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Georges Deniau

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French tennis player turned coach
Georges Deniau
Born (1932-12-25) 25 December 1932 (age 92)
Paris, France
Height1.85 m (6 ft 1 in)
PlaysRight-handed

Georges Deniau (born on (1932-12-25)25 December 1932 in Paris), is a French tennis player turned coach.

Biography

Georges Deniau started playing tennis in Argelès-Gazost and began competing in 1945 at the PAC (Rueil). As a player, he reached the 3rd round of the Roland-Garros singles in 1955 and 1956. During the Open Era, he played in the 1st round in 1968 against Ion Țiriac and participated in the doubles tournament annually until 1972.

After being ranked in the 1st series for 6 years, he became a coach starting in 1961 and won the French professional championship title in 1962.

He ran a tennis school at an altitude of 1600m in Flaine in the Alps. He notably worked with the France Davis Cup team in the early 1970s, and the Switzerland Davis Cup team in the 1980s, where he later served as national technical director for 5 years, leading the team to the final in the 1992 Davis Cup. As a player coach, he notably coached Guy Forget and Jakob Hlasek.

He also published several technical works, wrote articles, and was responsible for the technical pages of Tennis Magazine from 1976. In 2011, he released From the Musketeers to Federer, a work in which he recounts his encounters with great players in history, from Henri Cochet to Roger Federer.

Publications

  • Tennis total, La Jeune Parque, 1970
  • Tennis – la technique, la tactique, l'entraînement (Tennis – technique, tactics, training), Robert Laffont, 1974 ISBN 2221051556
  • How to Win in 15 Tennis Lessons, Mengès, 1982 ISBN 2856201555
  • From the Musketeers to Federer, Edilac, 2011 ISBN 2-915351-15-5

Notes and references

  1. "Finale de Coupe Davis: un "couteau suisse" bien de chez nous". Ladepeche.fr. 18 November 2014.
  2. ^ Frédéric Sugnot (4 April 2003). "In Switzerland, the coach is not neutral!". humanite.fr. Retrieved 17 August 2010.
  3. Gérard Albouy (29 June 1981). "Tennis at the top". LeMonde.fr.
  4. Julien Reboullet (19 November 2018). "Georges Deniau: "And there, McEnroe transcended Sampras"". L'Équipe.
  5. Christian Despont (7 April 2003). "Georges Deniau, the "repentant retiree", has mended the bonds within the Swiss team". Le Temps.
  6. Yves Jaton (29 January 2000). "Georges Deniau: "In Hlasek's place, I would have returned the post to Mezzadri"". Le Temps.
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