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U. S. hopes for patriotic spirit at Davis Cup

Finals on American soil for first time since 1992

Roddick of the US returns shot to Johansson of Sweden during Davis Cup semi-final tennis match in Gothenburg
Andy Roddick of the U.S. returns a shot to Joachim Johansson of Sweden during their Davis Cup semi-final match, September 21, 2007. The Americans defeated Sweden to advance to the finals Nov. 30-Dec. 2 against Russia.
Bob Strong / Reuters
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updated 6:15 p.m. ET Nov. 29, 2007

PORTLAND, Ore. - Andy Roddick expects some boisterous patriotic spirit when the United States hosts Russia this weekend for the Davis Cup.

The United State has not hosted the final in the international team tennis competition since 1992.

“I think we’re expecting a rowdy crowd just based solely on the fact that it sold out in about 17 minutes,” Roddick said. “That shows us people here want to be here and they’re excited about being here. And so are we.”

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The Davis Cup, which gets under way on Friday, sold out in less than 30 minutes when tickets went on sale. Additional tickets went on sale this week after the hardcourt was installed at Memorial Coliseum and more seating was created.

The U.S. team, under captain Patrick McEnroe, includes sixth-ranked Roddick, 13th-ranked James Blake, and the top-ranked doubles team of Bob and Mike Bryan.

They’ll be vying for the Davis Cup against Dmitry Tursunov and Mikhail Youzhny as well Nikolay Davydenko, ranked No. 4 in the world, and Igor Andreev. Shamil Tarpischev is the captain of the team.

The draw for the event was Thursday.

“I think people get excited about an opportunity to cheer for America, whether it’s the women’s World Cup when they had so much success years ago, even the men’s World Cup last year. It’s exciting to cheer and get patriotic like that,” Blake said. “I think Davis Cup is a perfect opportunity.”

Local officials on Wednesday estimated the event would bring at least $7.1 million in visitor spending to the state, through expenses including lodging, restaurants and transportation.

More than 60 percent of the ticket buyers were from outside Oregon, according to the Oregon Sports Authority, which released the estimate on Wednesday.

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“It’s a phenomenal figure, by far the highest percentage of out-of-state spectators we’ve ever seen for an event,” said Drew Mahalic, chairman of the Oregon Sports Authority.

The once-dominant United States has 31 Davis Cup titles but none in 12 years, the longest span without an American victory. Pete Sampras last led the team to victory over Russia on clay in Moscow in 1995.

The United States last hosted the Davis Cup Final in 1992, in Fort Worth, Texas. Andre Agassi, Jim Courier, Pete Sampras and John McEnroe defeated Switzerland.

Memorial Coliseum, which seats about 12,800, has hosted two previous Davis Cup events, in 1981 and 1984, both U.S. semifinal victories over Australia.

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