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Andy Roddick
Hey, everyone. Welcome to Served. I'm Andy, producer Mike in the house. Techie Sean. Also with us this week we are going to be celebrating my good friends Bob and Mike Bryan. They came on for a really, really, what I thought was a hilarious interview with a million viral moments. And when those two get together and start storytelling, you know, the various parts of their, you know, illustrious careers where they became the best doubles team of all time but have this sibling twin thing which makes magic on the court and they're probably a little too close sometimes, but like just always kind of went about things the right way anyway, so we did an interview with them. They were gracious enough to come on this show. I, you know, I don't. 15, 16 months ago, when nobody was really listening, I thought the show was going to be like go nuts and it would just be, to me, it would be criminal to have this, this footage of them and the stories that they've told and not kind of revisit that interview with their upcoming induction into the hall of Fame and well deserved induction into the hall of Fame. So Mike did. He took. What'd you do? You took Pete. What? What did you do?
Mike Bryan
Oh, we chopped it up a little bit. We did kind of a best of clip. Before we get to that, Andy, they, the Bryan brothers actually posted a clip this morning. It's setting up the Aug. 22 hall of Fame celebrity pro classic that I think you're, you're facing and squaring off against them. And I think Kim's even involved in it. But, but Sean put play Andy, that Clip.
Bob Bryan
Andy. What's up, Bob? Mike Bryant here from Wimbledon. We're already getting ready for you, man. We're on the grass here. We'll see you in Newport soon, man. Stretch out, do whatever you gotta do.
Sean
Don't serve it to my backhand. And I'm not gonna serve it to your forehand. And keep your servo under 140, man. It's grass.
Andy Roddick
Chill out.
Bob Bryan
Okay? You're gonna hurt somebody, aren't you?
Andy Roddick
Oh, God. So they've been mentioning that I was gonna maybe have to play. I don't. I don't want to. I didn't want to play them when I was good at tennis. What a. What a nightmare that is on grass.
Bob Bryan
Ugh.
Mike Bryan
Any. Any predictions?
Andy Roddick
Pain for me. I mean, it's like just.
Mike Bryan
You're just folding already?
Andy Roddick
Well, it's just not. It's kind of bullshit if you think about it, because. No, it is. Give me a second here. It is. It's got a Bullshit. Because it's like they're obviously the two best players on the court. They still play every tournament. Like, oh, here we are, this video fresh from Wimbledon, where we won fucking five matches. Like, they never stop playing tennis. Like, you know, so I don't know. Like. And. But also normally, the way it works in these things is if you have two people who are by far the best players who keep playing. And listen, their skill set was never running sideline to sideline. Like, they're. You know, they got those little.
Bob Bryan
Little.
Andy Roddick
Little. Little legs, you know, those little tiny legs. And so it's like. It's never as if they were going sideline to sideline. So, like, their skill set tracks. Like, I can't serve anymore. My shoulder's broke, and I wasn't really good at anything besides that. So normally in. In that scenario, you split up the best two players, but because they're twins and because they're like. Because they're like a package deal all of a sudden, I don't. Do I. Do I have a partner? Am I just playing one on two? How bad is this going to get? Do we have any more details?
Mike Bryan
Who else is playing? Sean, It's. I saw Kim glisters on the roster, and I think you'll. I think you'll be okay. I think you'll be in good hands.
Andy Roddick
Yeah, I mean, I'll take Kim, no problem. We'll put.
Mike Bryan
We'll put details in the show descriptions. Go click the link. Go check it out. If you guys are going to be up in Newport, grab some tickets. It's going to be Friday, August 22, the hall of Fame Celebrity Pro Classic. I for one, am super pumped. I'm going to be there to see you get your ass kicked.
Andy Roddick
Oh my. Dude. Okay, so something, something else just dropped for me and I don't know, I'm sure they've announced this. I don't know if they have and if they haven't. Surprised. I have to play Thursday night in Ash for that like has been Night at the Stars. So wait a minute. I have to play. I'm quality of. I'm playing Thursday night. I haven't hit a serve in a year. I'm playing Thursday night and then I have to play Friday. Is it like I have to get to Newport somehow. Like, can we convert.
