fbpx
Wikipedia

Robert Bédard (tennis)

Robert Bédard (born 13 September 1931)[1] is a Canadian former tennis player and educator. He is the most recent Canadian winner of the Canadian Open Tennis Championships.

Robert Bédard
Country (sports)Canada
Born (1931-09-13) September 13, 1931 (age 92)
Saint-Hyacinthe, Quebec, Canada
PlaysRight-handed
Singles
Career record198-109
Career titles30
Highest ranking1 (1955 Canada)
Grand Slam singles results
French Open3R (1954)
Wimbledon3R (1954)
US Open3R (1955, 1956, 1959, 1961)
Doubles
Grand Slam doubles results
Wimbledon1R (1954)
Mixed doubles
Grand Slam mixed doubles results
Wimbledon1R (1957)
Team competitions
Davis CupNorth American Zone and Interzone finals (1953, 1955, 1959)

Bédard won three Canadian Open singles titles in 1955 (over Henri Rochon in the final), 1957 (over Ramanathan Krishnan in the final) and 1958 (over Whitney Reed in the final). Bédard won a record seven Quebec Open singles championships and two Ontario Open singles titles. Bédard won the ILTF Sutton Hard Courts or ILTF Surrey Hard Court Championships on clay at Sutton, England in 1957. That same season he won the North of England Hard Court Championships on clay at Southport, England. He won the USLTA Eastern Clay Court Championships in 1960. His career titles won was 30 tournaments, mostly on clay, in a very restricted playing career often confined to just the summer months.

Bédard was considered among the top ten clay court players in the world and was the top-ranked Canadian singles player in 11 consecutive years from 1955 to 1965. At the height of his career, he was unbeaten in 216 consecutive matches against Canadian players.

Bédard represented Canada in Davis Cup play for many years, reaching North America Zone and Interzone Finals in 1953, 1955, and 1959. During his career, he defeated No. 1 players of 20 different countries, including Australia and the U.S..

Bédard was a multi-sport athlete and was offered professional contracts with the New York Rangers ice hockey team and the Cleveland Indians baseball team, which he declined in favour of a career in academia. He became the principal of St. Andrew's College, an elite private preparatory collegiate, from 1981 to 1997.

Tennis career edit

Summary edit

Born in Saint-Hyacinthe, Quebec, Bédard began playing tennis at the relatively late age of 15,[2] and tennis was always his second sport to ice hockey. Bédard continued to play minor league ice hockey during the winter months and minor league baseball during the summer months.

Bédard is the most recent Canadian to win the Canadian Open men's singles championship, triumphing in 1955 (defeating Henri Rochon in the final), 1957 (defeating Ramanathan Krishnan in a four sets final), and 1958 (defeating Whitney Reed in the final). He won the doubles title three times, in 1955, 1957, and 1959 with compatriot Don Fontana. He won the mixed doubles title in 1959 partnering Mariette Laframboise. Bédard holds the record at the Canadian Open Championships for the most appearances with 17. He won the Montreal Cup at age 20.[2] Bédard won a record seven Quebec Open Championships singles titles between 1955 and 1970,[3] two Ontario Open singles titles, six Oakville Invitational singles titles, and three Nova Scotia Championships. Bédard won the ILTF Sutton Hard Courts or ILTF Surrey Hard Court Championships on clay at Sutton, England in 1957. That same season he won the North of England Hard Court Championships at Southport, England. He won the USLTA Eastern Clay Court Championships singles title in 1960 in his only appearance at the event.

Bédard competed in the French Championships twice, Wimbledon four times, and the U.S. Nationals eleven times.[4] His best showing at a Grand Slam event was reaching the round of 32, which he did once at both Roland Garros and Wimbledon, both in 1954, and four times at Forest Hills, in 1955, 1956, 1959, and in 1961.

Despite having a very limited time in tennis play, in many years playing tournaments only in the summer months, Bédard was an outstanding clay court player, with 30 tournament wins against many well-known clay specialists. During his career, Bédard defeated No. 1 players of 20 different countries, including Australia (Adrian Quist, Roy Emerson), the U.S. (Whitney Reed, Dick Savitt), Great Britain (Bobby Wilson, Mike Sangster), Canada (Lorne Main, Henri Rochon, Don McCormick, Jim Boyce), Italy (Nicola Pietrangeli, Orlando Sirola), Sweden (Sven Davidson, Ulf Schmidt), France (Paul Rémy, Pierre Darmon), Germany (Rupert Huber), Belgium (Jacques Brichant), Denmark (Kurt Nielsen, Torben Ulrich), Mexico (Mario Llamas, Rafael Osuna), Guatemala (Juan Jose Hermosilla), Cuba (Reynaldo Garrido), Brazil (Armando Vieira), Ecuador (Eduardo Zuleta), South Africa (Gordon Forbes, Bob Mark), Rhodesia (Adrian Bey[5]), India (Ramanathan Krishnan), Viet Nam (Christian Duxin), Philippines (Willie Hernández).[6] Bédard defeated many World top ten players, of whom Savitt, Emerson, Osuna achieved World No. 1 ranking, Davidson achieved World No. 2, Quist, Pietrangeli, Krishnan achieved World No. 3, Nielsen, Straight Clark achieved World No. 4, Bryan Grant achieved World No. 6, Sangster, Eugene Scott, and Ron Holmberg achieved World No. 7, Schmidt, Darmon, Mark achieved World No. 8, and Brichant achieved World No. 9. Reed was ranked No. 1 in the U.S..

College tennis player edit

During the 1952–53 school year, Bédard attended UCLA on a tennis scholarship provided by his home community supporters in Sherbrooke, Quebec.[2] This would be his only formal tennis coaching, and he was otherwise a self-taught player. During that same scholastic year, Bédard's fellow Canadian tennis player and later Davis Cup teammate Don Fontana was also in the UCLA tennis program on a tennis scholarship. Bédard and Fontana played against Bill Tilden and his student in possibly the final matches of Tilden's life, shortly before he died.[7]

Amateur edit

1952–1953 edit

Bédard won the Montreal Cup in August 1952 beating Jack Spencer in the final.[8] Bédard also won the Nova Scotia Championships that year.[9]

In 1953, Bédard reached the semi-finals of the Quebec championships, losing in three straight sets to Lorne Main.[10] Bédard was ranked Canadian No. 2 for 1953 behind Main.

1954 edit

Bédard reached the final of the Hollywood Beach Invitational, losing in three straight sets to Gardnar Mulloy. He later reached the final of the 1954 Stuttgart Open, losing to Gottfried von Cramm. He was a quarterfinalist at the 1954 Italian Open, winning a five-set marathon over Sven Davidson despite losing the first two sets, and later losing to defending champion Jaroslav Drobný. At the 1954 French Open, Bédard defeated Xavier Perreau-Saussine in the second round in a long five-set match.[11] The No. 1 seed for the tournament, Lew Hoad, defeated Bédard in the third round at Roland Garros in three close sets. A month later, Bédard won his first match at Wimbledon, a close four set victory over Gordon Forbes, and also won his second round match. Fred Perry, who covered Wimbledon for BBC, stated that Bédard was the most complete athlete in the tournament and noted his competitive zeal in matches.[12] Hoad, the Wimbledon No. 2 seed, eliminated Bédard in the third round in four sets, Bédard winning the third set from Hoad. Bédard reached the final of the Quebec Open championships, where he lost a long four-set match to Lorne Main, who had won the Monte Carlo and Belgian titles that season on red clay in Europe. Bédard was ranked Canadian No. 2 for 1954 behind Main.

1955 edit

In European play, Bédard won a close five set match against Orlando Sirola in the second round of the Italian Championships. Bédard reached the semifinal at Cannes, defeating Jacques Brichant, but lost to Władysław Skonecki. He won a close match against Nicola Pietrangeli in the Queen's Club Championships, but lost in the third round to Hoad. At the 1955 Wimbledon Championships, Bédard lost in the first round to Herb Flam. In 1955, Bédard won his first Canadian Open championship at Quebec City in August on clay. Bédard defeated Val Harit in the quarterfinal, Don Fontana in the semifinal and Henri Rochon in the final.[13] Rochon had eliminated Lorne Main in the other semifinal. Bédard teamed with his Davis Cup partner Fontana to win the Canadian Open doubles title. Bédard won the Nova Scotia Championships for 1955.[14] Bédard also beat Rochon in the final of the Quebec championships in July.[15] He reached the third round at Forest Hills in 1955 for the first of an eventual four times, but again it was Hoad that he came up against, this time Hoad winning in three straight sets.

1956 edit

In July Bédard won the Quebec Open over Fontana in the final.[16] He also won the Ontario Championships in July beating Paul Willey in the final, Willey having a win over Pietrangeli at Florence that season.[17] As defending champion in the 1956 Canadian Open, held in Vancouver on grass, Bédard lost in the semifinals to Noel Brown, who then defeated Fontana in the final. Bédard again reached the third round at Forest Hills, this time bowing out to unseeded American Hugh Stewart in four sets. After going out early in the next two U.S. Nationals, he would once again reach the third round in 1959, when he lost to No. 6 seed Luis Ayala. He reached the same round one last time two years later, just shy of his 30th birthday.

