Canada Davis Cup team

Canada
CaptainFrank Dancevic[1]
ITF ranking2 (27 November 2023)
Highest ITF ranking1 (6 February 2023)
ColorsRed & White
First year1913
Years played93
Ties played (W–L)173 (79–94)
Years in
World Group
14 (16–16)
Davis Cup titles1 (2022)
Runners-up1 (2019)
Most total winsDaniel Nestor (48–28)
Most singles winsSébastien Lareau (17–16)
Milos Raonic (17–5)
Most doubles winsDaniel Nestor (33–13)
Best doubles teamDaniel Nestor /
Frédéric Niemeyer (12–1)
Most ties playedDaniel Nestor (53)
Most years playedDaniel Nestor (25)

The Canada men's national tennis team represents Canada in Davis Cup tennis competition since 1913. They are overseen by Tennis Canada, the governing body of tennis in Canada.

The team won their first Davis Cup in 2022, beating Australia 2–0 in the final. In its first appearance in 1913 it had reached the World Group final, losing to the United States 0–3.[2]

History

1913–2010: Moderate success

Canada competed in its first Davis Cup in 1913. The team won its first tie, played in June at the Queen's Club, London over South Africa by a score of 4–1.[3] The team consisted of just two players, Robert Powell and Bernard Schwengers. Canada then in July easily defeated Belgium in the semi-finals 4–0.[4] In the playoff final however, played a week later, they lost all three matches to the Americans in straight sets.[2] (The Americans went on to defeat Great Britain in the challenge round, to win the competition.)

Canada did not play a World Group tie from 1921 until 1991, when the team of Grant Connell, Glenn Michibata, Andrew Sznajder, and Martin Wostenholme, with team captain Pierre Lamarche, lost 1–4 away to Spain.[5] The following year, again in the World Group first round, Canada came closer to advancing, going down 2–3 at home to Sweden despite taking a first-day 2–0 lead. The tie was highlighted by a surprise singles win of rookie Daniel Nestor over superstar and then world number one ranked Stefan Edberg. Nestor could not repeat the magic, however, losing in the deciding rubber match in 5 sets to Magnus Gustafsson.[6]

In 2004, Canada fell to the Netherlands 1–4 in the World Group first round. Team members then were Simon Larose, Frank Dancevic, Frédéric Niemeyer, and Daniel Nestor as a star doubles specialist.[7]

2011–12: Back in the World Group

In 2011, Canada defeated the Israel Davis Cup team 3–2 at the Canada Stadium in Ramat Hasharon, Israel to qualify for the 2012 Davis Cup World Group. Canada's team consisted of Milos Raonic, Vasek Pospisil, Daniel Nestor, Philip Bester and Peter Polansky. The teams split the first two matches in two upsets, as Pospisil defeated Dudi Sela and Amir Weintraub beat Raonic. Nestor and Pospisil defeated Jonathan Erlich and Andy Ram in the doubles match. On the final day, Sela defeated Polansky in the fourth match while Pospisil defeated Weintraub in the final match.[8]

In 2012, Canada played against France in the first round of the World Group, but lost 1–4. Pospisil lost the first match to Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and Raonic won the next one against Julien Benneteau to end day one at 1–1. Canada then lost the three next matches (the doubles and the last singles match) as Raonic had to withdraw for his second singles match against Tsonga following an injury on his left knee. He was replaced by Dancevic who lost in straight sets.[9] Canada secured its spot in the World Group in 2013, and for the second straight year, with a 4–1 victory over South Africa in the playoffs in September. Canada had only played two straight years in the World Group one other time in its history before that, in 1991–92.

