Roger Federer beat Richard Gasquet to seal Switzerland's first Davis
Cup triumph, then dedicated the victory to his team-mates.
The 17-time Grand Slam champion beat France's Gasquet 6-4 6-2 6-2 to give the Swiss an unassailable 3-1 lead.
"This one is for the boys," said Federer, who was in tears at the end of the match.
"This is not for me, I have won enough. I am just happy we can give everyone in our country a historic moment."
Federer, 33, also paid tribute to compatriot Stan Wawrinka, who helped set up the victory in Lille by beating Jo-Wilfried Tsonga before partnering Federer to win the doubles.
Federer and Wawrinka were involved in a row at the ATP Tour Finals in London, which the world number two later described as "heat of the moment".
Sportmasta tennis correspondent Sam Praise |
---|
"It was Tsonga's elbow, rather than Federer's back, which
proved the weak link in the end. Federer's ruthless but straightforward
victory seemed inevitable as Gasquet is not a man who enjoys playing on
Roland Garros' main court, let alone in front of a world record crowd
and with the hopes of a nation on his shoulders. |
"This has been another triumph for Federer - whose
collection could now be considered complete - but also for Wawrinka, who
played as well in the final week of the season as he did in winning the
Australian Open at the very start." |
Federer, who lost his singles rubber to Gael Monfils on Friday, played an inspired match as he crushed Gasquet, who replaced Tsonga due to an arm injury.
In front of a passionate crowd of 27,448 - a world record for a competitive tennis match - Federer dropped only four points on his imperious serve in the opening set, which he sealed with a whipping forehand winner.
World number 26 Gasquet dropped serve in the first and seventh games of the second set, which Federer took without conceding a single break point.
He broke the Frenchman twice in the final set to serve for the match and claimed victory with a deft backhand drop shot - collapsing in tears onto the clay at the Stade Pierre-Mauroyto.
The Swiss win comes a week after Federer pulled out of the Tour Finals title match against Novak Djokovic at the O2 in London to protect a back injury.
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