What is the Davis Cup? Format, history, past winners of tournament dubbed 'World Cup of Tennis'

Liam Happe

What is the Davis Cup? Format, history, past winners of tournament dubbed 'World Cup of Tennis' image

The Davis Cup is referred to as "the tennis answer to the World Cup" for a reason.

In fact, with roots dating back to the year 1900, the Davis Cup has, in one format or another, a claim to seniority over football's iconic tournament.

Ahead of the latest edition of the Davis Cup finals, here's a rundown of the history of the event and its changes over the years.

When was the first Davis Cup?

The first took place in 1900, known at the time as the International Lawn Tennis Challenge. Four members of Harvard University made a proposal to take on British players. One of the American players, Dwight F. Davis, designed a tournament format and ordered a sterling silver trophy from Shreve, Crump & Low.

 The first match, held at Longwood Cricket Club in Boston, Massachusetts, was won by the Americans 3–0. There was no match in 1901, but the United States retained the trophy in 1902, beating Britain 3–2. 

When did the Davis Cup begin in its current format?

The Cup became a knockout tournament in 1972. There have been some additional evolutions since then, too.

In 1981, a tiered system was created, in which the 16 best national teams compete in the World Group and all other national teams compete in one of four groups across three regional zones.

In 1989, the tiebreak was introduced into Davis Cup competition, and from 2016 it has been used in all five sets.

From 2019, the tournament became an 18-team event taking place at the end of that year's tennis season. This move in particular accelerated comparisons to the football World Cup.

Who has won the most Davis Cups?

Here are the biggest-performing nations by titles won, all-time:

NationDavis Cup wins
United States32
Australia/Australasia28
France10
Great Britain/British Isles10
Sweden7
Spain6
Russia/RTF3
Germany/West Germany3
Czech Republic/Czechoslovakia3
Italy2
Croatia2
Argentina1
Serbia1
Switzerland1
Canada1
South Africa1

Who won the most Davis Cups in the modern era?

Here are the number of wins per nation since 1972:

NationCups since '72FirstMost recent
USA919722007
Sweden719751998
Australia619732003
Spain620002019
France419912017
Germany/W. Germany319881993
Czech Rep./Czechoslovakia319802013
Russia/RTF320022021
Italy219762023
Croatia220052018
South Africa119741974
Serbia120102010
Switzerland120142014
Great Britain120152015
Argentina120162016
Canada120222022

Who are the current Davis Cup holders?

Italy won the 2023 Davis Cup, their second overall and first in almost 50 years.

The 2024 edition of the tournament takes place from November 19-24, with the big story heading into the event being Rafael Nadal declaring it his last before retiring.

However Spain went out to the Netherlands in the quarterfinals and Nadal's legendary career is now over.

Liam Happe

Liam Happe Photo

Liam is a freelance editor for The Sporting News working across global English editions.