2013: Run to the World Group semifinals

In 2013, Canada upset the number one ranked tennis nation Spain 3–2 in the first round of the World Group, the first win ever for Canada at that stage in the Open Era. Raonic won the first match over Albert Ramos and Dancevic defeated then No. 34 Marcel Granollers to give Canada a 2–0 lead after the first day. Canada's doubles team of Nestor and Pospisil lost to Marc López and Granollers, but Raonic secured the win for Canada in the final day with a victory over Guillermo García-López. Dancevic lost the last match to Ramos.[10] Canada then defeated in April Italy 3–1 in the quarterfinals to reach the second semifinal of its history, the first in the Open Era. Italy's Andreas Seppi won the first match over Pospisil, but Raonic answered back with a victory over Fabio Fognini. The Canadian doubles team of Nestor and Pospisil took the crucial doubles match in a marathon of almost four hours and a half over Daniele Bracciali and Fognini. Raonic gave Canada the win after defeating Seppi in the final day.[11] Canada was eliminated 2–3 by Serbia in the semifinals in September. World No. 1 Novak Djokovic won the first match over Pospisil and Raonic took the second over Janko Tipsarević to end day one at 1–1. Canada had a 2–1 lead after the second day when the doubles team of Nestor and Pospisil defeated Nenad Zimonjić and Ilija Bozoljac. Raonic and Pospisil both lost their matches the final day, respectively to Djokovic and to Tipsarević. Canada will stay in the World Group in 2014 for a third straight year, a record.[12]

2014–2018: Continuing presence in the World Group

In 2014, a very diminished Canadian team lost in the World Group first round to Japan 1–4 as both Raonic and Pospisil were injured and not able to play.[13] Canada then had to play a playoff in September against Colombia to stay in the World Group next year. They won the tie 3–2 meaning that Canada will play in the World Group for the fourth straight year.[14]

In 2015, Canada had their revenge over Japan with a 3–2 win in the first round of the World Group. Raonic defeated Tatsuma Ito in straight sets in the first match and Kei Nishikori won against Pospisil to end the first day in a 1–1 tie. The next day, Canada's doubles team of Nestor and Pospisil won a closely contested match over Go Soeda and Yasutaka Uchiyama to give a 2–1 lead to Canada. Nishikori defeated Raonic in five sets the last day but Pospisil secured the victory for Canada with a straight-set win over Soeda.[15] Canada next played its quarterfinal tie in July but, without its two best singles players Raonic and Pospisil who were both injured, fell 0–5 to Belgium on the road.[16]

In 2016, Canada played its World Group first round against France. Again, without its best player Raonic who was out because of an adductor injury and Nestor not able to play for personal reasons, Canada was defeated by a score of 0–5. They next played a playoff tie in September against Chile, winning by the score of 5–0 and securing Canada's place in the World Group for the sixth straight year.[17]

In 2017, Canada, once again without Raonic, lost for the second straight year in the first round of the World Group to Great Britain. Pospisil won his two singles matches over top 50 players Kyle Edmund and Dan Evans, but lost in doubles with Nestor against Dominic Inglot and Jamie Murray. 17-year-old Denis Shapovalov played the two other singles matches, losing the opener to Evans and the deciding rubber to Edmund. In the latter, he hit the match umpire, Arnaud Gabas, in the eye after launching a ball aimlessly towards the crowd in anger after dropping serve in the opening stages of the third set, defaulting the match and tie as a consequence.[18] Canada then won in September a playoff tie over India by the score of 3–2, with wins by Shapovalov in singles and by Nestor and Pospisil in doubles, and will stay in the World Group for a seventh straight year.[19]

In 2018, the first season with new captain Frank Dancevic, Canada lost once again in the first round of the World Group by the score of 1–3 to Croatia. Borna Ćorić won the first rubber over Pospisil, and Shapovalov won the second over Viktor Galović. Despite leading 6–2, 6–3, 4–2, Nestor and Pospisil lost the crucial doubles match against Marin Čilić and Ivan Dodig in five sets. The final day, Shapovalov lost to Ćorić, meaning that Canada had to play a playoff tie in September versus Netherlands to secure its place in the World Group for 2019,[20] which they won by a score of 3–1, through two singles wins by Raonic and one singles win by Shapovalov.

2019: First Canadian final

In February 2019, following a format change in the Davis Cup, Canada played in the 2019 Davis Cup qualifying round versus Slovakia in order to qualify for the 2019 Davis Cup Finals later in the year. Shapovalov won his first singles match, but then Canada lost the next two matches before rallying with two straight singles match victories by Shapovalov and newcomer Félix Auger-Aliassime to win by a score of 3–2.

The Canadian team fielded only two players in the 2019 Davis Cup Finals to make it to the final tie: Vasek Pospisil and Denis Shapovalov. In the group stage, Canada beat Italy by 2–1, winning both its singles matches against higher-ranked players. Pospisil beat Fabio Fognini in straight sets, and Shapovalov beat Matteo Berrettini in a nail-biter featuring three tie-breaks. The Italians won the doubles match. In their tie against the US, Pospisil beat Reilly Opelka in two tie-breaks, and Shapovalov beat Taylor Fritz, with a tie-break in the first set. The doubles match was not played.

