Soviet Union | |
---|---|
ITF ranking | N/A |
First year | 1962 |
Years played | 27 |
Ties played (W–L) | 70 (44–26) |
Years in World Group | 5 (0–5) |
Davis Cup titles | 0 |
Most total wins | Alex Metreveli (80–25) |
Most singles wins | Alex Metreveli (56–14) |
Most doubles wins | Sergei Likhachev (24–11) Alex Metreveli (24–11) |
Best doubles team | Alex Metreveli and Sergei Likhachev (18–7) |
Most ties played | Alex Metreveli (38) |
Most years played | Alex Metreveli (14) |
The Soviet Union men's national tennis team competed in 1962–1991. The team competed with the name 'Commonwealth of Independent States' in 1992. Following 1992, the nations competed as:
- Russia men's national tennis team (historical records assumed by Russia)
- Armenia men's national tennis team (began 1996)
- Azerbaijan men's national tennis team (began 1996)
- Belarus men's national tennis team (began 1994)
- Estonia men's national tennis team (played independently in 1934; resumed in 1993)
- Georgia men's national tennis team (began 1994)
- Kazakhstan men's national tennis team (began 1995)
- Kyrgyzstan men's national tennis team (began 2002)
- Latvia men's national tennis team (began 1993)
- Lithuania men's national tennis team (began 1994)
- Moldova men's national tennis team (began 1995)
- Tajikistan men's national tennis team (began 1997)
- Turkmenistan men's national tennis team (began 2004)
- Ukraine men's national tennis team (began 1993)
- Uzbekistan men's national tennis team (began 1994)
External links
Davis Cup teams | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Finals | |||||||||
World Group I | |||||||||
World Group II | |||||||||
Group III |
| ||||||||
Group IV |
| ||||||||
Group V |
| ||||||||
Suspended | |||||||||
Inactive | |||||||||
Former |
National sports teams of the Soviet Union | |
---|---|