Mike Bryan
Can we convert it to like a Dingles match? Can we convert the. Should we lobby for that?
Andy Roddick
Great. Anything that I don't have to serve is. So I have to play Thursday night and then I'm going to go like Friday day.
Mike Bryan
I didn't make your schedule. Don't be upset with me.
Andy Roddick
I'm not upset with you. I'm upset with me. I thought it was a Saturday thing. I didn't. I thought I did two live shows.
Mike Bryan
We'll have our draw Special on the 21st from outside Arthur Ashe before the Stars event and then we will have our hall of Fame special on that Saturday, so.
Andy Roddick
Well, the show. You got a lot to do. That's fine. The show. I like working. I like working. It's just the shows, believe it or not, Mike, they don't really stress me out physically that much. I'm not really worried about my shoulder getting through a podcast, so.
Mike Bryan
Oh, this is not podcasting correctly then.
Andy Roddick
This is. Well, we, we probably aren't podcasting correctly, but like this is. We're definitely. What a. What a nightmare.
Mike Bryan
Help me set the stage for this though. So when you guys were playing Davis cup and you were supposed to play a Juan Carlos Ferreira, but then he got subbed out. Can you set the stage on year and where this is and what that is and, and then let it. Let's lay out for them.
Andy Roddick
I'll, I'll. I'll run you through it if you can say Ferrero properly. Yeah, yeah. Jeremy Ferrara. You turned him into like a cast member of Entourage.
Mike Bryan
Chalk it up.
Andy Roddick
Yeah. So Seville, I mean, listen, I joke with the Brian's and I talk about what a nightmare it is to play doubles against that. That is, all of that is true. And also my life was never better than when we were on the Davis cup squad together, and I knew that there was no chance I had to play Saturday. They were going to win pretty much every time. But, yeah, the general sentiment this. How stupid we were. The general sentiment in the locker room was, oh, no. You know, Ferrero won the French Open the year before, has been number one in the world. What a nightmare. They sub in this kid in a doll who I had beaten pretty handily at the US Open, like, two months earlier, an hour before the match. And we're all. If this is the clip, I can't remember, but we're all going, oh, this is. This is great. I cannot believe these idiots actually are playing this guy Nadal on red clay. Gosh, we really have them here. But anyways, the rest of clips, they're the best. They're hilarious when they, you know, let the curtain down and talk about the inner workings of not only being brothers, but being the best doubles team in the world. They always present really well. But there are moments of tension that we would laugh about behind the scenes forever in a day, because as much as they look alike, they are very, very different personalities. But I always felt extremely honored to be their friend. I can't wait to support them during the induction and always have time for some Brian brothers stories. And with that, let's. Let's get to some storytelling with the Brian Bros. Bob and Mike Bryan agreed to come on the show. I looked at Mike and I said, let's let it rip, Tater. Chip, let's go. Bob and Mike, how you guys doing?
Sean
Good. How you doing, Andy? Nice to see this podcast become a reality. I know you were. We were talking about it in Charlotte a few months ago, and I was waiting to text you and say, hey, this is a great podcast, because I knew you would ask us to be on. So I was waiting until we were both ready for this, for this to happen.
Andy Roddick
Yeah, I think, Mikey, correct me if I'm wrong, if my suspicion of Bob is accurate. I think he was waiting to see if we got canceled in the first three weeks. Is that a more accurate representation?
Bob Bryan
You're rocking and rolling, but, yeah, we had a fun time in Charlotte in December for your foundation, and we told a few stories at your dinner, and you're like, I think I'm going to start a podcast, and you got to let it rip.
Andy Roddick
Let it rip, Tatership. I first saw you guys, and you all know this because we've talked about it many times, but I first saw you all there. I remember being in Austin, Texas. I was probably like, 7 or 8 years old.
Sean
Andy, we weren't taking, we didn't even take you serious. You know, John, your big bro was on the national team. We looked up to him. He was kind of like our junior idol, him and Goldstein. And you were just a little tag along. You were playing mini tennis on the sidewalk there in Austin. And you know, we didn't even take you serious until you hit Sampras with that, that body serve at Kivis game. And then it was then you kind of moved into the spotlight. But Johnny, I mean, he was a legend at Georgia. We actually played against him in, in two NCAA finals. And you played him, you played him.