In the knock-out stage, the Canadians played Australia in the quarterfinals. Pospisil again led off by beating John Millman in the first match, but Shapovalov lost in three sets to Alex de Minaur. They recovered, however, to win the doubles match in straight sets. They next faced Russia in the semifinals. Pospisil lost his first match to Andrey Rublev, who was undefeated. But Shapovalov beat Karen Khachanov, and the pair sealed a trip to the final in the doubles match. They faced Spain in the final tie.

Current team

Rankings as of January 29, 2024

Team representing Canada in 2024 Qualifiers vs. Republic of Korea[21]
Name Born First Last Noms Ties Win/Loss Ranks
Year Tie Sin Dou Tot Sin Dou
Gabriel Diallo (2001-09-24)September 24, 2001 2022 2024  South Korea 5 6 4–3 0–0 4–3 132 324
Liam Draxl (2001-12-05)December 5, 2001 1 0 0–0 0–0 0–0 298 538
Alexis Galarneau (1999-03-02)March 2, 1999 2022 2024  Finland 6 7 2–1 3–3 5–4 211 553
Vasek Pospisil (1990-06-23)June 23, 1990 2008 2024  South Korea 26 33 15–14 17–12 32–26 486 576
Milos Raonic (1990-12-27)December 27, 1990 2010 2023  Finland 15 13 17-5 2-1 19-6 306

Player records

Most total wins overall
# Player Years Win–loss Ties
played
Years
played
Singles Doubles Total
1 Daniel Nestor 1992–2018 15–15 33–13 48–28 53 25
2 Vasek Pospisil 2008–2024 15–14 17–12 32–26 33 14
3 Sébastien Lareau 1991–2001 17–16 11–3 28–19 20 10
4 Grant Connell 1987–1997 8–3 15–6 23–90 21 10
5 Frédéric Niemeyer 1999–2009 9–11 13–2 22–13 18 10
6 Milos Raonic 2010–2023 17–5 2–1 19–60 13 8
7 Frank Dancevic 2002–2016 15–21 3–1 18–22 24 14
8 Mike Belkin 1966–1973 14–7 3–5 17–12 12 8
9 Denis Shapovalov 2016–2022 11–7 3–2 14–90 14 5
Andrew Sznajder 1987–1996 14–10 0–0 14–10 13 8
Lorne Main 1949–1955 10–11 4–3 14–14 13 7
Active players in bold. Statistics as of November 21, 2023

Recent performances

Here is the list of all match-ups since 1981, when the competition started being held in the current World Group format.

1980s

Year Competition Date Surface Location Opponent Score Result
1981 North & Central American Zone, 1st Round 9–11 Jan Clay Bogotá (COL)  Colombia 2–3 Loss
1982 North & Central American Zone, Semifinals 15–17 Jan Hard Caracas (VEN)  Venezuela 4–1 Win
North & Central American Zone, Finals 5–7 Mar Hard (i) Montreal (CAN)  Colombia 3–1 Win
Americas Inter-Zonal, Finals 5–7 Mar Hard (i) Laval (CAN)  Paraguay 1–4 Loss
1983 Americas Zone, Quarterfinals 4–6 Mar Hard (i) Laval (CAN)  Venezuela 3–2 Win
Americas Zone, Semifinals 6–8 May Clay Guayaquil (ECU)  Ecuador 1–4 Loss
1984 Americas Zone, Quarterfinals 2–4 Mar Clay Mexico City (MEX)  Mexico 0–5 Loss
1985 Americas Zone, 1st Round 8–10 Mar Carpet (i) Chicoutimi (CAN)  Caribbean/West Indies 4–1 Win
Americas Zone, Semifinals 2–4 Aug Clay Chicoutimi (CAN)  Mexico 2–3 Loss
1986 Americas Zone, Quarterfinals 7–9 Mar Clay Santiago de Chile (CHI)  Chile 2–3 Loss
1987 Americas Zone, 1st Round 30 Jan – 1 Feb Hard Caracas (VEN)  Venezuela 4–1 Win
Americas Zone, Quarterfinals 13–15 Mar Clay Lima (PER)  Peru 3–2 Win
Americas Zone, Semifinals 24–26 Jul Hard Edmonton (CAN)  Ecuador 2–3 Loss
1988 Americas Zone Group I, Quarterfinals 5–7 Feb Clay Guayaquil (ECU)  Ecuador 0–5 Loss
Americas Zone, Relegation Play-offs 8–10 Apr Carpet (i) Vancouver (CAN)  Chile 4–1 Win
1989 Americas Group I, 1st Round 3–5 Feb Carpet (i) Montreal (CAN)  Uruguay 4–1 Win
Americas Zone Group I, Semifinals 7–8 Apr Clay Buenos Aires (ARG)  Argentina 0–3 Loss

