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The heartbreaking choice of Sylvain Bruneau

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The heartbreaking choice of Sylvain Bruneau

Thirty-five years after entering the offices of Tennis Canada, Sylvain Bruneau decided it was time to move on. Not because the flame went out, but because he chose to listen to himself. For her family. Interview with one of the most important architects of Canadian tennis.

The rain had stopped in Montreal on Friday afternoon. At the gates of the weekend, Sylvain Bruneau had two towels in his hands to wipe the seats on which the conversation would take place, in the second row of bleachers on the edge of the central court of the IGA stadium.

A ground he has trodden thousands of times. Over time, it became his office. An empty stadium is both intimidating and poetic. Like an abandoned stage after a play. Or a house emptied of its furniture that we are about to leave.

By leaving his role as head of women’s tennis at the national federation for that of analyst at the Sports Network (RDS), Bruneau is leaving his second home in a way. Where his memories piled up and where he realized his dreams.

“It’s a big part of my life. Almost everything I’ve done in tennis, I’ve done at Tennis Canada,” explained Bruneau, his foot resting on the seat in front of him.

He came to Tennis Canada at the age of 23 in 1988 for casual duties. Ten years later, he became a full-time employee.

“I was there at a time when we were, honestly, not very good at tennis. And I was also part of the transformation. I went through all the steps. I have the feeling of accomplishment. But I’m not leaving with a bittersweet feeling or because I’m fed up. I still would have had the motivation. »

On the television

The Quebecer will now act as an analyst of tennis matches at RDS. He had already tried the experience between 2015 and 2017, just before joining the entourage of Bianca Andreescu. The network repatriated him after his separation from the player, in June 2021.

“I liked it and it helped me in my coaching with Bianca to watch so many men’s games. It helped me shape his game,” he explains.

The reconciliation of his employment at Tennis Canada and that at RDS had become too difficult to manage, however, he admits. Between his presence on the air and his travels to supervise his players, the schedule and the workload had become unbearable.

PHOTO HUGO-SÉBASTIEN AUBERT, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Sylvain Bruneau

“It’s very demanding physically and mentally, the role I had here at Tennis Canada. Then I had conversations with Tennis Canada about how we could do a wedding. We did that for a while, but I thought it was way too much. »

He then turned to his family. “I had to make a very difficult choice. »

Because ultimately, he had sworn to himself, after his crazy epic alongside Andreescu, never again to be absent and away for such a long time. In order to be closer to his wife and daughters. However, with the overlapping of his mandates as coach and analyst, he no longer felt able to respect his commitment.

“My family remains my priority,” he says.

A new role

Bruneau has already proven himself on television. His experience and his vocabulary make him a safe bet for RDS, which can already count on “an exceptional team”.

“Sometimes I’m afraid of being too technical. I feel like going somewhere, but sometimes I wonder if I’m going to lose people, because it’s too much. I try to find a balance,” he explains.

By his own admission, Bruneau is incapable of watching a game just for fun, without analyzing every move, every decision, every strategy. Like a director in front of a film at the cinema. From now on, he will be able to do so while educating Quebec tennis fans, by popularizing everything that goes through the mind of a coach of his caliber.

“I think the role of analyst is important. Make tennis known and loved. Share a vision, an experience and a strategy. And to discover tennis through the work of an analyst. It’s part of the promotion of sport and it appeals to me. Develop tennis other than by the result. »

Bianca, 2019 and recognition

Even though Bruneau has built his fame and reputation over more than three decades, the year 2019 has truly propelled him to stardom.

The three titles won by Andreescu that year marked the spirits. We talk about it with nostalgia, as if these memories belonged to another era, but that was barely four years ago.


PHOTO OLIVIER JEAN, LA PRESSE ARCHIVES

Sylvain Bruneau and Bianca Andreescu in training in 2019

Many people remember seeing Bruneau squatting in front of the then 18-year-old Andreescu, shouting at her: I want it so bad!alluding to the Indian Wells tournament trophy, in the middle of the final.

Fans still remember his victory at the National Bank Open in Toronto a few months later.

Everyone remembers where he was when, in the weeks that followed, the Canadian became a Grand Slam champion at the United States Open.

This final in New York completely changed Bruneau’s trajectory and influence. However, he says he never watched this match against Serena Williams afterwards. No doubt to preserve an intact memory of this grandiose moment. He especially remembers the frightening noise and the electricity in the air.

But a bit like Roch Voisine with Helen or Celine Dion with My heart Will Go On, Bruneau is a little taken with this success.

Instinctively, it’s the first subject you think of when discussing your career.

“It’s normal that people keep coming back to this. I’m not tired of talking about it, ”he says.

However, this experience is not necessarily what comes to mind when he thinks back to the year 2019, he admits. “I mainly think about the path to get there. When I think back to Bianca, I don’t just land the US Open in my thoughts. I fall back into banal moments, which no one saw, when she was in small tournaments and she was rising. »

If he managed to guide her to such a triumph, it is thanks to his children. Because we always come back.

I evolved as a coach and as an individual because I became a father. It changed me a lot. It made me more sensitive, more understanding. I was very military, very demanding, rigid.

Sylvain Bruneau

Today, he wants to return the favor to his loved ones.

Returning to the tunnel through which the players arrive on the central, Bruneau gives the impression of walking lighter. And do it with your head held high.

In December, he will leave this stadium once and for all, where a souvenir could be placed on each seat. The Dutch Noelle van Lottum will take her place.

“Good things have happened here. I think I leave a beautiful project to Noëlle. »

Source: lapresse

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Rublev on his next opponent at the Australian Open: “You told me the name, but I still don’t know who it is”

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Rublev on his next opponent at the Australian Open: “You told me the name, but I still don’t know who it is”

Russian tennis player Andrei Rublev told how the presence of former world number one Marat Safin on the coaching staff influences him, and also admitted that he knows nothing about his next opponent in the Australian Open bracket.

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— What does cooperation with Marat Safin give you? Are we talking about practicing exercises in training or about some technical and tactical issues?

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– Let’s talk about your next opponent Jaime Faria. Do you know anything about him?

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Safin and Rublev have been collaborating since the spring of 2025. Now the Russian is 15th in the ATP rankings, Faria is 151st in the world.

    Source: Sportbox

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    Australian Open Medvedev qualified in three sets for the 2nd round

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    Australian Open Medvedev qualified in three sets for the 2nd round

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    Source: lapresse

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    First loss of the top 10: The eighth ATP number ended the match at the Aus Open early

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    First loss of the top 10: The eighth ATP number ended the match at the Aus Open early

    Canadian tennis player Felix Auger-Aliassime (ATP 8) finished competing at the 2026 Australian Open.

    He went to court against the Canadian player in the first round. Nuno Borgesha (Portugal, ATP 46). After three sets, Auger refused to continue the match and the match ended after 2 hours and 16 minutes.

    Australian Open 2026. 1/64 finals

    Nuno Borges (Portugal) – Felix Auger-Aliassime (Canada) [7] – 3:6, 6:4, 6:4

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    Video review of the match

    Photo gallery of the match

    Getty Images/Global Images Ukraine
    Getty Images/Global Images Ukraine
    Getty Images/Global Images Ukraine
    Getty Images/Global Images Ukraine

    Source: Sport UA

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