1957 edit

Bédard and his wife took a honeymoon tour of Europe in 1957 following their wedding, which would be his finest year with four tournament wins in singles. He won two clay court tournaments in Britain in 1957.

Bédard won the ILTF Sutton Hard Courts or ILTF Surrey Hard Court Championships on clay, the two titles played in combination that season, at the Sutton Tennis and Squash Club in Sutton, Surrey, England.[18] He defeated defending champion Bob Howe in the final in straight sets. Bédard also won the North of England Hard Court Championships on clay at Southport, England at the Argyle Lawn Tennis Club,[19] defeating Alan Mills, winner of the North of England Championships on grass that season, in a straight sets final. Mills would win the event in 1959.

In the Italian Tennis Championships Bédard reached the third round but was unable to play against Ashley Cooper and had to withdraw. In the French Championships at Roland Garros, Bédard led Flam in their second round match by two sets to one but lost the last two sets. Flam would reach the final before losing to Davidson. In the Kent Championships at Beckenham on grass, Bédard defeated Roy Emerson, but lost in the next round to Ramanathan Krishnan. At Wimbledon, Bédard and his wife entered the mixed doubles, losing in the first round. Bédard defeated Torben Ulrich in the first round at Wimbledon in singles but lost his next match to Brichant.

Bédard won the Nova Scotia Championships in mens singles for 1957, and also won the mixed doubles title with his wife.[20] Bédard played in the O'Keefe International at the Toronto Lawn Tennis Club on red clay in Toronto. He won three rounds and defeated Kurt Nielsen and Armando Vieira, but lost the semifinal to Sven Davidson, world No. 2 and the French Open champion for that year on red clay. Davidson defeated Budge Patty in the final.

Bédard won the Canadian Open for the second time at Montreal's Monkland Tennis Club on clay,[21] the same venue where Santana would win the Canadian Open title over Emerson ten years later.[22] He defeated in turn Straight Clark, winner of the Cincinnati Masters Clay Court in 1954, Armando Vieira, the 1956 Dixieland champion, and Ramanathan Krishnan in a superbly played four-set final. Krishnan had beaten Bédard several times earlier that year in Britain, and would win the Canadian Open in 1968. Bédard had lost to Vieira in the 1957 Quebec Open championships in a long semifinal match. Bédard also won the 1957 Canadian Open doubles title partnered by his Davis Cup teammate Fontana.

1958 edit

Bédard successfully defended his Canadian Open title in 1958 in Vancouver on grass, defeating American player Glenn Bassett, a former Cincinnati Masters champion, in the quarterfinal in four sets and Whitney Reed, a later U.S. No. 1 tennis player, in the final in three straight sets. Bédard had earlier in the season lost to Reed on clay in Toronto in Davis Cup play. Reed would later win two Canadian Open singles titles.

Bédard won the Adirondack Invitation tournament at Schroon Lake, New York,[23] defeating his fellow Canadian Davis Cup teammate Lorne Main in the final. At the O'Keefe International at the Toronto Lawn Tennis Club on red clay in Toronto, Bédard defeated Ulf Schmidt and Dick Savitt, winner of the U.S. National Indoor title that year, before losing to Luis Ayala in the semifinal. In August, Bédard won the Quebec Open title beating Val Harit in the final in five sets, his 100th straight victory against Canadian players.[24]

1959 edit

Bédard won the silver medal at the 1959 Pan American Games in Chicago.[2] In the latter event he defeated Mexican Francisco Contreras in the semi-finals but lost the final to Chilean Luis Ayala, thus capturing the silver medal.[2] Bédard also won the 1959 Adirondack Invitation at Schroon Lake, New York defeating American players George Ball,[25] winner of the New Jersey State Championships in 1958 and 1961, in the semifinal and Sidney Schwartz, twice winner of the Eastern Clay Court Championships title, in the final. Bédard won the Quebec Open in August, beating Cuban Reynaldo Garrido in a five set semifinal and Eduardo Zuleta of Ecuador in the final in three straight sets.[26] Bédard was defending champion at the Canadian Open, but lost his quarterfinal match with Reynaldo Garrido, who then defeated Whitney Reed in the semifinal and his own brother Orlando Garrido in the final. Bédard teamed with Fontana to win the Canadian Open doubles title.

1960 edit

In 1960, Bédard won the USLTA Eastern Clay Court Championships held that year at the Oritani Field Club in Hackensack, New Jersey in his only appearance at the historic tournament. The title was won by such champions as Riggs, Segura, Parker, Talbert, Savitt, Holmberg, Froehling and Ashe. The event moved around the New York City area, and included such venues as the Westchester Country Club (currently HarTru clay courts).[27] Bédard defeated Eugene Scott, a later quarterfinalist at Roland Garros, in the final in a marathon five set match after trailing two sets to one, a "long and tough match".[28]

Bédard defeated Mike Sangster in the third round of the Canadian Open. He lost a long five-set semifinal to the eventual tournament winner, Ladislav Legenstein. Bédard beat François Godbout,[29] the Quebec Indoor champion that year, in the final of the Quebec Open in July in three straight sets. Bédard "used his experience as a Davis Cup veteran to thwart any attempted rally by his opponent in the men's Singles. His fast, all-court-game stumped Godbout..."[30] Bédard won the Oakville Invitational at Oakville, Ontario.[31]

1961 edit

Bédard reached the semifinal of the Canadian Open where he led Whitney Reed two sets to one, but lost in a marathon five sets. Reed won the final over Mike Sangster. Bédard also won the Ontario Championships in August against John Swann.[32] Bédard won the Oakville Invitational at Oakville, Ontario.[33]

1962 edit

Bédard won the Oakville Invitational at Oakville, Ontario defeating Paul Cranis in the final in three straight sets. He also won the Verdun Invitational at Woodland Park Tennis Club beating Val Harit in the final.[34]

1963 edit

Bédard again reached the semifinal of the Canadian Open where he lost to Whitney Reed in four sets, Reed again winning the tournament.

1964 edit

Bédard won the Oakville Invitational in June over George Sokol, winner of the Eastern States Clay Court and the Middle States Clay Court, in the final in three straight sets.[35] Bédard lost in the final of the Quebec Open in August to Ronald Holmberg. "The fair-haired Texan steadily outplayed Bédard over the clay courts of the Civil Employees' Tennis Club".[36]

1965 edit

In June, Bédard beat Godbout in the final of the Oakville Invitational tournament.[37] In August, Bédard won the Quebec Open Championships on clay at the Montreal Monklands Tennis Club in dramatic fashion, the same clay court venue where he had won the 1957 Canadian Open.[38] Bédard defeated Billy Lenoir in the semifinal in five sets after Lenoir, the Cincinnati Masters Clay Court champion that year, had a two sets to love lead over Bédard, when many in the crowd then left the stadium. Bédard stated that at that point "I realized what I was doing wrong with my serve and my forehand, and all of a sudden it came back."[39] He then faced defending champion Holmberg, an outstanding clay player, in the final. Bédard lost the first two games of the match to Holmberg, but then won the next eight games. Late in the second set, Bedard sprained his ankle and then trailed 5 to 2 in the third set. However, he rallied and won the last three games to win the set at 8 to 6, and the match in three straight sets. Bédard stated, "I don't think that [Holmberg] was prepared for the game I was ready to give him."[40][41] The following day at the Quebec City International round robin, still recovering from his sprained ankle, Bédard defeated Pierre Darmon after trailing 5 to 3 in the deciding set, winning at 10 to 8, after Darmon had twice served for the match.[42] Darmon would eventually win the tournament. Bédard won his final match of the event over Bobby Wilson.[43] Bédard lost to Lester Sack in three straight sets at the Canadian Open and Sack would be runner-up that year to Holmberg. Bédard returned the favour by beating Sack in three straight sets at the U.S. Open in the first round. Bédard was ranked the No. 1 Canadian player for the 11th consecutive and final time in 1965.

1966 edit

Bédard came from 5-3 down in the final set to beat Godbout in the final of the Dow Invitational at La bohème Tennis Club in June.[44] The following week he successfully defended his Oakville Invitational title, defeating Val Harit, John Powless, and Godbout in the final. He lost to Mike Belkin in the final of the Quebec Open in July. "Bédard started strongly but the toil of the three-and-a-half hour final began to show in the final set when cramps completely immobilized him".[45]

1967 edit

Bédard announced his retirement in August, having played only a limited schedule in the previous few years, usually consisting of just a few Canadian events in the summer months each year.[46]

1969 edit

Bédard won the gold medal in men's singles tennis in the 1969 Canada Games in Halifax.[1] He defeated Don McCormick, a later Canadian No. 1 ranked player, in the Gold Medal match.[47]

Professional edit

1970 edit

In 1970, Bédard claimed he was still retired and only entered a few events because they "fell during his holidays".[48] He won the Quebec Open Championships, which included wins over much younger players, including Jim Boyce in a four set match. Boyce was a later Canadian National men's singles champion (closed) and Canadian No. 1,[49][50] and had already won the Western Ontario Open that same 1970 season.[51] In the semifinal Bédard defeated Bailey Brown, winner of multiple U.S. clay titles, and in the final Australian Ken Binns, winner of multiple Australian tennis and squash titles.[52] Bédard was awarded the first prize money for the event.[53] This was a record seventh Quebec Open title for Bédard.

