BRATISLAVA, Feb. 8 -- Thanks to the new format of the women's tennis Fed Cup competition, team Slovakia has a strong chance of advancing to the final tournament to be held in April in Hungary's capital Budapest, only a two hour drive from Bratislava.
The only thing that is standing in Slovakia's way is a feisty opponent, team Britain.
After the two opening singles clashes of day one of the World Group Qualifiers in Slovakia's capital, the home team is on the verge of advancing and leads Britain 2-0 in the best-of-five battle.
The second point was won by Slovakia's No. 1 Viktoria Kuzmova who triumphed in a thrilling, almost three-hour long match over team GB's No. 2 Harriet Dart 6-7, 6-3, 7-5.
Dart put on a big fight on her Fed Cup debut, disregarding her opponent's 76 places higher WTA ranking but eventually succumbed to Kuzmova's fast, aggressive performance in the third set when she capitalized on her sixth match point.
Kuzmova can seal the deal for her nation's team on Saturday against GB's No. 1 Heather Watson.
The Britons have lost all four of their previous away ties in the Fed Cup, so their chances do not seem very promising.
Earlier on Friday, Anna Karolina Schmiedlova was not forced to bring out her big guns as Watson turned out to be easy prey, reminiscent of their previous encounter in the WTA tournament in Prague.
Schmiedlova triumphed 6-2, 6-3 on her favorite clay surface of the National Tennis Centre in Bratislava, returning strong after a knee surgery kept her out of action for the better half of 2019. Enditem
Mubarak's health worsens amid political crisis
Shooting brings back gun debate
Wu concludes tour by vowing support
Trilateral naval drill raises concerns over regional stability
New plan to reduce income inequality
Debate bubbles over sugary drink ban
Miner digs deep to solve gambling addiction
All hail Kings of the NHL
Second child is a growing option
UK to blame for damaged relations with China
Bomb, gun attacks kill 107 in Iraq
Designated driver services booming in big cities
Actress Zhang Ziyi sues HK newspaper
Animals benefit from pin-point accuracy
Most people uneasy about what they eat
Fighting continues in Syria
Shooting suspect quiet as he faces court
Observers unable to reach site of killings
UK's top court backs extradition of Assange
Gates spearheads anti-smoking push
Transport workers welcome higher wages and better conditions
Bus caught fire on stack of straw
Space program seeks a mother's touch
Huge lottery win creates buzz at Sanlitun store
Aussie court rules dingo killed baby, ending 32-year mystery
Ships withdraw from island lagoon
Boys have lower bar for university entry
Star wants to attract more soccer talent from abroad
Buffett bucks trend by buying newspapers
Classes teaching women how to marry a millionaire sparks controversy