First round, beat United States 3-2, Glasgow

It was the second year in a row Britain had met the US in the first round, but this time Leon Smith's side were at home. And for the second year in a row James Ward pulled off a big upset on day one, this time coming from two sets down to beat John Isner. The Bryan brothers edged another five-setter in the doubles against Jamie Murray and Dominic Inglot but Andy Murray defeated Isner to clinch victory for Britain.

Quarter-finals, beat France 3-1, London

One of the Murray brothers' finest weekends. Andy defeated Jo-Wilfried Tsonga on the first day at Queen's Club after Gilles Simon had easily seen off Ward. In the crucial doubles, Andy and Jamie came from a set down to beat Tsonga and Nicolas Mahut, and Andy staged another comeback on the final day to beat Simon in four sets before collapsing into his chair in tears.

Semi-finals, beat Australia 3-2, Glasgow

On paper this was a slightly easier tie and Andy Murray had no trouble defeating Thanasi Kokkinakis in the first singles before Bernard Tomic levelled matters with a four-set win over Dan Evans. The doubles again was the pivotal rubber, this time the Murray brothers getting the better of Lleyton Hewitt and Sam Groth in five gripping sets. Andy then claimed the decisive point with a straight-sets win against Tomic.

Final, beat Belgium 3-1, Ghent

Britain went into the final as big favourites against surprise finalists Belgium. Debutant Kyle Edmund almost caused a shock in the opening rubber when he led Goffin by two sets to love but the Belgian number one hit back to win in five. Andy Murray levelled matters, defying a raucous crowd to beat Ruben Bemelmans, and the Murray brothers won a tense four-setter in the doubles. That left it to Andy Murray to complete his stunning year in the competition by beating Goffin to clinch the trophy.