1990s

Year Competition Date Surface Location Opponent Score Result
1990 Americas Zone Group I, Quarterfinals 2–4 Feb Carpet (i) Vancouver (CAN)  Brazil 4–1 Win
Americas Zone Group I, Semifinals 30 Mar – 1 Apr Clay Asunción (PAR)  Paraguay 5–0 Win
World Group, Relegation Play-offs 21–23 Sep Hard Montreal (CAN)  Netherlands 3–2 Win
1991 World Group, 1st Round 1–3 Feb Clay Murcia (ESP)  Spain 1–4 Loss
World Group, Relegation Play-offs 30 Mar – 1 Apr Hard Havana (CUB)  Cuba 3–2 Win
1992 World Group, 1st Round 31 Jan – 2 Feb Carpet (i) Vancouver (CAN)  Sweden 2–3 Loss
World Group, Relegation Play-offs 25–27 Sep Grass Vancouver (CAN)  Austria 1–3 Loss
1993 Americas Zone Group I, Quarterfinals 5–7 Feb Clay Mexico City (MEX)  Mexico 1–4 Loss
Americas Zone, Relegation Play-offs 26–28 Mar Clay Santiago de Chile (CHI)  Chile 1–3 Loss
1994 Americas Zone Group II, Quarterfinals 4–6 Feb Hard (i) Ottawa (CAN)  Jamaica 5–0 Win
Americas Zone Group II, Semifinals 25–27 Mar Clay Bogotá (COL)  Colombia 3–2 Win
Americas Zone Group II, Finals 15–17 Jul Hard Montreal (CAN)  Venezuela 2–3 Loss
1995 Americas Zone Group II, Quarterfinals 3–5 Feb Clay Port-au-Prince (HAI)  Haiti 3–2 Win
Americas Zone Group II, Semifinals 31 Mar – 2 Apr Carpet (i) Kelowna (CAN)  Colombia 5–0 Win
Americas Zone Group II, Finals 22–24 Sep Carpet (i) Victoria (CAN)  Ecuador 3–2 Win
1996 Americas Zone Group I, Quarterfinals 9–11 Feb Hard Valencia (VEN)  Venezuela 2–3 Loss
Americas Zone, Relegation Play-offs 5–7 Apr Carpet (i) Edmonton (CAN)  Chile 3–2 Win
1997 Americas Zone Group I, Quarterfinals 7–9 Feb Hard (i) Montreal (CAN)  Bahamas 4–1 Win
Americas Zone Group I, Semifinals 4–6 Apr Hard (i) Montreal (CAN)  Venezuela 5–0 Win
World Group, Relegation Play-offs 19–21 Sep Carpet (i) Montreal (CAN)  Slovakia 1–4 Loss
1998 Americas Zone Group I, Quarterfinals 13–15 Feb Hard (i) Halifax (CAN)  Mexico 3–2 Win
Americas Zone Group I, Semifinals 3–5 Apr Clay Guayaquil (ECU)  Ecuador 2–3 Loss
1999 Americas Zone Group I, Quarterfinals 12–14 Feb Clay Cali (COL)  Colombia 2–3 Loss
Americas Zone, Relegation Play-offs 16–18 Jul Hard Nassau (BAH)  Bahamas 4–1 Win

