Sports | tennis Doubles Win Keeps France Alive in Cup Top-ranked Bryans fall as US fails to clinch semifinals spot By Mitch Pritchard Posted Apr 12, 2008 5:14 PM CDT Copied Mike Bryan, right, and Bob Bryan, left, react during their Davis Cup tennis quarterfinals doubles match against France in Winston-Salem, N.C., Saturday, April 12, 2008. (AP Photo/Chuck Burton) Frenchmen Michael Llodra and Arnaud Clement rallied past top-ranked twins Bob and Mike Bryan 6-7 (7), 7-5, 6-3, 6-4 to cut the Americans' lead to 2-1 in their Davis Cup quarterfinal today. The Bryans had been 14-1 in Davis Cup play and 5-0 in clinching situations, but they couldn't secure a spot for the United States in the semifinals against Spain. Llodra and Clement raised their record to 4-2 against the Bryans, keeping the French alive going into reverse singles. A day after Andy Roddick and James Blake put the U.S. in command with wins, the Bryans wasted a chance to pass John McEnroe and Peter Fleming as the winningest U.S. Davis Cup doubles team. Tomorrow, Roddick plays either Paul-Henri Mathieu or Richard Gasquet and Blake plays the final match. Read These Next Police pin blame for airport fiasco on Nancy Mace. Trump doesn't want Clarence Thomas or Samuel Alito to retire. President Trump begins campaign to turn the affordability narrative. China hits an unprecedented economic milestone. Report an error