Andy Roddick
In the what round you, Bob, you beat. So my older brother John is a two time NCAA coach of the year. Great coach, was a good junior, was on the national team kind of in and around when, when, when Bob were there. And then Bob, you beat him in what round of the NCAA singles Semis.
Sean
That was the greatest win of my whole career. I beat him in Athens in the semis. Beating a legend, John Roddick on his home court. Definitely there wasn't anything better than that for me in my singles.
Andy Roddick
That was it. Yeah, you could have died a happy playing the Bulldogs.
Bob Bryan
Playing the Bulldogs in Georgia actually got us ready for Davis cup because that's the toughest environment in sports. We got to play that team. And the dogs are barking, they're, they're pouring beer on our heads as we got balls yelling obscenities about our mom. You know that that's actually the most intimidating atmosphere in sports, I would say.
Andy Roddick
Are you saying that for effect? I mean, we played in front of 30 some odd thousand people in a soccer stadium in.
Sean
You think that that was pretty intimidating? I mean, it was dizzying to look up and see all the Spanish fans in Sevilla. Yeah, that was cool. But this, when they're getting personal and they're, and they're talking about your mom and you can understand the language and these drunk fraternity guys are just out for blood. You pull your hat down and you try not to look up because if you make eye contact with these guys, it's over. But that was, yeah, that was crazy. Athens, Georgia, nothing like it. I wish the NCAAs would go back to, to Athens. 6,500 barking dogs, nothing like it.
Andy Roddick
I know that there's pictures floating around of, of you guys at Davis cup ties when you're young. Change my world. I saw the Dallas final in 92. I think we've, we've all been very outspoken about the effect it had on us. Is that effect the same? And is it. Do you feel a big responsibility to kind of make sure that Davis cup has the same impact as it. As it had on us? And is that possible now?
Sean
Yeah, that's the challenge. Right. We're missing some of those opportunities to inspire those, those young kids, the next Andy Roddick. You were at the matches. We all saw these young guys like Opelica, Francis Tiafa, when they're little 11, 12 year olds at these Davis cup matches. We're not going to have a home tie here in the States. It's going to be three years. I think come next year, that that's a lot of missed opportunities to, you know, bring tennis to smaller markets. Yes. But also inspire people like us. So, yeah, I want to. I want to keep Davis cup in the forefront. We.
Bob Bryan
We loved it.
Sean
I know we all had this shared goal. You wanted that on your resume. We were talking about it January 1st. All of us. We didn't start. Stop talking about it until we'd won the cup, honestly. And we looked forward to these weeks. I mean, look, we were playing poker. We all had a great time in the hotels, hanging out together, going out after the matches, enjoying those wins. And the atmospheres were insane, Andy. I mean, we were playing in front of 15,000 fans. We had the F16s flying over pyrotechnics, the drum lines running out, Darius Rucker singing the national anthem. But I think we have guys that are committed to playing and they want to win this Cup. But, yeah, they're not talking about it right now. I can guarantee you it's a little different than when we were, when we were around.
Bob Bryan
I mean, we went to. Sorry, sorry. We went to Croatia right after the US Open, and we went over there and we played at a neutral site against these, you know, great teams. Right. Like Netherlands. We played against Finland and Croatia, and there were five American fans. And you bring a guy over like Francis Tiafa, who just played a night match on Arthur Ashe Stadium in front of 22,000American fans. So it's really hard for these guys to get up for it. And they know the next week they're flying over to Vancouver to play the Labor Cup. So it's a lot to ask schedule wise, but also you'd want these guys to be in these atmospheres where they're. It's exciting. So it's, it's a little bit different. And we got to bring that, that back to Davis Cup, I think.
Andy Roddick
How does that, how does that happen in its current format? Or does it not happen in its current format?
