The 2006 Fed Cup was the 44th edition of the most important competition between national teams in women's tennis.

2006 Fed Cup
Details
Duration22 April – 17 September
Edition44th
Achievements (singles)
2005
2007

The final took place at Spiroudome in Charleroi, Belgium, on 16–17 September. The home team, Belgium, lost to Italy, 2–3, giving Italy their first title in their first final and Belgium's second final.

World Group

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Participating Teams

Austria

Belgium

France

Germany

Italy

Russia

Spain

United States

Draw

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Quarterfinals
22–23 April
Semifinals
15–16 July
Final
16–17 September
Liège, Belgium (Indoor hard)
1  Russia2
Ostend, Belgium (Indoor hard)
 Belgium3
 Belgium4
Ettenheim, Germany (Outdoor clay)
4  United States1
 Germany2
Charleroi, Belgium (Indoor hard)
4  United States3
 Belgium2
Valencia, Spain (Outdoor clay)
 Italy3
3  Spain5
Zaragoza, Spain (Outdoor clay)
 Austria0
3  Spain1
Nancy, France (Indoor clay)
 Italy3
 Italy4
2  France1

World Group play-offs

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The four losing teams in the World Group first round ties (Austria, France, Germany and Russia), and four winners of the World Group II ties (China, Croatia, Czech Republic and Japan) entered the draw for the World Group play-offs.

Date: 15–16 July

VenueSurfaceHome teamScoreVisiting team
Tokyo, JapanIndoor hard  Japan5–0  Austria
Cagnes-sur-Mer, FranceOutdoor clay  France3–2  Czech Republic
Beijing, ChinaIndoor hard  China4–1  Germany
Umag, CroatiaOutdoor clay  Croatia2–3  Russia

World Group II

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The World Group II was the second highest level of Fed Cup competition in 2006. Winners will advance to the World Group play-offs, and losers played in the World Group II play-offs.

Date: 22–23 April

VenueSurfaceHome teamScoreVisiting team
Tokyo, JapanIndoor hard  Japan4–1   Switzerland
Zagreb, CroatiaIndoor carpet  Croatia3–2  Argentina
Bangkok, ThailandOutdoor hard  Thailand1–4  Czech Republic
Jakarta, IndonesiaOutdoor hard  Indonesia0–4  China

World Group II play-offs

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The four losing teams from World Group II (Argentina, Indonesia, Switzerland and Thailand) played off against qualifiers from Zonal Group I. Two teams qualified from Europe/Africa Zone (Israel and Slovakia), one team from the Asia/Oceania Zone (Australia), and one team from the Americas Zone (Canada).

Date: 14–15 July

VenueSurfaceHome teamScoreVisiting team
Ramat HaSharon, IsraelOutdoor hard  Israelw/o  Indonesia
Edmonton, CanadaOutdoor hard  Canada3–2  Argentina
Bratislava, SlovakiaIndoor hard  Slovakia5–0  Thailand
Chavannes-de-Bogis, SwitzerlandOutdoor hard   Switzerland0–5  Australia

Americas Zone

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  • Nations in bold advanced to the higher level of competition.
  • Nations in italics were relegated down to a lower level of competition.

Group I

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Venue: Club Campestre de Medellín, Medellín, Colombia (outdoor clay)

Dates: 19–22 April

Participating Teams

Group II

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Venue: Parque del Este, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic (outdoor hard)

Dates: 18–20 April

Participating Teams

Asia/Oceania Zone

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  • Nations in bold advanced to the higher level of competition.
  • Nations in italics were relegated down to a lower level of competition.

Group I

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Venue: Olympic Park, Seoul, South Korea (outdoor hard)

Dates: 20–22 April

Participating Teams

Group II

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Venue: Olympic Park, Seoul, South Korea (outdoor hard)

Dates: 20–21 April

Participating Teams

Europe/Africa Zone

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  • Nations in bold advanced to the higher level of competition.
  • Nations in italics were relegated down to a lower level of competition.

Group I

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Venue: TC Lokomotiv, Plovdiv, Bulgaria (outdoor clay)

Dates: 17–22 April

Participating Teams

Group II

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Venue: Club Ali Bey, Manavgat, Antalya, Turkey (outdoor clay)

Dates: 26–29 April

Participating Teams

Group III

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Venue: Club Ali Bey, Manavgat, Antalya, Turkey (outdoor clay)

Dates: 26–29 April

Participating Teams

Rankings

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The rankings were measured after the three points during the year that play took place, and were collated by combining points earned from the previous four years.[1]

24 April
RankNationPoints[2]Move
1  Russia35,267.5
2  France27,910.0
3  Spain14,502.5
4  United States14,275.0
5  Belgium9,987.5 1
6  Italy8,855.0 2
7  Austria7,875.0 2
8  Slovakia7,077.5 1
9  Germany4,762.5
10  Japan4,437.5 4
17 July
RankNationPoints[2]Move
1  Russia31,960.0
2  France23,292.5
3  Belgium14,592.5 2
4  Italy13,510.0 2
5  United States11,442.5 1
6  Spain10,957.5 3
7  China5,822.5 6
8  Japan5,767.5 2
9  Slovakia5,407.55 1
10  Austria5,030.0 3
18 September
RankNationPoints[2]Move
1  Russia27,860.0
2  Italy21,690.0 2
3  France21,247.5 1
4  Belgium14,592.5 1
5  United States11,442.5
6  Spain10,957.5
7  China5,822.5
8  Japan5,767.5
9  Austria5,030.0 1
10  Canada3,995.0 1

References

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  1. ^ "Rankings Explained". fedcup.com. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
  2. ^ a b c Fed Cup Nations Ranking History. ITF. 2012.
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