MALMO, Sweden (AP)—While demonstrators clashed with police outside the near-empty stadium, Sweden won the doubles match Saturday to take a 2-1 lead against Israel in the Davis Cup series.
Simon Aspelin and Robert Lindstedt defeated Israelis Andy Ram and Amir Hadad 6-4, 1-6, 7-6 (4), 6-4 as police held off dozens of anti-Israel protesters who tried to storm the barricades outside the 4,000-seat Baltic Hall.
The players found out about the melee after the match.
“We knew there were going to be a few thousand people screaming out there,” Ram said. “Inside here we didn’t feel anything. The police did a good job.”
Only 300 special guests were allowed inside the hall to watch Ram and Hadad save two match points before Lindstedt’s drop shot winner clinched the match. Malmo officials had closed the venue to the public, citing security risks and protests against Israel because of the recent offensive in the Gaza Strip.
Earlier in the week, Ram said it was a “stupid decision” to play the match behind closed doors.
“Playing without a crowd is like playing a practice match,” Ram said.
On Sunday, Israel’s Dudi Sela is scheduled to play Thomas Johansson in reverse singles, followed by Harel Levy against Andreas Vinciguerra.
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