Sean
We got to get out of the group stage. We take it to Malaga, hopefully get some excitement in the press, bring over a team of fans. We had those net heads that would come over in hundreds, you know, Sevilla, like, there was 27, 500 Spanish fans. But we could always look at our net heads, you know, to go nuts for us. Dude, that Sevilla, that. That was incredible, because I remember that night, the Thursday night before the match, we were almost celebrating when they pulled out Juan Carlos Ferrero, the French Open champion, number, whatever, two in the world. And they were substituting in a teenager named Rafael Nadal, who you, I think, beat at the US Open. Three, four, and, oh, a couple months before, we were all like, oh, my God, they're. They're idiots. I can't believe they're putting in Nadal.
Andy Roddick
Yeah. Roddick will never lose to Nadal on clay. That was dumb of them.
Sean
We thought. We thought we had a chance. And then, well, Marty had that short forehand against Moya and went for his. I think went for his head. And the crowd booed for, like, 30 minutes. That kind of changed a little momentum. And then against Nadal, I felt like Nadal became Nadal in that match in front of his home fans. And you were. You were so disappointed that you had lost to the greatest clay court player of all time, that when we got home and we got our check in the mail, it was like, three times as big. You sent us your. You sent us your prize money. I don't remember if you realize or remember that you sent us your money. You said, give it to the Brian's. You know, I didn't earn it. I mean, we kicked it back to your charity, but I don't think you would have given. Given away your prize money had you known this guy would have won 14 French Opens.
Andy Roddick
Well, I can actually make you a very honest man right now. We played them again in 08 after Rafa had won, I think, four straight French Opens. And I didn't send you guys shit after that one. I think. I actually don't even think. I don't think Mike was there for that one, so he certainly wasn't getting any money. But I wasn't giving any money away after that one. I felt like I earned my beating in 08, whereas I let one slip. And, yeah, I think you had one.
Bob Bryan
Set that went to 6, 4. And we were, like, celebrating that night. We're having a couple drinks, and you're.
Andy Roddick
Like, yeah, do you guys. This is a side Tangent. But do you want to hear one of the most depressing moments of my life real quick?
Sean
Sure.
Bob Bryan
Yeah.
Andy Roddick
Okay. So you. Bob was there, or was it. Was it Mike. Mike. You played with. Did you play that second one, or. It was Bob and Marty.
Bob Bryan
I played with Marty Fish. Bob was having his firstborn child, Michael.
Andy Roddick
That's right. Okay. That's what it was.
Bob Bryan
And we played in the Plaza del Toro.
Andy Roddick
And that's ring. That's right. That's right. Yeah. And so this. It was the. You guys won double. You guys always won doubles. Didn't matter. You know, who was playing with what. It's like the undersold part is like, you guys could just play. And it was great. But in 08, I remember this Sunday, I was playing. I had lost to Ferrer in five sets the first day. I think I was down two sets and then came back and then lost. It was brutal. And then the morning. So I wake up the morning on Sunday in Spain, and you look out the window and you know you're gonna play Nadal and clay. So I kind of, like, open like this, and I look out, and it's gray and raining, and I'm like, this sucks. This is a bad beat. I do not need to be playing on him, on anything slower or muddier. So I go warm up, and then they have that, like, live, grainy feed into the locker room where you can see, like, center court. So I had warmed up, and then all of a sudden, I see a wheelbarrow going out onto the court, right? I'm like, what the. What the fuck is that? Wheelbarrow and a shovel. And some guy has a shovel, and he's just shoveling clay onto the court, and the other guy's patting it down. I'm like, so the ra. The general goatness of him on clay, I felt, like, half embarrassed because they were paying so much attention to me for this match when they really didn't need to. I was going to go out and be a dumpster fire anyways. It was a complete suicide mission.
Bob Bryan
But.
Sean
But those were the fun things about the home and away. I mean, you know, when you play on the road, they're going to play us on the slowest, soupiest dirt. I remember Belgium, like, they threw dirt down into that. That indoor arena, and the court wasn't even hardened. You know, the. The ball was like an explosion. It was like that Powerade commercial that you did. The ball would, like, stick in the court. It was real. And I think we got a fortunate call. And I remember the postone our security guys, the brothers, you know, running us out of there because they were. That whole place was going to come down on us.