2000s

Year Competition Date Surface Location Opponent Score Result
2000 Americas Zone Group I, Quarterfinals 4–6 Feb Clay Viña del Mar (CHI)  Chile 1–4 Loss
Americas Zone Group I, Relegation Play-off 21–23 Jul Hard Montreal (CAN)  Argentina 4–1 Win
2001 Americas Zone Group I, Semifinals 6–8 Apr Clay Córdoba (ARG)  Argentina 0–5 Loss
Americas Zone Group I, Relegation Play-off 20–22 Jul Clay Mexico City (MEX)  Mexico 3–2 Win
2002 Americas Zone Group I, Quarterfinals 8–10 Feb Carpet (i) Ontario (CAN)  Mexico 4–1 Win
Americas Zone Group I, Semifinals 5–7 Apr Carpet (i) Calgary (CAN)  Chile 5–0 Win
World Group, Relegation Play-offs 20–22 Sep Clay Rio de Janeiro (BRA)  Brazil 0–4 Loss
2003 Americas Zone Group I, 2nd Round 4–6 Apr Carpet (i) Calgary (CAN)  Peru 5–0 Win
World Group, Relegation Play-offs 19–21 Sep Carpet (i) Calgary (CAN)  Brazil 3–2 Win
2004 World Group, 1st Round 6–8 Feb Clay (i) Maastricht (NED)  Netherlands 1–4 Loss
World Group, Relegation Play-offs 24–26 Sep Clay Bucharest (ROU)  Romania 1–4 Loss
2005 Americas Zone Group I, 2nd Round 29 Apr – 1 May Clay Valencia (VEN)  Venezuela 4–0 Win
World Group, Relegation Play-offs 23–25 Sep Hard Toronto (CAN)  Belarus 2–3 Loss
2006 Americas Zone Group I, 2nd Round 7–9 Apr Clay Mexico City (MEX)  Mexico 1–4 Loss
Americas Zone, Relegation Play-offs 21–23 Jul Hard Granby (CAN)  Venezuela 3–2 Win
2007 Americas Zone Group I, 1st Round 9–11 Feb Carpet (i) Calgary (CAN)  Colombia 5–0 Win
Americas Zone Group I, 2nd Round 6–8 Apr Clay Florianópolis (BRA)  Brazil 1–3 Loss
2008 Americas Zone Group I, 1st Round 8–10 Feb Carpet (i) Calgary (CAN)  Mexico 4–1 Win
Americas Zone Group I, 2nd Round 11–13 Apr Clay Santiago de Chile (CHI)  Chile 2–3 Loss
2009 Americas Zone Group I, 1st Round 6–8 Mar Hard (i) Toronto (CAN)  Ecuador 2–3 Loss
Americas Zone, Relegation Play-offs 10–12 Jul Clay Lima (PER)  Peru 3–2 Win

2010s

Year Competition Date Surface Location Opponent Score Result
2010 Americas Zone Group I, 2nd Round 5–7 Mar Clay Bogotá (COL)  Colombia 1–4 Loss
Americas Zone, Relegation Play-offs 17–19 Sep Hard Toronto (CAN)  Dominican Republic 5–0 Win
2011 Americas Zone Group I, 1st Round 4–6 Mar Clay Metepec (MEX)  Mexico 4–1 Win
Americas Zone Group I, 2nd Round 8–10 Jul Clay Guayaquil (ECU)  Ecuador 3–2 Win
World Group, Relegation Play-offs 16–18 Sep Hard Ramat HaSharon (ISR)  Israel 3–2 Win
2012 World Group, 1st Round 10–12 Feb Hard (i) Vancouver (CAN)  France 1–4 Loss
World Group, Relegation Play-offs 14–16 Sep Hard Montreal (CAN)  South Africa 4–1 Win
2013 World Group, 1st Round 1–3 Feb Hard (i) Vancouver (CAN)  Spain 3–2 Win
World Group, Quarterfinals 5–7 Apr Hard (i) Vancouver (CAN)  Italy 3–1 Win
World Group, Semifinals 13–15 Sep Clay (i) Belgrade (SRB)  Serbia 2–3 Loss
2014 World Group, 1st Round 31 Jan – 2 Feb Hard (i) Tokyo (JPN)  Japan 1–4 Loss
World Group, Relegation Play-offs 12–14 Sep Hard (i) Halifax (CAN)  Colombia 3–2 Win
2015 World Group, 1st Round 6–8 Mar Hard (i) Vancouver (CAN)  Japan 3–2 Win
World Group, Quarterfinals 17–19 Jul Clay Ostend (BEL)  Belgium 0–5 Loss
2016 World Group, 1st Round 4–6 Mar Clay Baie-Mahault (FRA)  France 0–5 Loss
World Group, Relegation Play-offs 16–18 Sep Hard (i) Halifax (CAN)  Chile 5–0 Win
2017 World Group, 1st Round 3–5 Feb Hard (i) Ottawa (CAN)  Great Britain 2–3 Loss
World Group, Relegation Play-offs 15–17 Sep Hard (i) Edmonton (CAN)  India 3–2 Win
2018 World Group, 1st Round 2–4 Feb Clay (i) Osijek (CRO)  Croatia 1–3 Loss
World Group, Relegation Play-offs 14–16 Sep Hard (i) Toronto (CAN)  Netherlands 3–1 Win
2019 Qualifying round 1–2 Feb Clay (i) Bratislava (SVK)  Slovakia 3–2 Win
Finals (Group F) 18 Nov Hard (i) Madrid (ESP)  Italy 2–1 Win
19 Nov Hard (i)  United States 2–1 Win
Finals (Quarterfinals) 21 Nov Hard (i)  Australia 2–1 Win
Finals (Semifinals) 23 Nov Hard (i)  Russia 2–1 Win
Finals (Final) 24 Nov Hard (i)  Spain 0–2 Runner-up

