The Czech Republic won a second straight Fed Cup yesterday after Lucie Safarova gave them an un-beatable 3-1 lead over Serbia by thrashing Jelena Jankovic 6-1, 6-1.

Safarova, the world number 17, cruised past 22-ranked Jankovic in just an hour and 17 minutes, keeping the Serbian under constant pressure and earning 32 winners against Jankovic’s eight.

“It’s fantastic because it happened at home, in Prague, in front of our fans,” a triumphant Safarova said just after the game.

“It was one of the best games I’ve played in my career,” she added.

“It was unbelievable. She hardly missed one ball,” Czech team captain Petr Pala said.

The Czechs stumbled earlier in the day after Serbia’s Ana Ivanovic reduced their two rubber lead from Saturday to 2-1 by beating Petra Kvitova 6-3, 7-5.

Ivanovic, the world number 12, needed an hour and 46 minutes to sink Kvitova, the world number eight, who was grappling with the effects of an illness.

Kvitova, sweating profusely and visibly weakened by a cold that forced her to pull out of the WTA Championship last week, lost her first rubber after an 11-game Fed Cup winning streak.

“I really started swinging from the beginning and it worked well for me,” said Ivanovic, the Serbian number one, who had lost easily to Safarova on Saturday.

“I was a lot calmer and I was sort of playing the game that I’ve been playing lately,” she added.

Kvitova fought back at the end of the second set, when she broke Iva-novic’s serve for the first time and seemed on the verge of overwhelming her rival. But Ivanovic broke back as she converted the third match point in the last game.

Kvitova refused to blame the loss on her illness.

“I felt better and I found it easier to breathe than on Saturday,” she said.

“But I lost a lot of strength yesterday and I was also drained emotionally.

“I lacked energy, the doctor gave me some sugar during a bathroom break but it didn’t help much,” said Kvitova, adding she did not sleep well.

But Serbia, playing their first final ever, never had a chance to come close as Safarova rallied.

“Petra was sick so she wasn’t at her best today, and I thought OK, it’s going to be my turn this time, and I’m really happy that I did it,” said Safarova.

Last year, the Czech Republic lifted the trophy after beating Russia in Moscow 3-2.

Before that, former Czechoslovakia, which split peacefully into the Czech Republic and Slovakia in 1993, won the Fed Cup five times between 1975 and 1988.

Paris Masters final
Ferrer bt Janowicz 6-4, 6-3.

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