Andy Roddick
It was the single worst call I've ever been the beneficiary of, the one that you're referencing. And I remember walking up to correct it, and I remember you all and Patrick yelling at me, turn the fuck around. Go back. So I ended up breaking, and we got my producer Mike. Literally, we were playing. It's probably only 2,500 people. It wasn't like the biggest stadium ever, but it was like we were going to be relegated and we win. But they called an overhead out that was maybe six inches inside the line. And I had corrected a call earlier that year and given a match away. And so I start walking up, and my entire bench just starts yelling at me, it's not about you. Move.
Mike Bryan
Get back.
Sean
So anyways, we needed every point against that little guy, Rokus. He was a magician.
Andy Roddick
Pound for pound.
Sean
Yes.
Andy Roddick
Pound for pound. One of the best, didn't he? Won the French Open in doubles, too.
Sean
Yep. With malice.
Andy Roddick
He. He could stripe it, man. Anyways, we held serve, and we get trash thrown on us as we're leaving. Like, they start throwing things. Like. I mean, that was. That was. That was a. That was a weird situation.
Bob Bryan
Davis cup journey came full circle in Portland. I still feel like that's the highlight of our career, winning the Davis cup at the Rose Garden in front of a, you know, packed crowd. We played the Russians. It was like a Rocky movie. And I remember you got it done, and James got it done on the first day. So Bob and I had the opportunity to clinch for the country. And when I was serving out the match, you know, I looked over, I saw how emotional you were on the. On the sideline. You're already crying and, you know, getting it done, kind of the elation. We piled up on the court, took it out late to the clubs, you know, had a. I think we had like a 4am morning. I remember you tapped me on the shoulder at, like, 4am I think you were drenched in sweat. You'd been dancing all night. And you said, hey, guess what? You're playing the dead rubber tomorrow live on the Tennis Channel. You're playing. And then I walk over, I see Bob in the corner. I tap him. I'm like, guess what? You're playing the dead rubber. And we had this big battle that night, and we actually ended up calling my parents and. And then they voted. They're like, okay, Bob. Bob's. He's usually been the singles horse. Bob's got to do it. And then I, I, I think I pulled an all nighter with you. Bob had to get some sleep and played Andrea the next day.
Sean
So that went from the best night of my life to the worst night of my life.
Bob Bryan
You.
Sean
You guys threw me to the wolves the next day.
Andy Roddick
I, you might have had a few.
Sean
To too many to drink. I don't think you could have passed the breathalyzer test.
Andy Roddick
Oh, no.
Sean
On Sunday to play that. I mean, we had that Davis Cup. I remember we were filling it with booze.
Andy Roddick
I'm sure I don't know what you mean. I don't understand. The Beer Olympics was good.
Bob Bryan
Remember you had the Beer Olympics in Austin? I remember that.
Andy Roddick
I do remember. I remember all of my bad decisions. I, yeah, I'm, I'm not proud of this moment. I feel badly talking to you now, Bob, especially because you came on this podcast so nicely avoiding your unfinished home projects because you're not sure where to start. Thumbtack knows homes, so you don't have to. Don't know the difference between matte paint.
Sean
Finish and satin or what that clunking.
Andy Roddick
Sound from your dryer is. With Thumbtack, you don't have to be a home pro.
Sean
You just have to hire one.
Andy Roddick
You can hire top rated pros, see price estimates and read reviews all on the app download today.
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Andy Roddick
I want you guys to talk about winning the Olympics, specifically in 2012. I think it's fitting in an Olympic year. But you all had done all of the things by 2012, it was kind of readily accepted that you guys were either the best doubles team ever or on your way to becoming the best doubles team ever. So the only argument was about timing and counting stats at that point. But you hadn't won an 04, you hadn't won an 08. So talk about going into the 2012 Olympics and the pressure set with knowing that this, this could be a thing that could potentially if you don't win it this time. You know, 16 wasn't guaranteed at that moment. 20 certainly wasn't guaranteed at that moment. Talk about you all going into that tournament. Did you talk about it as something different? Did you understand the weight of it? What was that like and what were the kind of, I guess the mental ramifications going into to that event versus, you know, a Slam at that point?
