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Auburn men’s tennis head coach Bobby Reynolds joins Best of Three for a deep conversation on the evolution of college tennis, player development, and the future of the NCAA system. Reynolds explains why college tennis is no longer a fallback option for aspiring professionals, but a legitimate high-performance pathway for players who need physical maturity, tactical clarity, coaching, and repeated high-level competition.
The discussion moves from Ben Shelton, Gabriel Diallo, Ethan Quinn, Cam Norrie, and Kevin Anderson into the day-to-day reality of building players inside a college program. Reynolds outlines how Auburn approaches technical changes, racket and string decisions, tactical identity, semester-by-semester development, and the long arc required to turn promising juniors into professional-level players.
The episode then turns toward the financial pressures reshaping college athletics. NIL, fundraising, conference realignment, and the near-loss of Arkansas men’s tennis all raise a harder question: can the same system producing professional players survive long enough to keep doing it?
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By Best Of Three ProductionsAuburn men’s tennis head coach Bobby Reynolds joins Best of Three for a deep conversation on the evolution of college tennis, player development, and the future of the NCAA system. Reynolds explains why college tennis is no longer a fallback option for aspiring professionals, but a legitimate high-performance pathway for players who need physical maturity, tactical clarity, coaching, and repeated high-level competition.
The discussion moves from Ben Shelton, Gabriel Diallo, Ethan Quinn, Cam Norrie, and Kevin Anderson into the day-to-day reality of building players inside a college program. Reynolds outlines how Auburn approaches technical changes, racket and string decisions, tactical identity, semester-by-semester development, and the long arc required to turn promising juniors into professional-level players.
The episode then turns toward the financial pressures reshaping college athletics. NIL, fundraising, conference realignment, and the near-loss of Arkansas men’s tennis all raise a harder question: can the same system producing professional players survive long enough to keep doing it?
Send us Fan Mail