Seniors/veterans tennis edit

Bédard has remained active playing in senior's tennis over the years,[54] in particular doubles with his sons.

Bédard won the Canadian National outdoor singles championship in 2006 for Age 70 players, defeating Crichton Wilson in the final.[55]

Bédard won the Canadian National outdoor singles championship for the 80-and-over category in 2015. His former Davis Cup team-mate, Lorne Main, won the 85-and-over category.[56]

In 2015, Bédard participated with another Pan American Games medalist in a doubles match at a museum house which contained early tennis equipment.[57]

Ranking edit

Bédard was considered among the top ten clay court players in the world.[58] At the height of his career, he was unbeaten in 216 consecutive matches against Canadian players.[59] Bédard was the top-ranked Canadian player in singles for 11 consecutive years from 1955 to 1965.[60][61] During this time he lost only once to a fellow Canadian in competition, to Reider Getz of Vancouver at the Verdun invitational in July 1964.[62] Bédard was ranked no lower than third in Canada between 1952 and 1970. He was first ranked No. 1 in Quebec in 1953.[2]

Davis Cup edit

Bédard was a Canadian Davis Cup member from 1953 to 1961, and again in 1967, and had a career win–loss record of 11 and 22, 8 and 15 in singles and 3 and 7 in doubles.[63]

Bédard lost all three of the Davis Cup rubbers he contested in 1953.[63] Despite this Canada did go on to face the Americans in the final of the America Group, played in Canada. Bédard and his partner Henri Rochon lost the doubles match in their quarter-final tie against Mexico, played at the Mount Royal Tennis Club; fortunately, Lorne Main won both of his singles rubbers, including the Round 4 match over Mario Llamas, which gave Canada an insurmountable 3–1 lead. (It was the last time Canada beat Mexico until 2001.) In the next round, also played at Mount Royal, Canada won the first three rubbers to seal victory against Cuba. He played his first singles match, losing the Round 5 dead rubber to Orlando Garrido in four sets. The American Group final was played at the Mount Royal Tennis Club in Montreal on grass, chosen by the Canadian Davis Cup Association, despite the fact that the Canadian players (Rochon, Main, and Bédard) were all specialists on clay, and the American team won 5–0. Bédard's match was a singles dead rubber four-set loss, this time to American Tut Bartzen.

In 1954, Canada opened with a tight tie win over Chile 3–2, again in Montreal.[63] After Main came back from 2 sets to 1 down in Round 1, Bédard got his first Cup singles win, in straight sets over Ricardo Balbiers. Main and Paul Willey next lost in straight sets to Andrés Hammersley and Chilean star Luis Ayala. Main came through to seal victory with hard fought marathon win over Hammersley in five sets. Bédard lost the fifth match dead rubber to Ayala. Canada lost to Mexico 4–1 in Mexico City.

Canada began 1955 Cup play with an expected comfortable opening win over the West Indies.[63] Bédard defeated Trinidadian Ian McDonald in four sets in the first match and teamed with Don Fontana to win the doubles rubber in straight sets, as Canada won 5–0. Canada next faced 1954 runner-up and eventual 1955 champion Australia in the America Group final. The tie was chosen by the Canadian Davis Cup Association to be played in Montreal at the Mount Royal Tennis Club, on grass, despite the fact that both Bédard and Main were outstanding on clay. Bédard had the unenviable task of opening proceedings against World No. 2 (amateur) Ken Rosewall, and lost the match in four sets, Lorne Main lost to Hartwig. Bédard and Fontana lost the doubles rubber in four sets as well, Fontana lost a dead rubber to Hoad in singles. Bédard's won sets were the only two sets during the tie that Canada won.

In the 1956 Davis Cup, Canada again opened with a win over the West Indies, this time in Port of Spain on clay courts, the Canadians' most successful surface, and dropping only one set.[63] This set up an encounter with the United States in Victoria, British Columbia, with the Canadian Davis Cup Association again choosing grass courts despite the fact that the Canadian players were clay court specialists. Fontana was soundly defeated by Ham Richardson to open the tie. In the second match, Bédard won the first set against Herb Flam, 6–2, before eventually losing the match. The two Canadians then came back from dropping the first set to go up two sets to one against Ron Holmberg and Barry MacKay in the doubles, only to lose the last two sets, and with it the tie. Bédard lost a dead rubber to Richardson in straight sets and Paul Willey gave the Canadians some consolation in winning the fifth match over MacKay.

In 1957, Canada played just one Cup tie, losing 2–3 to Brazil in Montreal.[63] Bédard played the opening match and twice came from a set down against Carlos-Alberto Fernandes only to lose the close fifth set. Fontana squared matters in winning the second match over Armando Vieira, also in five sets. In the crucial doubles rubber, Fernandes and Viera proved too good, winning in four. Fontana then went down in straight sets in the fourth match.

Canada started the 1958 campaign superbly, playing at home on clay in Toronto, sweeping aside Cuba without conceding more than 4 games in any set.[63] At the same venue, the Toronto CS & C Club on clay, they next faced the Americans. Canada managed to win just two sets. Fontana was soundly beat by MacKay, one, two, and five. Bédard played Whitney Reed closer but also went down in straight sets. He and Fontana then lost the doubles in straight sets as well. The U.S. went on to retake the Cup in the finals from holders Australia.

The following year after an opening round bye, Canada faced Australia in Montreal in the group final. The Canadian Davis Cup Association selected a grass surface to host the tie, although Bédard was a clay specialist. The Australians fielded a team featuring three future icons: Roy Emerson, Rod Laver, and Neale Fraser. Canada won only two sets in two dead rubbers.[63] Fontana lost the first singles match against Emerson. Next Bédard lost to Laver, receiving the only foot fault in his career while serving at 5-6 and 15–30 in the first set.[64] (The official was a French Canadian.) Australia then won the tie by taking the doubles rubber, with Emerson and Fraser defeating Fontana and Bédard. In consolation, Bédard and François Godbout had taken the first sets off of Emerson and Laver in the last two matches.

Canada played just one tie in 1960, an opening round loss, once more to the United States by a score 0 matches to 5 score.[65] On clay in Quebec City this time, Bédard started well, winning the first two sets against Tut Bartzen. Fontana took only 6 games off of Barry MacKay in the second match. The two Canucks made a stand in the first set of the doubles taking it to 12 games all before succumbing and losing the next two sets handily. Bédard won Canada's third set of the tie in the fourth match.

In 1961, Canada once more lost in the first round of Cup competition – they would not win a Cup tie again in fact until 1966.[65] The tie was held at Civil Employees Tennis Club, Quebec City on clay, and Bédard was certainly not at fault for the loss to Mexico as he won the opening rubber over Mario Llamas – as well as his second singles match, a dead rubber, over Rafael Osuna in four sets. François Godbout did not fare as well, losing both of his singles matches. The two Quebeckers played a very close doubles match but came up just short in what would prove to be the decisive encounter.

After six years absent from play, Bédard returned for a 1967 tie versus Great Britain, played in Bournemouth on shale.[63] (From 1966 through 1969 Canada competed in the Europe Group.) Young Canadian star Belkin got proceedings off well for the visitors defeating Mike Sangster in four sets.[66] In the second match Bédard twice won a set to level before losing to Roger Taylor in the fifth 5–7. Belkin and Keith Carpenter then battled Taylor and Bobby Wilson to a 12–10 fifth set, which they lost. At one point, the Canadian doubles team had led two sets to love and 5–2 in the third, Carpenter missing a high volley.[67] In the fifth set the Canadian team held five match points, some of them on serve. Belkin started very strongly against Taylor in the fourth match, winning the first two sets by a 6–2 score and holding four match points against Taylor. The home player however came back to win the final three sets of a close match. Bédard then lost the fifth match dead rubber to Sangster.