Sean
Yeah, I mean, 2012, we were 34 years old, 35 years old when Andre retired, was ancient. But there's a sense of urgency with the Olympics, right? Tennis is always about the next opportunity. If you don't win the French Open, you got a crack at Wimbledon. You know, this one, that one Olympics is different. You got to wait four years. You know, you got to be top in your country or you're not going. And everyone always asks us, what would you rather win, a Grand Slam or the Olympics. I think for singles you take a Grand Slam, you know, you put yourself in the history books. It really validates everything you've done your whole life. I've heard the number. If you win a Grand Islam is worth 30 million in endorsements and this and that. It opens the door to the hall of fame. But for doubles, that's different. You know, you're not, you're not making headlines. You're not playing on TV every day. A lot of people don't know the doubles players, but winning a gold medal kind of takes you to that global audience. It's the trophy that everyone wants to hold. I just did career day here at my kids school and I brought the gold medal and I passed it around. The kids are freaking out, holding it. It's like a celebrity onto itself. So then, you know, 34 years old, we went to London. There was a sense of urgency. We had to win that gold. It all came together. We won seven tiebreakers during that time. It was two out of three sets on grass, doubles, small margins. We got it. We played the French guys again in the finals and you know, it was one of Those moments, you know, there was no tears on the metal stand. We were in shock. And I think it was Cincinnati a few weeks later that we were in our rental car and we just started screaming. It finally hit us. And I had the gold in my racket bag. I carried it around in my bag for like six months, brought it out at bars. It was like a chick magnet, you know? And I. For Mike. For Mike, because I was married. Anyway.
Bob Bryan
Bob, I remember your. Your gold medal. It had so many scuffs on it, and it wasn't even a circle anymore. You're handing it out so many fans, they were dropping it. And it was actually like almost a square. And I kept mine in at my house. I shined it up. It was in the front. I had lights shining on it. And then Bob did the old switcheroo. Came out to California.
Andy Roddick
Come on.
Bob Bryan
And put his little square.
Sean
It didn't. It wasn't even gold.
Bob Bryan
It looked silver, you know, And. And then took my gold out to Miami and it's pretty fun.
Andy Roddick
So where do they stand currently then?
Sean
Well, it's in the safe. But Mike. Yeah, Mike had this mint condition gold medal in the safe. My ribbon was all tattered, you know, and so I did the switcheroo. I'm like, hey, I want a fresh one. And he called me, like, it was like a year later. He was like, you son of a bitch, give me my gold medal back.
Andy Roddick
So he hadn't even looked at it.
Sean
So anyway, my gold medal's got some mileage on it.
Andy Roddick
I feel like too often when I'm talking to people about you, all about you two, I saw the work and the muscle memory created through practice. You guys get explained away by people who even know tennis as. Oh, yeah, that's just. That's the twin thing. I'm like, mother fucker. It's not the twin. They literally spend eight hours like, you'll hit a great volley. Go. That's the twin thing. I'm like, I'm sure there's an element of that. And I want you all to define what that is in a second. Because I find myself wanting to defend the skill set and work more than kind of giving credit to just you two in proximity. Is that. Is that nuts?
