He might not have won the match against supremely talented Shapovalov but pushed the 18-year-old Canadian before losing the second singles 6-7(2) 4-6 7-6(6) 6-4 1-6 after battling hard for three hours and 52 minutes.
"Personally, it was a very good Davis Cup tie for me. I will rate it among top three matches in my career, in terms of quality of play, in terms of fightback and duration of the match. We could not win but we fought well. Ram also played well. He pulled off a great win (on Day one). It was close and good," Yuki, who is ranked 152 in the world, told PTI during an exclusive interaction.
"I would not say it was a good opportunity missed since we played better than expected. We were playing a team which had one top-50 singles player and two Wimbledon doubles champions. Playing a World Group Play-off was always going to be tough when India are playing a team above their level.
"In terms of rankings and in terms of quality of players, the squads of Serbia and Czech Republic are better but any team coming down from World Group is very difficult to beat."
Also Read
Asked what he gains out of these wins after a troubled 2016 season, of which he missed a good part due to a injury, Yuki replied,"It's the confidence."
"But I need more consistency. I have played a lot of matches this year, just need to keep going. The focus is to finish (the 2017 season) strong."
Yuki admitted that to qualify for the World Group and stay there, India needs either better singles players or he and for Ramkumar to get better in the ATP rankings.
"There is level where we are. Both me and Ram are around 150 and by the end of the year we will be around 120. But you need someone, who is consistently in top-50 but at the same time there is a big improvement if we compare it to the scenario we had five or 10 years back. We have a lot of options now. We have to got closer but still far from becoming a force," he opined.
Yuki is also of the opinion that Indian Davis Cup team needs a better doubles player to do well.
In the last four ties, India lost the doubles thrice (Canada, Spain, New Zealand) and won only against Uzbekistan.
"We need someone in the top-10, top-20 to help Rohan out there. In the past, it was a sure shot point because we had Grand Slam champions in our squad. Mahesh and Leander played for at least 20 years. Rohan is doing well for the past 10 years.
"It's a more of a transition phase. It will take some time but it's not an area of concern as we have more doubles players around now. There is Jeevan (Neduncheziyan) hovering around 100, there is (N Sriram) Balaji and others (Purav Raja and Divij Sharan), who are 50-60 in the world," he said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content