In March 2023, Bédard acclaimed the Canadian Davis Cup victory in 2022 as the greatest win in Canadian tennis history.[68]

Playing style and assessment edit

Bédard was a natural, muscular multi-sport athlete, whose excellence in baseball and ice hockey led to contract offers from professional teams, including the New York Rangers ice hockey team and the Cleveland Indians baseball team.[69] Fred Perry stated that Bédard was the most complete athlete in the 1954 Wimbledon tournament and noted his competitive zeal in matches.[12]

He received only one season of tennis coaching, at UCLA. His academic career left little time for tennis practice, most of which was with his wife and children at his home backyard courts. His wife and sons were excellent players.[70]

His playing style was described by Lucien Laverdure, a racket ace also inducted into the Quebec Sports Hall of Fame in 1991, in his book "Tennis Mon Obsession", published around 1965: "[Bédard's] dominant qualities of determination, patience, strength, control, combined with an extraordinary sense of anticipation led him straight to the goal he had set for himself and far beyond".[71]

Laverdure later remarked in a 2012 assessment, "One of Bédard's competitors, Don Fontana, stated that his physical conditioning was most remarkable: he spoke of rare speed (Bédard ran the 100 meters in 10.3 seconds!), and of superb eye-hand co-ordination, and of intense concentration. It is through perseverance and motivation that Robert Bédard will succeed in triumphing in tennis: he will never have enough time to perfect his technique and bring it up to the level of European or American players who were training at the year long. A bit like Rafael Nadal, Bédard excelled more on clay and exhausted his opponents: I am not comparing his level of play here to that of the Spaniard but rather trying to highlight his qualities as a player."[12]

Laverdure further referenced that "Raymond Summers, a Toronto journalist wrote (1956) that it would have been better for [Bédard] to spend a few seasons working on his shots than to engage in international competitions, referring to a lack of technique to deal with this elite level. He will add that Bédard had to compensate with exhausting work combined with great determination and enormous perseverance to achieve his goals. In short, we can conclude that Robert Bédard played instinctively and that he was above all motivated by his desire to win; if he had had the chance to perfect his basic skills, he could have performed at another level and who knows, reached heights that Canadian players still dream of. It must be admitted all the same that it shows the psychological nature of [his] character in addition to illustrating what type of man he was in life, outside of sports practice."[12]

Tennis executive edit

Bédard served as the president of Tennis Quebec from 1967 to 1970 and the vice-president of Tennis Canada from 1973 to 1977.[2]

Honours edit

Bédard was awarded the Queen's Jubilee Prize in 1977. He was inducted into the Canadian Tennis Hall of Fame and Quebec Sports Hall of Fame in 1991.[72] He was inducted into Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 1996. He was inducted into the Aurora Sports Hall of Fame in 2013 as an inaugural inductee.[73][74]

The St. Andrew's College Bédard Athletic Centre is named after him.

Commentating edit

Bédard was a tennis colour commentator for coverage of a round robin tournament held in Canada in 1967 and again in 1968, that featured four of the world's top amateur players.[75] Coverage was broadcast on CBC Television. He was joined in the booth by play-by-play announcer Bob McDevitt.

Outside of tennis/personal edit

An amateur tennis player in the days before Open tennis, Bédard has been a long-time educator, first as a French and geography school teacher at Bishop's College School in Sherbrooke, Quebec and as longtime headmaster for 16 years at St. Andrew's College in Aurora, Ontario where he and his wife Anne still live.

One of Bédard's near neighbours in Aurora was his former Davis Cup team-mate Lorne Main, who lived in an adjacent town about 15 minutes drive away.[76]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "| Hall of Famers Search". Sportshall.ca.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "Robert Bédard, tennis (French)". RDS.ca. January 1991. Retrieved 12 February 2011.
  3. ^ Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=9tXw7Op4-u0C&dat=19650802&printsec=frontpage&hl=en
  4. ^ Robert Bédard. ITF Player Profile. https://www.itftennis.com/en/players/robert-bedard/800173096/can/vt/s/overview/
  5. ^ "In Memoriam: Hall of Famer Adrian Bey". Usta.com. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  6. ^ Aurora Sports Hall of Fame. https://aurorashof.ca/inductee/robert-B%C3%A9dard/
  7. ^ Frank Deford, Big Bill Tilden. Simon & Schuster (1976) P. 273ff.
  8. ^ "The Gazette (Montreal), 2 September 1952". newspapers.com.
  9. ^ "Nova Scotia Open List of Champions".
  10. ^ "The Gazette (Montreal), 4 July 1953". newspapers.com.
  11. ^ (PDF). Fft.fr. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 May 2011. Retrieved 12 February 2011.
  12. ^ a b c d Beaudry, Luc. "Robert Bédard un champion oublié – Tennis – Grand Club". Rds.ca. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  13. ^ The Gazette. Montreal. 15 August 1955 https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/419822008
  14. ^ "Nova Scotia Open List of Champions".
  15. ^ "The Ottawa Citizen, 11 July 1955". newspapers.com.
  16. ^ "The Sault Star, 16 July 1956". newspapers.com.
  17. ^ "The Ottawa Citizen, 20 July 1956". newspapers.com.
  18. ^ "Home". Sutton Tennis and Squash Club. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  19. ^ "History". Argyletennis.net. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  20. ^ "Nova Scotia Open List of Champions".
  21. ^ "The Club". Monklandtennis.com. 16 December 2019.
  22. ^ "Synd 14 8 67 Tennis Championships Men Singles Final". YouTube.
  23. ^ Championship Match at Schroon Lake.https://adirondack.pastperfectonline.com/Webobject/6E85DCED-880F-42F1-9736-174555780403
  24. ^ "The Windsor Star, 25 August 1958". newspapers.com.
  25. ^ Georgle Ball. https://www.elpasohistory.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/El_Paso_Herald_Post_Sat__Mar_28__1970_.jpg
  26. ^ "The Gazette (Montreal), 18 August 1959". newspapers.com.
  27. ^ Westchester Country Club. https://www.wccclub.org/sports/tennis
  28. ^ "The Montreal Gazette - Google News Archive Search". News.google.com. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  29. ^ "Panthéon des sports du Québec". Pantheondessports-ca.translate.goog. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  30. ^ "The Gazette (Montreal), 1 August 1960". newspapers.com.
  31. ^ "The Montreal Star, 29 June 1964". newspapers.com.
  32. ^ "The Gazette (Montreal), 21 August 1961". newspapers.com.
  33. ^ The Montreal Star. 29 June 1964. https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/742790307/
  34. ^ "The Gazette (Montreal), 9 July 1962". newspapers.com.
  35. ^ The Montreal Star. 29 June 1964. https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/742790307/
  36. ^ "The Gazette (Montreal), 3 August 1964". newspapers.com.
  37. ^ "The Gazette (Montreal), 28 June 1965". newspapers.com.
  38. ^ https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=9tXw7Op4-u0C&dat=19650802&printsec=frontpage&hl=en%7Cwork=Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph
  39. ^ Montreal Gazette, 2 August 1965. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=Fr8DH2VBP9sC&dat=19650802&printsec=frontpage&hl=en
  40. ^ Montreal Gazette, 2 August 1965. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=Fr8DH2VBP9sC&dat=19650802&printsec=frontpage&hl=en
  41. ^ Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph, 2 August 1965. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=9tXw7Op4-u0C&dat=19650802&printsec=frontpage&hl=en
  42. ^ Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph, 3 August 1965. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=9tXw7Op4-u0C&dat=19650803&printsec=frontpage&hl=en
  43. ^ Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph, 9 August 1965. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=9tXw7Op4-u0C&dat=19650809&printsec=frontpage&hl=en
  44. ^ "The Gazette (Montreal), 20 June 1966". newspapers.com.
  45. ^ "The Montreal Star, 1 August 1966". newspapers.com.
  46. ^ "The Sault Star, 23 August 1967". newspapers.com.
  47. ^ https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=Fr8DH2VBP9sC&dat=19690822&printsec=frontpage&hl=en%7Cwork = The Montreal Gazette|via=Google News Archive Search
  48. ^ "The Leader Post, 7 August 1970". Newspapers.com.
  49. ^ "Players | Hall of Fame". Guildwoodtennis.com.
  50. ^ "Ultimate Tennis Statistics – Jim Boyce". Ultimatetennisstatistics.com.
  51. ^ Western Ontario Open. https://www.waterlootennis.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/The-Western-Ontario-Open-Tennis-Championship-c.pdf
  52. ^ "The Montreal Star, 27 July 1970". Newspapers.com.
  53. ^ https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=9tXw7Op4-u0C&dat=19700727&printsec=frontpage&hl=en%7Cwork=Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph|via=Google News Archive Search|access-date=27 February 2022
  54. ^ "Robert Bédard, le champion meconnu". Montreal Gazette. Archived from the original on 18 January 2013. Retrieved 12 February 2011.
  55. ^ (PDF). Tenniscanada.ca. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 12 February 2011.
  56. ^ [1][dead link]
  57. ^ "Gabriela Dabrowski ('15 Pan Am Games medalist) at Aurora Hillary House". YouTube.
  58. ^ https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=Fr8DH2VBP9sC&dat=19600714&printsec=frontpage&hl=en%7Cwork=The Montreal Gazette|via=Google News Archive Search|access-date=27 February 2022. "Bedard is considered one of the world's top ten clay court players..."
  59. ^ Robert Bedard. https://www.db4tennis.com/players/male/robert-bedard
  60. ^ Robert Bedard. https://www.db4tennis.com/players/male/robert-bedard
  61. ^ "The Gazette (Montreal), 30 July 1995". newspapers.com.
  62. ^ "The Vancouver Sun, 13 July 1964". newspapers.com.
  63. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Robert Bédard's Davis Cup page". Daviscup.com. Retrieved 12 February 2011.
  64. ^ The Sixties: OnCourt. https://oncourt.ca/2023/03/21/the-60s-bedard-godbout-fauquier-belkin-puddicombe/
  65. ^ a b "Canada Davis Cup page". Davis Cup.com. Retrieved 12 February 2011.
  66. ^ "Synd 4 5 67 Canadians Lead Britain One – Nil in Tennis Series". YouTube.
  67. ^ The Sixties:OnCourt. https://oncourt.ca/2023/03/21/the-60s-bedard-godbout-fauquier-belkin-puddicombe/
  68. ^ The 1960s. https://oncourt.ca/2023/03/21/the-60s-bedard-godbout-fauquier-belkin-puddicombe/
  69. ^ "Bedard chose tennis over hockey, baseball". Toronto.com. November 2013.
  70. ^ "Aurora Sports Hall of Fame – 2013 Induction: Robert Bedard". YouTube.
  71. ^ "Robert Bédard, tennis". RDS.ca. 1 January 1991. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
  72. ^ . Tenniscanada.com. Archived from the original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 12 February 2011.
  73. ^ "Aurora Sports Hall of Fame Announces Inaugural Members" (PDF). Sportaurora.ca. 10 September 2013. Retrieved 16 October 2013.
  74. ^ "Inaugural Aurora sports hall of fame class announced". Yorkregion.com. 12 September 2013. Retrieved 16 October 2013.
  75. ^ "CBC Championship Tennis". Tvarchive.ca. Retrieved 12 February 2011.
  76. ^ Legends Bédard, Main win senior national tennis titles at Mount Royal club. https://montrealgazette.com/sports/tennis/legends-bedard-main-win-senior-national-tennis-titles-at-mount-royal-club