Bob Bryan
We were, as you saw our practices, we were crazy intense, right? Like, we really pushed each other. We had our. Our practices like clockwork. We've done them so many times since literally like three, four years old. We were working on doubles coming up when guys are mainly focusing on singles. My dad had us doing These doubles drills and hitting for the alleys. And so when we were, when we were out there, we were just moving, moving, moving. But we were practicing like we wanted to play. Pretty much like every shot had a consequence. If I missed a shot, Bob would like roll his eyes like he expected the best out of me. Held the bar so damn high. Like we, you know, you saw our practices, they're, they're pretty intense. There'd be some blow ups, some stuff said, but we were just holding each other to, to a really high standard and we just wanted to, we wanted to be the best man. Like we wanted to play that Davis cup in the Olympics. And we knew that we had to be the number one team. And we really just, we were perfectionists. We hated to lose. And every day in practice it felt like we were playing matches. So, you know, that goes into it. But also the twin dynamic and sharing a womb together and practicing every day together and being in the hotel room playing music together. That whole team chemistry and twin energy that felt like when we were on the court, it was like one blob of energy. It was like this two headed monster. We're moving together, covering for each other. There's this kind of unspoken communication where it really did flow well. We were anticipating. I could look at Bob's face and know what he was feeling, where he's going to hit his serve. We didn't really even speak in between points, right? We just used a couple code, twin language words. And we like to play quick. But you know, communication was our kind of our biggest strength. But it could also be our biggest foe, right? You know, the sibling tension could sometimes surface on the practice court, sometimes in matches, you know, it would bubble up. You know, when you're, when you're playing with your brother in high pressure moments, right, you feel like you can say anything to your bro that you wouldn't say to a normal partner. Like I wouldn't say that you have, but your twin, you know, you've shared a room with forever, you share a bank account with, right? Then things are said that are pretty hurtful. I know exactly Bob's weak spots. I know all his insecurities and I'll drop a little bomb and sometimes it'll explode. We played our best and we didn't say much, but there were a few moments where it did happen and we're not proud of it, right? But I think it's normal as brothers, if you're a brother and especially a twin, you're going to have these moments. And I worked Every day with my bro, and it's like you're going to the office and we're taking it so seriously. So, yeah, there are a few. And I know we talked about these in Charlotte and I know you probably brought us on your podcast to maybe mention a couple of these moments.
Andy Roddick
Yes, yes. In no uncertain terms. Yes. Because there's a couple I want to just reference. And then I would like to you all to take it wherever you want. There was a guitar situation in London one time. There was someone getting knocked out in Australia, which I only Learned about like 6 months ago. And don't spare us details. Tell us kind of when this relationship, which on paper. And you guys have always been so fluent with media, with, you know, you're the first two people out growing the game every week. You guys are like, you know, without knowing these moments of stress, you're like a walking double mint commercial, right? It's like this. These like, you're like a half polo ad, half like, you know, you could sell anything. You could sell, you know, ice to someone in Alaska. But give it. Tell us a couple of these stories.
Sean
I'll take it back to 06. We hadn't won Wimbledon the year before we played Huss Moody in the finals. They were a qualifier team. On paper, that's a gimme. They're the only qualifying team to win Wimbledon. We lost that match two weeks before we lost the Wimbledon final or the, sorry, the French Open final. We had break points in the third. Didn't get it done. Show up at Wimbledon, just kind of being there a year later, after not winning against the qualifier team, there was some tension. The monkey was growing on our back. It was the only one we hadn't won. Like I said, we're playing first round on a field court. You know, there's only 20, 20 people on this side of the court, 20 people on the other side of the court. We're in the weeds and we're playing Jordan Kerr and Amir Delek, a fellow American. We should get this one done in straights and move on. We're down a break, two sets to. Two sets to one and a break in the fourth, a break in the fifth. We scraped by. We went 11, nine in the fifth. A lot of people would be relieved and happy. We were pissed off. And we're discussing the match in the. In the transportation car going back to the Airbnb and we're both playing Monday morning quarterback pointing. And those. Those pointing fingers, we turn into shoves. And then now we're swinging at each Other the cars rocking side to side.
Andy Roddick
In the way. In the car, in the drive, by the way. Let me set the. Just let me. Don't let me interrupt for too long. But, like, you have drivers. This a volunteer position, right? And so maybe the drive. And they're normally like tennis fans. Like, you know, you get conversation and we. They do. They do us such a service every week. But imagine being like, oh, my gosh, it's gonna be cool. The Bryants are coming. They're the best doubles team in the world. Okay. Go, Bob.
