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Nations the Same, but Roles Changed in Davis Cup Final

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

It was snowing last weekend in Vaxjo, Sweden, where Stefan Edberg stopped to practice; and it was raining in Stuttgart, West Germany, when he got there this week. Storms, lightning and thunder? As usual, they accompany an introduction to Boris Becker.

One of the most prestigious events in tennis begins today in Becker’s back yard, where, in perhaps this sport’s ultimate twist, money is not the object. No, nationalism is at stake this weekend, the bragging rights of not just Europe, but the world of tennis.

The Davis Cup, a competition that began in 1900, will be either taken away by challenger Sweden or retained by defending champion West Germany in a rematch of last year’s final at Goteborg, where then-challenger West Germany took the title held by defending champion Sweden.

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Not only was it a classic case of role reversal, it was also classic tennis.

There was Mats Wilander, the No. 1 player in the world, taking the first two sets from Carl-Uwe Steeb but ultimately losing the match. There was Edberg cut out like a Christmas cookie by Becker. Finally, there was the vaunted Swedish doubles team of Edberg and Anders Jarryd winning the first two sets, only to fall in five sets to Becker and Eric Jelen.

The title clinched at 3-0, West Germany closed it out, 4-1, for its first Davis Cup championship. Becker, a three-time Wimbledon champion and the U.S. Open champion, put West Germany’s Davis Cup victory into perspective.

“To win the Davis Cup is the all-time highlight of my career,” Becker said. “We won it, 3-0, on the second day against Sweden on clay in their home court.”

Now, Sweden has the chance to do the same thing to West Germany. While working out in Vaxjo, Edberg considered the similarities between this year and last. He had chosen Vaxjo because there was one court in the city that had the same kind of indoor carpet, called Pegulan, that will be used in the final.

His head cold was gone, the one that bothered Edberg during the week he was in New York, where he won the Nabisco Masters tournament. But the kind of suffocating pressure that can grip your nerve endings, travel up your arms and paralyze your racket, well, they’re still going to be around.

For most of the decade, the Swedes have lived in the Davis Cup final. This is Sweden’s seventh consecutive appearance, with three victories. It should also be noted that the holder of the Davis Cup has failed to keep it each of the last three years. If all this indicates that this is Sweden’s year, well, it probably depends on Becker, the principal West German.

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His best year on the Grand Prix circuit having been concluded with two Grand Slam victories, Becker can finish in even grander style by successfully defending his country’s Davis Cup title.

Like everyone else, Edberg is wary of Becker.

“Becker is the German team,” Edberg said simply. “He really is. Of course, we cannot forget Steeb, who is a very good player as well.”

This would be sound advice. When the United States played West Germany in July, Andre Agassi called matches against Steeb “a gimme,” then promptly went out and lost to him. Steeb is ranked No. 15 in the world.

The Swedes will use Edberg and probably Wilander against Becker and Steeb, while Edberg and Jarryd are likely to play doubles against Becker and Jelen. Becker’s 13-3 record against top-10 players was the best in Grand Prix competition.

There is a chance the doubles match may decide the final, but only if there is consistency from Wilander, Sweden’s biggest variable. Wilander sank like a stone in the rankings in 1989, plunging from No. 1 to No. 12, and was 0-3 against opponents in the top 10.

“I think it’s a little bit uncertain how Mats is going to perform,” Edberg said. “I mean, he’s very eagerly practicing now, which is a good sign, but it’s totally different when they call time and you play a match.”

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To get to the final, Sweden defeated Italy, 4-1; Austria, 3-2, and Yugoslavia, 4-1. West Germany made it by beating Indonesia, 5-0; Czechoslovakia, 3-2, and the United States, 3-2.

Just reaching the final has been something of a tradition for Sweden, which has been the runner-up 14 times. Edberg said this weekend’s final in Stuttgart will be followed closely by his countrymen. And why not?

“The Davis Cup has meant a lot to me and, of course, to the Swedish people, who have been taking a lot of interest in the Davis Cup because . . . we have done so well in the past,” Edberg said. “There is a lot of tradition; it takes us a long way back. It’s one of the greatest things in tennis. You’ve got the four Grand Slams, you’ve got Davis Cup. And it’s really, really big in Sweden.

“Yes, West Germany, they are favorites coming in, but it is a little bit around to what it was last year because we were slightly the favorites, playing at home,” he said. “But I guess we’re in their position. We feel like we’ve got nothing to lose. Hopefully, we can take the title back to Sweden.”

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