External links edit

robert, bédard, tennis, robert, bédard, born, september, 1931, canadian, former, tennis, player, educator, most, recent, canadian, winner, canadian, open, tennis, championships, robert, bédardcountry, sports, canadaborn, 1931, september, 1931, saint, hyacinthe. Robert Bedard born 13 September 1931 1 is a Canadian former tennis player and educator He is the most recent Canadian winner of the Canadian Open Tennis Championships Robert BedardCountry sports CanadaBorn 1931 09 13 September 13 1931 age 92 Saint Hyacinthe Quebec CanadaPlaysRight handedSinglesCareer record198 109Career titles30Highest ranking1 1955 Canada Grand Slam singles resultsFrench Open3R 1954 Wimbledon3R 1954 US Open3R 1955 1956 1959 1961 DoublesGrand Slam doubles resultsWimbledon1R 1954 Mixed doublesGrand Slam mixed doubles resultsWimbledon1R 1957 Team competitionsDavis CupNorth American Zone and Interzone finals 1953 1955 1959 Bedard won three Canadian Open singles titles in 1955 over Henri Rochon in the final 1957 over Ramanathan Krishnan in the final and 1958 over Whitney Reed in the final Bedard won a record seven Quebec Open singles championships and two Ontario Open singles titles Bedard won the ILTF Sutton Hard Courts or ILTF Surrey Hard Court Championships on clay at Sutton England in 1957 That same season he won the North of England Hard Court Championships on clay at Southport England He won the USLTA Eastern Clay Court Championships in 1960 His career titles won was 30 tournaments mostly on clay in a very restricted playing career often confined to just the summer months Bedard was considered among the top ten clay court players in the world and was the top ranked Canadian singles player in 11 consecutive years from 1955 to 1965 At the height of his career he was unbeaten in 216 consecutive matches against Canadian players Bedard represented Canada in Davis Cup play for many years reaching North America Zone and Interzone Finals in 1953 1955 and 1959 During his career he defeated No 1 players of 20 different countries including Australia and the U S Bedard was a multi sport athlete and was offered professional contracts with the New York Rangers ice hockey team and the Cleveland Indians baseball team which he declined in favour of a career in academia He became the principal of St Andrew s College an elite private preparatory collegiate from 1981 to 1997 Contents 1 Tennis career 1 1 Summary 2 College tennis player 3 Amateur 3 1 1952 1953 3 2 1954 3 3 1955 3 4 1956 3 5 1957 3 6 1958 3 7 1959 3 8 1960 3 9 1961 3 10 1962 3 11 1963 3 12 1964 3 13 1965 3 14 1966 3 15 1967 3 16 1969 4 Professional 4 1 1970 5 Seniors veterans tennis 6 Ranking 7 Davis Cup 8 Playing style and assessment 9 Tennis executive 10 Honours 11 Commentating 12 Outside of tennis personal 13 See also 14 References 15 External linksTennis career editSummary edit Born in Saint Hyacinthe Quebec Bedard began playing tennis at the relatively late age of 15 2 and tennis was always his second sport to ice hockey Bedard continued to play minor league ice hockey during the winter months and minor league baseball during the summer months Bedard is the most recent Canadian to win the Canadian Open men s singles championship triumphing in 1955 defeating Henri Rochon in the final 1957 defeating Ramanathan Krishnan in a four sets final and 1958 defeating Whitney Reed in the final He won the doubles title three times in 1955 1957 and 1959 with compatriot Don Fontana He won the mixed doubles title in 1959 partnering Mariette Laframboise Bedard holds the record at the Canadian Open Championships for the most appearances with 17 He won the Montreal Cup at age 20 2 Bedard won a record seven Quebec Open Championships singles titles between 1955 and 1970 3 two Ontario Open singles titles six Oakville Invitational singles titles and three Nova Scotia Championships Bedard won the ILTF Sutton Hard Courts or ILTF Surrey Hard Court Championships on clay at Sutton England in 1957 That same season he won the North of England Hard Court Championships at Southport England He won the USLTA Eastern Clay Court Championships singles title in 1960 in his only appearance at the event Bedard competed in the French Championships twice Wimbledon four times and the U S Nationals eleven times 4 His best showing at a Grand Slam event was reaching the round of 32 which he did once at both Roland Garros and Wimbledon both in 1954 and four times at Forest Hills in 1955 1956 1959 and in 1961 Despite having a very limited time in tennis play in many years playing tournaments only in the summer months Bedard was an outstanding clay court player with 30 tournament wins against many well known clay specialists During his career Bedard defeated No 1 players of 20 different countries including Australia Adrian Quist Roy Emerson the U S Whitney Reed Dick Savitt Great Britain Bobby Wilson Mike Sangster Canada Lorne Main Henri Rochon Don McCormick Jim Boyce Italy Nicola Pietrangeli Orlando Sirola Sweden Sven Davidson Ulf Schmidt France Paul Remy Pierre Darmon Germany Rupert Huber Belgium Jacques Brichant Denmark Kurt Nielsen Torben Ulrich Mexico Mario Llamas Rafael Osuna Guatemala Juan Jose Hermosilla Cuba Reynaldo Garrido Brazil Armando Vieira Ecuador Eduardo Zuleta South Africa Gordon Forbes Bob Mark Rhodesia Adrian Bey 5 India Ramanathan Krishnan Viet Nam Christian Duxin Philippines Willie Hernandez 6 Bedard defeated many World top ten players of whom Savitt Emerson Osuna achieved World No 1 ranking Davidson achieved World No 2 Quist Pietrangeli Krishnan achieved World No 3 Nielsen Straight Clark achieved World No 4 Bryan Grant achieved World No 6 Sangster Eugene Scott and Ron Holmberg achieved World No 7 Schmidt Darmon Mark achieved World No 8 and Brichant achieved World No 9 Reed was ranked No 1 in the U S College tennis player editDuring the 1952 53 school year Bedard attended UCLA on a tennis scholarship provided by his home community supporters in Sherbrooke Quebec 2 This would be his only formal tennis coaching and he was otherwise a self taught player During that same scholastic year Bedard s fellow Canadian tennis player and later Davis Cup teammate Don Fontana was also in the UCLA tennis program on a tennis scholarship Bedard and Fontana played against Bill Tilden and his student in possibly the final matches of Tilden s life shortly before he died 7 Amateur edit1952 1953 edit Bedard won the Montreal Cup in August 1952 beating Jack Spencer in the final 8 Bedard also won the Nova Scotia Championships that year 9 In 1953 Bedard reached the semi finals of the Quebec championships losing in three straight sets to Lorne Main 10 Bedard was ranked Canadian No 2 for 1953 behind Main 1954 edit Bedard reached the final of the Hollywood Beach Invitational losing in three straight sets to Gardnar Mulloy He later reached the final of the 1954 Stuttgart Open losing to Gottfried von Cramm He was a quarterfinalist at the 1954 Italian Open winning a five set marathon over Sven Davidson despite losing the first two sets and later losing to defending champion Jaroslav Drobny At the 1954 French Open Bedard defeated Xavier Perreau Saussine in the second round in a long five set match 11 The No 1 seed for the tournament Lew Hoad defeated Bedard in the third round at Roland Garros in three close sets A month later Bedard won his first match at Wimbledon a close four set victory over Gordon Forbes and also won his second round match Fred Perry who covered Wimbledon for BBC stated that Bedard was the most complete athlete in the tournament and noted his competitive zeal in matches 12 Hoad the Wimbledon No 2 seed eliminated Bedard in the third round in four sets Bedard winning the third set from Hoad Bedard reached the final of the Quebec Open championships where he lost a long four set match to Lorne Main who had won the Monte Carlo and Belgian titles that season on red clay in Europe Bedard was ranked Canadian No 2 for 1954 behind Main 1955 edit In European play Bedard won a close five set match against Orlando Sirola in the second round of the Italian Championships Bedard reached the semifinal at Cannes defeating Jacques Brichant but lost to Wladyslaw Skonecki He won a close match against Nicola Pietrangeli in the Queen s Club Championships but lost in the third round to Hoad At the 1955 Wimbledon Championships Bedard lost in the first round to Herb Flam In 1955 Bedard won his first Canadian Open championship at Quebec City in August on clay Bedard defeated Val Harit in the quarterfinal Don Fontana in the semifinal and Henri Rochon in the final 13 Rochon had eliminated Lorne Main in the other semifinal Bedard teamed with his Davis Cup partner Fontana to win the Canadian Open doubles title Bedard won the Nova Scotia Championships for 1955 14 Bedard also beat Rochon in the final of the Quebec championships in July 15 He reached the third round at Forest Hills in 1955 for the first of an eventual four times but again it was Hoad that he came up against this time Hoad winning in three straight sets 1956 edit In July Bedard won the Quebec Open over Fontana in the final 16 He also won the Ontario Championships in July beating Paul Willey in the final Willey having a win over Pietrangeli at Florence that season 17 As defending champion in the 1956 Canadian Open held in Vancouver on grass Bedard lost in the semifinals to Noel Brown who then defeated Fontana in the final Bedard again reached the third round at Forest Hills this time bowing out to unseeded American Hugh Stewart in four sets After going out early in the next two U S Nationals he would once again reach the third round in 1959 when he lost to No 6 seed Luis