OSTRAVA: Lukas Rosol and Thanasi Kokkinakis will play the opening rubber in the Davis Cup World Group first-round tie between the Czech Republic and Australia in the eastern Czech city of Ostrava on Friday.
Australia captain Wally Masur pulled a surprise when he named Kokkinakis, the world number 133, overlooking veteran star Lleyton Hewitt and Sam Groth.
The 18-year-old rising star will play his second Davis Cup rubber against 31st-ranked Rosol, who is eleven years older.
"Got taste of Davis Cup in France playing the dead rubber, excited to play a live rubber here in Czech," the Australian team quoted Kokkinakis as saying on Twitter after the draw.
"We've got a team that can get three wins on the board however it plays out," added Groth.
Australia's spearhead Bernard Tomic, the world number 38, was drawn on Thursday to face 45th-ranked Jiri Vesely in the opening day's second singles rubber.
"I always play my best tennis at the Davis Cup," Tomic said after the draw.
In Saturday's doubles, Jan Mertl and Adam Pavlasek will take on Groth and Hewitt, but the Czech team are almost certain to change the lineup.
"Rosol and Vesely may play all the rubbers but I have no clear idea now," said Czech captain Jaroslav Navratil.
"I have to wait until after the singles. I'll see how the two of them are and then I'll decide on the doubles."
Both teams are without their top players as Czech number one Tomas Berdych has decided to skip the tie to focus on his singles career while teammate Radek Stepanek and Australia's Nick Kyrgios are injured.
History favours Australia who have won six out of seven ties against the Czech Republic or its predecessor Czechoslovakia.
In their last tie, Australia trounced the Czechs 5-0 in the 1997 quarter-finals in Adelaide.
Australia have won the Davis Cup 28 times -- second only behind the United States with 32 wins -- but its last title dates back to 2003.
The Czechs lifted the trophy in 2012 and 2013, three decades after the former Czechoslovakia won in 1980 with a team led by then 20-year-old Ivan Lendl.
Czechoslovakia split into the Czech Republic and Slovakia in 1993, four years after shedding its totalitarian Communist rule of four decades.
In the 2014 edition, both rivals lost to France -- Australia in the first round and the Czech Republic in the semi-finals.
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