However, the chair umpire, Germany's Oliver Wolef upheld the linesman's call, and then Massu smashed his next return wide to be broken.

Rios, not trying to hide his unhappiness over the issue, told the post-match press conference, "I have been of the view that like umpires, linesmen should also be from neutral countries.''

UNI

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