Ayala He reached the same round one last time two years later just shy of his 30th birthday 1957 edit Bedard and his wife took a honeymoon tour of Europe in 1957 following their wedding which would be his finest year with four tournament wins in singles He won two clay court tournaments in Britain in 1957 Bedard won the ILTF Sutton Hard Courts or ILTF Surrey Hard Court Championships on clay the two titles played in combination that season at the Sutton Tennis and Squash Club in Sutton Surrey England 18 He defeated defending champion Bob Howe in the final in straight sets Bedard also won the North of England Hard Court Championships on clay at Southport England at the Argyle Lawn Tennis Club 19 defeating Alan Mills winner of the North of England Championships on grass that season in a straight sets final Mills would win the event in 1959 In the Italian Tennis Championships Bedard reached the third round but was unable to play against Ashley Cooper and had to withdraw In the French Championships at Roland Garros Bedard led Flam in their second round match by two sets to one but lost the last two sets Flam would reach the final before losing to Davidson In the Kent Championships at Beckenham on grass Bedard defeated Roy Emerson but lost in the next round to Ramanathan Krishnan At Wimbledon Bedard and his wife entered the mixed doubles losing in the first round Bedard defeated Torben Ulrich in the first round at Wimbledon in singles but lost his next match to Brichant Bedard won the Nova Scotia Championships in mens singles for 1957 and also won the mixed doubles title with his wife 20 Bedard played in the O Keefe International at the Toronto Lawn Tennis Club on red clay in Toronto He won three rounds and defeated Kurt Nielsen and Armando Vieira but lost the semifinal to Sven Davidson world No 2 and the French Open champion for that year on red clay Davidson defeated Budge Patty in the final Bedard won the Canadian Open for the second time at Montreal s Monkland Tennis Club on clay 21 the same venue where Santana would win the Canadian Open title over Emerson ten years later 22 He defeated in turn Straight Clark winner of the Cincinnati Masters Clay Court in 1954 Armando Vieira the 1956 Dixieland champion and Ramanathan Krishnan in a superbly played four set final Krishnan had beaten Bedard several times earlier that year in Britain and would win the Canadian Open in 1968 Bedard had lost to Vieira in the 1957 Quebec Open championships in a long semifinal match Bedard also won the 1957 Canadian Open doubles title partnered by his Davis Cup teammate Fontana 1958 edit Bedard successfully defended his Canadian Open title in 1958 in Vancouver on grass defeating American player Glenn Bassett a former Cincinnati Masters champion in the quarterfinal in four sets and Whitney Reed a later U S No 1 tennis player in the final in three straight sets Bedard had earlier in the season lost to Reed on clay in Toronto in Davis Cup play Reed would later win two Canadian Open singles titles Bedard won the Adirondack Invitation tournament at Schroon Lake New York 23 defeating his fellow Canadian Davis Cup teammate Lorne Main in the final At the O Keefe International at the Toronto Lawn Tennis Club on red clay in Toronto Bedard defeated Ulf Schmidt and Dick Savitt winner of the U S National Indoor title that year before losing to Luis Ayala in the semifinal In August Bedard won the Quebec Open title beating Val Harit in the final in five sets his 100th straight victory against Canadian players 24 1959 edit Bedard won the silver medal at the 1959 Pan American Games in Chicago 2 In the latter event he defeated Mexican Francisco Contreras in the semi finals but lost the final to Chilean Luis Ayala thus capturing the silver medal 2 Bedard also won the 1959 Adirondack Invitation at Schroon Lake New York defeating American players George Ball 25 winner of the New Jersey State Championships in 1958 and 1961 in the semifinal and Sidney Schwartz twice winner of the Eastern Clay Court Championships title in the final Bedard won the Quebec Open in August beating Cuban Reynaldo Garrido in a five set semifinal and Eduardo Zuleta of Ecuador in the final in three straight sets 26 Bedard was defending champion at the Canadian Open but lost his quarterfinal match with Reynaldo Garrido who then defeated Whitney Reed in the semifinal and his own brother Orlando Garrido in the final Bedard teamed with Fontana to win the Canadian Open doubles title 1960 edit In 1960 Bedard won the USLTA Eastern Clay Court Championships held that year at the Oritani Field Club in Hackensack New Jersey in his only appearance at the historic tournament The title was won by such champions as Riggs Segura Parker Talbert Savitt Holmberg Froehling and Ashe The event moved around the New York City area and included such venues as the Westchester Country Club currently HarTru clay courts 27 Bedard defeated Eugene Scott a later quarterfinalist at Roland Garros in the final in a marathon five set match after trailing two sets to one a long and tough match 28 Bedard defeated Mike Sangster in the third round of the Canadian Open He lost a long five set semifinal to the eventual tournament winner Ladislav Legenstein Bedard beat Francois Godbout 29 the Quebec Indoor champion that year in the final of the Quebec Open in July in three straight sets Bedard used his experience as a Davis Cup veteran to thwart any attempted rally by his opponent in the men s Singles His fast all court game stumped Godbout 30 Bedard won the Oakville Invitational at Oakville Ontario 31 1961 edit Bedard reached the semifinal of the Canadian Open where he led Whitney Reed two sets to one but lost in a marathon five sets Reed won the final over Mike Sangster Bedard also won the Ontario Championships in August against John Swann 32 Bedard won the Oakville Invitational at Oakville Ontario 33 1962 edit Bedard won the Oakville Invitational at Oakville Ontario defeating Paul Cranis in the final in three straight sets He also won the Verdun Invitational at Woodland Park Tennis Club beating Val Harit in the final 34 1963 edit Bedard again reached the semifinal of the Canadian Open where he lost to Whitney Reed in four sets Reed again winning the tournament 1964 edit Bedard won the Oakville Invitational in June over George Sokol winner of the Eastern States Clay Court and the Middle States Clay Court in the final in three straight sets 35 Bedard lost in the final of the Quebec Open in August to Ronald Holmberg The fair haired Texan steadily outplayed Bedard over the clay courts of the Civil Employees Tennis Club 36 1965 edit In June Bedard beat Godbout in the final of the Oakville Invitational tournament 37 In August Bedard won the Quebec Open Championships on clay at the Montreal Monklands Tennis Club in dramatic fashion the same clay court venue where he had won the 1957 Canadian Open 38 Bedard defeated Billy Lenoir in the semifinal in five sets after Lenoir the Cincinnati Masters Clay Court champion that year had a two sets to love lead over Bedard when many in the crowd then left the stadium Bedard stated that at that point I realized what I was doing wrong with my serve and my forehand and all of a sudden it came back 39 He then faced defending champion Holmberg an outstanding clay player in the final Bedard lost the first two games of the match to Holmberg but then won the next eight games Late in the second set Bedard sprained his ankle and then trailed 5 to 2 in the third set However he rallied and won the last three games to win the set at 8 to 6 and the match in three straight sets Bedard stated I don t think that Holmberg was prepared for the game I was ready to give him 40 41 The following day at the Quebec City International round robin still recovering from his sprained ankle Bedard defeated Pierre Darmon after trailing 5 to 3 in the deciding set winning at 10 to 8 after Darmon had twice served for the match 42 Darmon would eventually win the tournament Bedard won his final match of the event over Bobby Wilson 43 Bedard lost to Lester Sack in three straight sets at the Canadian Open and Sack would be runner up that year to Holmberg Bedard returned the favour by beating Sack in three straight sets at the U S Open in the first round Bedard was ranked the No 1 Canadian player for the 11th consecutive and final time in 1965 1966 edit Bedard came from 5 3 down in the final set to beat Godbout in the final of the Dow Invitational at La boheme Tennis Club in June 44 The following week he successfully defended his Oakville Invitational title defeating Val Harit John Powless and Godbout in the final He lost to Mike Belkin in the final of the Quebec Open in July Bedard started strongly but the toil of the three and a half hour final began to show in the final set when cramps completely immobilized him 45 1967 edit Bedard announced his retirement in August having played only a limited schedule in the previous few years usually consisting of just a few Canadian events in the summer months each year 46 1969 edit Bedard won the gold medal in men s singles tennis in the 1969 Canada Games in Halifax 1 He defeated Don McCormick a later Canadian No 1 ranked player in the Gold Medal match 47 Professional edit1970 edit In 1970 Bedard claimed he was still retired and only entered a few events because they fell during his holidays 48 He won the Quebec Open Championships which included wins over much younger players including Jim Boyce in a four set match Boyce was a later Canadian National men s singles champion closed and Canadian No 1 49 50 and had already won the Western Ontario Open that same 1970 season 51 In the semifinal