2020s

Year Competition Date Surface Location Opponent Score Result
2020–21 Finals (Group B) 25 Nov Hard (i) Madrid (ESP)  Sweden 0–3 Loss
28 Nov Hard (i)  Kazakhstan 0–3 Loss
2022 Qualifying round 4–5 Mar Clay (i) The Hague (NED)  Netherlands 0–4 Loss
Finals (Group B) 13 Sep Hard (i) Valencia (ESP)  South Korea 2–1 Win
16 Sep Hard (i)  Spain 2–1 Win
17 Sep Hard (i)  Serbia 1–2 Loss
Finals (Quarterfinals) 24 Nov Hard (i) Málaga (ESP)  Germany 2–1 Win
Finals (Semifinals) 26 Nov Hard (i)  Italy 2–1 Win
Finals (Final) 27 Nov Hard (i)  Australia 2–0 Champion
2023 Finals (Group A) 13 Sep Hard (i) Bologna (ITA)  Italy 3–0 Win
14 Sep Hard (i)  Sweden 3–0 Win
16 Sep Hard (i)  Chile 2–1 Win
Finals (Quarterfinals) 21 Nov Hard (i) Málaga (ESP)  Finland 1–2 Loss
2024 Qualifying round 2–3 Feb Hard (i) Montreal (CAN)  South Korea 3–1 Win

Head-to-head record

Country Record Win % Hard Clay Grass Carpet
 Caribbean/West Indies 7–0 100% 2–0 2–0 1–0 2–0
 Cuba 7–2 78% 2–0 3–2 2–0 0–0
 Mexico 7–18 28% 1–2 2–12 2–2 2–2
 Venezuela 6–2 75% 5–2 1–0 0–0 0–0
 Chile 6–4 60% 2–0 0–4 1–0 3–0
 Colombia 6–4 60% 2–0 1–4 0–0 3–0
 Italy 4–0 100% 4–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
 Peru 3–0 100% 0–0 2–0 0–0 1–0
 Netherlands 3–2 60% 2–0 1–2 0–0 0–0
 Bahamas 2–0 100% 2–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
 South Africa 2–0 100% 1–0 0–0 1–0 0–0
 Spain 2–2 50% 2–1 0–1 0–0 0–0
 Brazil 2–4 33% 0–0 0–3 0–1 2–0
 Ecuador 2–5 29% 0–2 1–3 0–0 1–0
 Australia 2–9 18% 2–0 0–2 0–7 0–0
 Dominican Republic 1–0 100% 1–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
 Germany 1–0 100% 1–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
 Haiti 1–0 100% 0–0 1–0 0–0 0–0
 India 1–0 100% 1–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
 Israel 1–0 100% 1–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
 Jamaica 1–0 100% 1–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
 New Zealand 1–0 100% 0–0 1–0 0–0 0–0
 South Korea 1–0 100% 1–0 0–0 0–0 0–0
 Uruguay 1–0 100% 0–0 0–0 0–0 1–0
 Belgium 1–1 50% 0–0 0–1 1–0 0–0
 Finland 1–1 50% 0–1 1–0 0–0 0–0
 Paraguay 1–1 50% 0–1 1–0 0–0 0–0
 Russia 1–1 50% 1–0 0–1 0–0 0–0
 Slovakia 1–1 50% 0–0 1–0 0–0 0–1
 Argentina 1–2 33% 1–0 0–2 0–0 0–0
 Sweden 1–2 33% 1–1 0–0 0–0 0–1
 Japan 1–6 14% 1–1 0–0 0–5 0–0
 United States 1–15 6% 1–1 0–5 0–9 0–0
 Austria 0–1 0% 0–0 0–0 0–1 0–0
 Belarus 0–1 0% 0–1 0–0 0–0 0–0
 Kazakhstan 0–1 0% 0–1 0–0 0–0 0–0
 Croatia 0–1 0% 0–0 0–1 0–0 0–0
 Romania 0–1 0% 0–0 0–1 0–0 0–0
 Serbia 0–2 0% 0–1 0–1 0–0 0–0
 Great Britain 0–2 0% 0–1 0–1 0–0 0–0
 France 0–3 0% 0–1 0–2 0–0 0–0
Overall win–loss 79–94 46% 38–17 18–48 8–25 15–4
*Previous champions in bold. Teams that have been ranked No. 1 in italics. Statistics as of November 27, 2023

