ALBERTVILLE, France — Adrian Mannarino sent defending champion France through to the quarterfinals of the Davis Cup, rallying from a set and 5-3 down Sunday to beat Robin Haase of the Netherlands 4-6, 7-6 (5), 7-5, 6-7 (2), 7-5 in a topsy-turvy World Group encounter.
After 4 hours, 20 minutes of an arduous contest featuring 34 break-point chances, Haase’s miscued volley at net went out and gave Mannarino match point.
He took it following a brief rally when Haase failed to return a whipped forehand into his feet. Mannarino punched the air as the French team celebrated wildly and poured water over Mannarino’s head.
The exhausted Haase walked straight off court having played 10 ½ hours over three days.
France has an insurmountable 3-1 lead ahead of the final reverse singles later Sunday and plays Italy in the last eight in April.
The 25th-ranked Mannarino had more winners than Haase — 61 to 47 — but was wasteful in converting only four of his 26 break-point chances, while Haase took three of his eight. Mannarino had 21 aces to Haase’s 19.
Mannarino, a late replacement for the injured Lucas Pouille, made up for his upset defeat on Friday to Thiemo de Bakker, ranked 369th. Richard Gasquet made it 1-1 by beating Haase, before Nicolas Mahut and Pierre-Hugues Herbert beat Haase and Jean-Julien Rojer on Saturday for a 2-1 lead for France.
Early on, Haase looked sharp against a cautious Mannarino.
The 42nd-ranked Dutchman broke for a 2-1 lead when Mannarino patted a woeful forehand wide, and then served two aces for 3-1. He could have secured a double break but Mannarino saved the fifth game with an ace at 30-40.
Haase was more aggressive than Mannarino in the first set and covered the court well. A volley at the net gave him set point and he sealed it with an ace.
He broke the Frenchman in the seventh game of the second set and held for 5-3. But Mannarino broke back for 5-5 after Haase cracked first in a 35-shot rally. Mannarino edged a tense tiebreaker and appeared to have the momentum.
Haase saved break points in his first three service games of the third set. Finally, Mannarino’s pressure paid off when he broke to love for 6-5 and clinched the set on serve.
But then it was Mannarino’s turn to waver as he was broken when serving for the match at 5-4 in the fourth set. Haas then dominated the tiebreaker to send the match into a deciding set.
GERMANY VS. AUSTRALIA
BRISBANE, Australia — Alexander Zverev has powered Germany through to the quarterfinals of the Davis Cup World Group, beating Australia’s Nick Kyrgios 6-2, 7-6 (3), 6-2 in the first reverse singles Sunday.
Germany went into Sunday’s play leading 2-1 after a doubles win Saturday. The final singles match between Australia’s Alex de Minaur and Jan-Lennard Struff was not played, giving Germany a 3-1 win.
"It’s an amazing feeling, hopefully this is just the beginning for us," the fifth-ranked Zverev said.
German captain Michael Kolhmann agreed.
"Against a really strong Australian team it makes us really confident," he said. "We showed we have a lot of good players, a lot of strong players. We showed that we are able to go further than this."
Germany will play either Britain or Spain in the quarterfinals from April 6-8.
No. 14-ranked Kyrgios looked frustrated from the start of the match on hard courts at Pat Rafter Arena, and required a second-set medical timeout to receive treatment on his right arm.
Kyrgios was clearly restricted ahead of the second-set tiebreak, earning a point penalty to trail 4-0 after slamming his racket into the ground following another unforced error — he made 34 in the match.
"My biggest weapon (serve) was not really there and that affects the rest of my game," he said.
Australia captain Lleyton Hewitt said the scoreline wasn’t indicative of the closeness of the tie.
"It’s obviously frustrating. Two of those five-set losses could have gone either way (but) that’s Davis Cup tennis," Hewitt said. "You have two quality teams going at it. Sometimes that’s how it falls."
On Saturday, Tim Puetz and late call-up Struff gave Germany its 2-1 lead, beating Matt Ebden and John Peers 6-4, 6-7 (1), 6-2, 6-7 (4), 6-4.
On Friday, Zverev gave Germany a 1-0 lead with a 7-5, 4-6, 4-6, 6-3, 7-6 (4) win over de Minaur before Kyrgios leveled for Australia with a 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 win over Struff.
Australia will contest September’s World Group playoffs.
ITALY VS. JAPAN
MORIOKA, Japan — Fabio Fognini powered Italy through to the quarterfinals of the Davis Cup World Group, beating Japan’s Yuichi Sugita 3-6, 6-1, 3-6, 7-6(6), 7-5 in the first reverse singles on Sunday.
Italy went into Sunday’s play leading 2-1 after a doubles win on Saturday and Fognini’s five-set victory in his opening singles match on Friday.
Fognini trailed 4-1 in the final set as Sugita sought to take the tie to a fifth match but the Italian rallied to secure the win.
At 40-15 in the final game, Sugita saved the first match point before hitting long on the second.
Italy advanced to its fifth quarterfinals in the past six years while Japan will have to win in the playoffs in September in order to return to the World Group next season.