Bedard defeated Bailey Brown winner of multiple U S clay titles and in the final Australian Ken Binns winner of multiple Australian tennis and squash titles 52 Bedard was awarded the first prize money for the event 53 This was a record seventh Quebec Open title for Bedard Seniors veterans tennis editBedard has remained active playing in senior s tennis over the years 54 in particular doubles with his sons Bedard won the Canadian National outdoor singles championship in 2006 for Age 70 players defeating Crichton Wilson in the final 55 Bedard won the Canadian National outdoor singles championship for the 80 and over category in 2015 His former Davis Cup team mate Lorne Main won the 85 and over category 56 In 2015 Bedard participated with another Pan American Games medalist in a doubles match at a museum house which contained early tennis equipment 57 Ranking editBedard was considered among the top ten clay court players in the world 58 At the height of his career he was unbeaten in 216 consecutive matches against Canadian players 59 Bedard was the top ranked Canadian player in singles for 11 consecutive years from 1955 to 1965 60 61 During this time he lost only once to a fellow Canadian in competition to Reider Getz of Vancouver at the Verdun invitational in July 1964 62 Bedard was ranked no lower than third in Canada between 1952 and 1970 He was first ranked No 1 in Quebec in 1953 2 Davis Cup editBedard was a Canadian Davis Cup member from 1953 to 1961 and again in 1967 and had a career win loss record of 11 and 22 8 and 15 in singles and 3 and 7 in doubles 63 Bedard lost all three of the Davis Cup rubbers he contested in 1953 63 Despite this Canada did go on to face the Americans in the final of the America Group played in Canada Bedard and his partner Henri Rochon lost the doubles match in their quarter final tie against Mexico played at the Mount Royal Tennis Club fortunately Lorne Main won both of his singles rubbers including the Round 4 match over Mario Llamas which gave Canada an insurmountable 3 1 lead It was the last time Canada beat Mexico until 2001 In the next round also played at Mount Royal Canada won the first three rubbers to seal victory against Cuba He played his first singles match losing the Round 5 dead rubber to Orlando Garrido in four sets The American Group final was played at the Mount Royal Tennis Club in Montreal on grass chosen by the Canadian Davis Cup Association despite the fact that the Canadian players Rochon Main and Bedard were all specialists on clay and the American team won 5 0 Bedard s match was a singles dead rubber four set loss this time to American Tut Bartzen In 1954 Canada opened with a tight tie win over Chile 3 2 again in Montreal 63 After Main came back from 2 sets to 1 down in Round 1 Bedard got his first Cup singles win in straight sets over Ricardo Balbiers Main and Paul Willey next lost in straight sets to Andres Hammersley and Chilean star Luis Ayala Main came through to seal victory with hard fought marathon win over Hammersley in five sets Bedard lost the fifth match dead rubber to Ayala Canada lost to Mexico 4 1 in Mexico City Canada began 1955 Cup play with an expected comfortable opening win over the West Indies 63 Bedard defeated Trinidadian Ian McDonald in four sets in the first match and teamed with Don Fontana to win the doubles rubber in straight sets as Canada won 5 0 Canada next faced 1954 runner up and eventual 1955 champion Australia in the America Group final The tie was chosen by the Canadian Davis Cup Association to be played in Montreal at the Mount Royal Tennis Club on grass despite the fact that both Bedard and Main were outstanding on clay Bedard had the unenviable task of opening proceedings against World No 2 amateur Ken Rosewall and lost the match in four sets Lorne Main lost to Hartwig Bedard and Fontana lost the doubles rubber in four sets as well Fontana lost a dead rubber to Hoad in singles Bedard s won sets were the only two sets during the tie that Canada won In the 1956 Davis Cup Canada again opened with a win over the West Indies this time in Port of Spain on clay courts the Canadians most successful surface and dropping only one set 63 This set up an encounter with the United States in Victoria British Columbia with the Canadian Davis Cup Association again choosing grass courts despite the fact that the Canadian players were clay court specialists Fontana was soundly defeated by Ham Richardson to open the tie In the second match Bedard won the first set against Herb Flam 6 2 before eventually losing the match The two Canadians then came back from dropping the first set to go up two sets to one against Ron Holmberg and Barry MacKay in the doubles only to lose the last two sets and with it the tie Bedard lost a dead rubber to Richardson in straight sets and Paul Willey gave the Canadians some consolation in winning the fifth match over MacKay In 1957 Canada played just one Cup tie losing 2 3 to Brazil in Montreal 63 Bedard played the opening match and twice came from a set down against Carlos Alberto Fernandes only to lose the close fifth set Fontana squared matters in winning the second match over Armando Vieira also in five sets In the crucial doubles rubber Fernandes and Viera proved too good winning in four Fontana then went down in straight sets in the fourth match Canada started the 1958 campaign superbly playing at home on clay in Toronto sweeping aside Cuba without conceding more than 4 games in any set 63 At the same venue the Toronto CS amp C Club on clay they next faced the Americans Canada managed to win just two sets Fontana was soundly beat by MacKay one two and five Bedard played Whitney Reed closer but also went down in straight sets He and Fontana then lost the doubles in straight sets as well The U S went on to retake the Cup in the finals from holders Australia The following year after an opening round bye Canada faced Australia in Montreal in the group final The Canadian Davis Cup Association selected a grass surface to host the tie although Bedard was a clay specialist The Australians fielded a team featuring three future icons Roy Emerson Rod Laver and Neale Fraser Canada won only two sets in two dead rubbers 63 Fontana lost the first singles match against Emerson Next Bedard lost to Laver receiving the only foot fault in his career while serving at 5 6 and 15 30 in the first set 64 The official was a French Canadian Australia then won the tie by taking the doubles rubber with Emerson and Fraser defeating Fontana and Bedard In consolation Bedard and Francois Godbout had taken the first sets off of Emerson and Laver in the last two matches Canada played just one tie in 1960 an opening round loss once more to the United States by a score 0 matches to 5 score 65 On clay in Quebec City this time Bedard started well winning the first two sets against Tut Bartzen Fontana took only 6 games off of Barry MacKay in the second match The two Canucks made a stand in the first set of the doubles taking it to 12 games all before succumbing and losing the next two sets handily Bedard won Canada s third set of the tie in the fourth match In 1961 Canada once more lost in the first round of Cup competition they would not win a Cup tie again in fact until 1966 65 The tie was held at Civil Employees Tennis Club Quebec City on clay and Bedard was certainly not at fault for the loss to Mexico as he won the opening rubber over Mario Llamas as well as his second singles match a dead rubber over Rafael Osuna in four sets Francois Godbout did not fare as well losing both of his singles matches The two Quebeckers played a very close doubles match but came up just short in what would prove to be the decisive encounter After six years absent from play Bedard returned for a 1967 tie versus Great Britain played in Bournemouth on shale 63 From 1966 through 1969 Canada competed in the Europe Group Young Canadian star Belkin got proceedings off well for the visitors defeating Mike Sangster in four sets 66 In the second match Bedard twice won a set to level before losing to Roger Taylor in the fifth 5 7 Belkin and Keith Carpenter then battled Taylor and Bobby Wilson to a 12 10 fifth set which they lost At one point the Canadian doubles team had led two sets to love and 5 2 in the third Carpenter missing a high volley 67 In the fifth set the Canadian team held five match points some of them on serve Belkin started very strongly against Taylor in the fourth match winning the first two sets by a 6 2 score and holding four match points against Taylor The home player however came back to win the final three sets of a close match Bedard then lost the fifth match dead rubber to Sangster In March 2023 Bedard acclaimed the Canadian Davis Cup victory in 2022 as the greatest win in Canadian tennis history 68 Playing style and assessment editBedard was a natural muscular multi sport athlete whose excellence in baseball and ice hockey led to contract offers from professional teams including the New York Rangers ice hockey team and the Cleveland Indians baseball team 69 Fred Perry stated that Bedard was the most complete athlete in the 1954 Wimbledon tournament and noted his competitive zeal in matches 12 He received only one season of tennis coaching at UCLA His academic career left little time for tennis practice most of which was with his wife and children at his home backyard courts His wife and sons were excellent players 70 His playing style was described by Lucien Laverdure a racket ace also inducted into the Quebec Sports Hall of Fame in 1991 in his book Tennis Mon Obsession published around 1965 Bedard s dominant qualities of determination