See also

  • Sports portal
  • flagCanada portal

References

  1. ^ "Dancevic named Canada Davis Cup captain". DavisCup.com. Retrieved November 20, 2017.
  2. ^ a b "Tie details - Canada vs. United States". DavisCup.com. Retrieved February 4, 2013.
  3. ^ "Tie details - Canada vs. South Africa". DavisCup.com. Retrieved February 4, 2013.
  4. ^ "Tie details - Canada vs. Belgium". DavisCup.com. Retrieved February 4, 2013.
  5. ^ "Tie details - Canada vs. Spain". DavisCup.com. Retrieved February 4, 2013.
  6. ^ "Canada eyes upset over Spain in Davis Cup tie". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved February 4, 2013.
  7. ^ "Tie details - Canada vs. Netherlands". DavisCup.com. Retrieved February 4, 2013.
  8. ^ "Pospisil carries Canada to Davis Cup playoff victory against Israel". The Star. Retrieved February 5, 2013.
  9. ^ "France crushes Canada's Davis Cup dream". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved February 4, 2013.
  10. ^ "Canada completes Davis Cup upset of top-ranked Spain". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved February 4, 2013.
  11. ^ "Milos Raonic sends Canada to historic Davis Cup semifinals". CBC Sports. Retrieved April 7, 2013.
  12. ^ "Canada's Cinderella Davis Cup run comes to an end with Pospisil loss". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved September 15, 2013.
  13. ^ "Japan beats injury-plagued Canada 4-1 at Davis Cup, advances to quarterfinal". TheRecord.com. Retrieved February 2, 2014.
  14. ^ "Milos Raonic, Canada clinch Davis Cup tie in Halifax". CBC Sports. Retrieved September 15, 2014.
  15. ^ "Pospisil plays hero in Canada's Davis Cup win". Toronto Sun. Retrieved March 8, 2015.
  16. ^ "Canada loses 3-0 to Belgium in Davis Cup". Sportsnet. Retrieved July 18, 2015.
  17. ^ "Canada secures Davis Cup berth after defeating Chile in doubles". CBC Sports. Retrieved September 17, 2016.
  18. ^ "Davis Cup drama after Canada's Denis Shapovalov is defaulted for smashing ball into umpire's face to hand Great Britain win". The Telegraph. Retrieved February 5, 2017.
  19. ^ "Shapovalov secures Davis Cup tie victory for Canada". CBC Sports. Retrieved September 17, 2017.
  20. ^ "Canada falls to Croatia at Davis Cup after Shapovalov loss". Sportsnet. Retrieved February 4, 2018.
  21. ^ "Tie Detail - Qualifiers". DavisCup.com. Retrieved January 25, 2024.

External links

  • Team page on DavisCup.com, the official website of the Davis Cup
  • Tennis Canada
  • v
  • t
  • e
Davis Cup teams
FinalsWorld Group IWorld Group IIGroup III
Americas zone
Asia/Oceania zone
Europe zone
Africa zone
Group IV
Americas zone
Asia/Oceania zone
Europe zone
Africa zone
Group V
Asia/Oceania zone
Africa zone
SuspendedInactiveFormer
  • v
  • t
  • e
  • Current champions (2023):  Italy
Editions
World Groups / Finals
World Groups play-offs
Qualifying rounds
2023 Davis Cup Finals teams
Former World Group / Finals teams
Players
  • v
  • t
  • e