patience strength control combined with an extraordinary sense of anticipation led him straight to the goal he had set for himself and far beyond 71 Laverdure later remarked in a 2012 assessment One of Bedard s competitors Don Fontana stated that his physical conditioning was most remarkable he spoke of rare speed Bedard ran the 100 meters in 10 3 seconds and of superb eye hand co ordination and of intense concentration It is through perseverance and motivation that Robert Bedard will succeed in triumphing in tennis he will never have enough time to perfect his technique and bring it up to the level of European or American players who were training at the year long A bit like Rafael Nadal Bedard excelled more on clay and exhausted his opponents I am not comparing his level of play here to that of the Spaniard but rather trying to highlight his qualities as a player 12 Laverdure further referenced that Raymond Summers a Toronto journalist wrote 1956 that it would have been better for Bedard to spend a few seasons working on his shots than to engage in international competitions referring to a lack of technique to deal with this elite level He will add that Bedard had to compensate with exhausting work combined with great determination and enormous perseverance to achieve his goals In short we can conclude that Robert Bedard played instinctively and that he was above all motivated by his desire to win if he had had the chance to perfect his basic skills he could have performed at another level and who knows reached heights that Canadian players still dream of It must be admitted all the same that it shows the psychological nature of his character in addition to illustrating what type of man he was in life outside of sports practice 12 Tennis executive editBedard served as the president of Tennis Quebec from 1967 to 1970 and the vice president of Tennis Canada from 1973 to 1977 2 Honours editBedard was awarded the Queen s Jubilee Prize in 1977 He was inducted into the Canadian Tennis Hall of Fame and Quebec Sports Hall of Fame in 1991 72 He was inducted into Canada s Sports Hall of Fame in 1996 He was inducted into the Aurora Sports Hall of Fame in 2013 as an inaugural inductee 73 74 The St Andrew s College Bedard Athletic Centre is named after him Commentating editBedard was a tennis colour commentator for coverage of a round robin tournament held in Canada in 1967 and again in 1968 that featured four of the world s top amateur players 75 Coverage was broadcast on CBC Television He was joined in the booth by play by play announcer Bob McDevitt Outside of tennis personal editAn amateur tennis player in the days before Open tennis Bedard has been a long time educator first as a French and geography school teacher at Bishop s College School in Sherbrooke Quebec and as longtime headmaster for 16 years at St Andrew s College in Aurora Ontario where he and his wife Anne still live One of Bedard s near neighbours in Aurora was his former Davis Cup team mate Lorne Main who lived in an adjacent town about 15 minutes drive away 76 See also editList of Bishop s College School alumni St Andrew s College AuroraReferences edit a b Hall of Famers Search Sportshall ca a b c d e f g Robert Bedard tennis French RDS ca January 1991 Retrieved 12 February 2011 Quebec Chronicle Telegraph https news google com newspapers nid 9tXw7Op4 u0C amp dat 19650802 amp printsec frontpage amp hl en Robert Bedard ITF Player Profile https www itftennis com en players robert bedard 800173096 can vt s overview In Memoriam Hall of Famer Adrian Bey Usta com Retrieved 27 February 2022 Aurora Sports Hall of Fame https aurorashof ca inductee robert B C3 A9dard Frank Deford Big Bill Tilden Simon amp Schuster 1976 P 273ff The Gazette Montreal 2 September 1952 newspapers com Nova Scotia Open List of Champions The Gazette Montreal 4 July 1953 newspapers com Roland Garros 1954 Men s Singles drawsheet PDF Fft fr Archived from the original PDF on 25 May 2011 Retrieved 12 February 2011 a b c d Beaudry Luc Robert Bedard un champion oublie Tennis Grand Club Rds ca Retrieved 27 February 2022 The Gazette Montreal 15 August 1955 https www newspapers com newspage 419822008 Nova Scotia Open List of Champions The Ottawa Citizen 11 July 1955 newspapers com The Sault Star 16 July 1956 newspapers com The Ottawa Citizen 20 July 1956 newspapers com Home Sutton Tennis and Squash Club Retrieved 27 February 2022 History Argyletennis net Retrieved 27 February 2022 Nova Scotia Open List of Champions The Club Monklandtennis com 16 December 2019 Synd 14 8 67 Tennis Championships Men Singles Final YouTube Championship Match at Schroon Lake https adirondack pastperfectonline com Webobject 6E85DCED 880F 42F1 9736 174555780403 The Windsor Star 25 August 1958 newspapers com Georgle Ball https www elpasohistory com wp content uploads 2018 01 El Paso Herald Post Sat Mar 28 1970 jpg The Gazette Montreal 18 August 1959 newspapers com Westchester Country Club https www wccclub org sports tennis The Montreal Gazette Google News Archive Search News google com Retrieved 27 February 2022 Pantheon des sports du Quebec Pantheondessports ca translate goog Retrieved 27 February 2022 The Gazette Montreal 1 August 1960 newspapers com The Montreal Star 29 June 1964 newspapers com The Gazette Montreal 21 August 1961 newspapers com The Montreal Star 29 June 1964 https www newspapers com newspage 742790307 The Gazette Montreal 9 July 1962 newspapers com The Montreal Star 29 June 1964 https www newspapers com newspage 742790307 The Gazette Montreal 3 August 1964 newspapers com The Gazette Montreal 28 June 1965 newspapers com https news google com newspapers nid 9tXw7Op4 u0C amp dat 19650802 amp printsec frontpage amp hl en 7Cwork Quebec Chronicle Telegraph Montreal Gazette 2 August 1965 https news google com newspapers nid Fr8DH2VBP9sC amp dat 19650802 amp printsec frontpage amp hl en Montreal Gazette 2 August 1965 https news google com newspapers nid Fr8DH2VBP9sC amp dat 19650802 amp printsec frontpage amp hl en Quebec Chronicle Telegraph 2 August 1965 https news google com newspapers nid 9tXw7Op4 u0C amp dat 19650802 amp printsec frontpage amp hl en Quebec Chronicle Telegraph 3 August 1965 https news google com newspapers nid 9tXw7Op4 u0C amp dat 19650803 amp printsec frontpage amp hl en Quebec Chronicle Telegraph 9 August 1965 https news google com newspapers nid 9tXw7Op4 u0C amp dat 19650809 amp printsec frontpage amp hl en The Gazette Montreal 20 June 1966 newspapers com The Montreal Star 1 August 1966 newspapers com The Sault Star 23 August 1967 newspapers com https news google com newspapers nid Fr8DH2VBP9sC amp dat 19690822 amp printsec frontpage amp hl en 7Cwork The Montreal Gazette via Google News Archive Search The Leader Post 7 August 1970 Newspapers com Players Hall of Fame Guildwoodtennis com Ultimate Tennis Statistics Jim Boyce Ultimatetennisstatistics com Western Ontario Open https www waterlootennis com wp content uploads 2018 04 The Western Ontario Open Tennis Championship c pdf The Montreal Star 27 July 1970 Newspapers com https news google com newspapers nid 9tXw7Op4 u0C amp dat 19700727 amp printsec frontpage amp hl en 7Cwork Quebec Chronicle Telegraph via Google News Archive Search access date 27 February 2022 Robert Bedard le champion meconnu Montreal Gazette Archived from the original on 18 January 2013 Retrieved 12 February 2011 Seniors Tennis PDF Tenniscanada ca Archived from the original PDF on 16 July 2011 Retrieved 12 February 2011 1 dead link Gabriela Dabrowski 15 Pan Am Games medalist at Aurora Hillary House YouTube https news google com newspapers nid Fr8DH2VBP9sC amp dat 19600714 amp printsec frontpage amp hl en 7Cwork The Montreal Gazette via Google News Archive Search access date 27 February 2022 Bedard is considered one of the world s top ten clay court players Robert Bedard https www db4tennis com players male robert bedard Robert Bedard https www db4tennis com players male robert bedard The Gazette Montreal 30 July 1995 newspapers com The Vancouver Sun 13 July 1964 newspapers com a b c d e f g h i Robert Bedard s Davis Cup page Daviscup com Retrieved 12 February 2011 The Sixties OnCourt https oncourt ca 2023 03 21 the 60s bedard godbout fauquier belkin puddicombe a b Canada Davis Cup page Davis Cup com Retrieved 12 February 2011 Synd 4 5 67 Canadians Lead Britain One Nil in Tennis Series YouTube The Sixties OnCourt https oncourt ca 2023 03 21 the 60s bedard godbout fauquier belkin puddicombe The 1960s https oncourt ca 2023 03 21 the 60s bedard godbout fauquier belkin puddicombe Bedard chose tennis over hockey baseball Toronto com November 2013 Aurora Sports Hall of Fame 2013 Induction Robert Bedard YouTube Robert Bedard tennis RDS ca 1 January 1991 Retrieved 27 February 2022 Tennis Canada Hall of Fame Tenniscanada com Archived from the original on 16 July 2011 Retrieved 12 February 2011 Aurora Sports Hall of Fame Announces Inaugural Members PDF Sportaurora ca 10 September 2013 Retrieved 16 October 2013 Inaugural Aurora sports hall of fame class announced Yorkregion com 12 September 2013 Retrieved 16 October 2013 CBC Championship Tennis Tvarchive ca Retrieved 12 February 2011 Legends Bedard Main win senior national tennis titles at Mount Royal club https montrealgazette com sports tennis legends bedard main win senior national tennis titles at mount royal clubExternal links editRobert Bedard at the Association of Tennis Professionals nbsp Robert Bedard at the International Tennis Federation nbsp Robert Bedard at the Davis Cup nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Bedard tennis amp oldid 1183572853, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.