Sean
So this poor lady, she's scared for her life. The car is going side to side. The car is swerving. Our coach is in the front seat. He's trying to reach back and break it up. Anyway, we get to the house. It's kind of settled down a little bit. We're getting our bags out of the car, and Mike bitch slaps me in the face. And then he takes off running up the stairs. And I just drop my bag. I'm running after him. I'm running after him. He grabs the rails of the stairs and mule kicks me off the stairs into the bushes. And I just bounce up like Terminator. And I'm running after him. We run all the way to the thing, third floor. He locks himself in the bathroom. I barely miss him. I'm banging on the door like a. Like a scene out of the Shining. And I can't get it. I can't get in. So all I see is this shiny prized possession is Taylor guitar. And I splintered that thing. That thing. You couldn't take it to a repair shop and put it back together? That thing was toast. But the funny thing is, like, five minutes later, we're having dinner. And that's the freaky thing about twins. We always say when we see friends, we're like, those are freaks. Or twins. Those are freaks. Because we're having dinner five minutes later and then actually realized, damn, we share a bank account. That guitar was half mine, you know, So I just. I just blew up half of my guitar, too. But it released a little steam. Like we would being the number one team, you know, having those expectations, keeping the bar high. And in everything we did, it would boil up and. And we would let it out and. And we're not proud of it, of sometimes these ways, but we went on to win the tournament, and we played some of our best tennis because that kind of locked us back in. And we let go of all that stuff from the year before, from the French Open, and then. Then it flowed. So Yeah, I mean, and I know you want to talk about, you know, the time that one of us was knocked out. No one, no one knows that story. We told it at your charity event. I think we had had a couple.
Andy Roddick
I want to actually wanna, I have a follow up and then I wanna get to that. The knockout. But Mike, the hit and run is an interesting play for you because obviously technical volleys return. You're like, you're like, you're like the Tim Duncan. Like everything is just kind of perfect. You're just in the position you need to be. You make it look easier than it is. But speed, I'm going with Bob. Did you think you were going to get away with a hit and run.
Bob Bryan
Looking after the team? I mean, I knew Bob could have killed me. I saw the look in his eye and he was coming at me like a bull and I had to lock the door and literally, like he was coming through the door, like, here. Not Here comes Johnny, here comes Bobby. Right, right. But you know, it is weird. Like we always knew we were a package deal. And these fights get like, they get buried pretty quick. And we could like, we knew we're always going to stay together. So we would have these blow ups and they, they actually led to greater times, greener pastures. If this happened with like Knowles and Nestor or anyone, you know, they'd never talk again. Right. But it's just, it's funny. And then, yeah, I mean, the, the one in, in 2017, this is probably our biggest of them all. And we've only told this story one time to a few people at your charity event. And so right now we're going live with it. Right? But it was kind of a dark period of our career. We hadn't won a slam for a couple years. That must be our chemistry.
Andy Roddick
Can you imagine, Mike? Producer Mike. Could you imagine not winning a slam for a couple years? What fucking losers.
Bob Bryan
Our chemistry was fractured, right? Bob was living in Miami, I was in California. Our coach even let us go. Like Macker said, hey, you guys are too far gone. He actually fired us. So come on, this is after the Open when, you know, the hopes of winning the slam are gone. You're playing indoors, you don't see the sun for days. Or in Antwerp in a dungeon playing cards. I'm going through a tough personal life event. I'm getting a divorce. Right. I'm checking my phone, I'm trying to check for lawyers, but we're playing cards. We like to play cards and we're playing hard. A dollar a point, Bob's. Killing me. You know, he's venmo me for a thousand bucks every couple days and he's the dealer. I see that he kind of bottom dealed me. So I give him a whack on the back of the head, right? And I did that about. I gave him like maybe 10 love taps during that week because I was stressed, right? And then he looked at me, he's like, if you ever do that again, I'm gonna knock you out.
Sean
So, yeah. So fast forward a couple months. Like, like Mike said, we're, we're looking for some magic in our careers we hadn't had in a couple years. We grabbed that babble out racket that you're, that you're used to. You know, we're stubborn with this prince, no technology on this prince racket. We were like, hey, we need a little extra pop. We have the babylot. We're down in Australia. We only use it for a week. We're playing our first round match, Aussie Open backcourt. Hot day, windy, balls are flying. We're playing two guys we've never heard of and we've heard of him now, but at the time, Nishioka and Fuchsiavic, we had no clue who these guys were. And we're losing and balls are getting away anyway. Mike has some overheads, doesn't put him away. End up losing the point. And I say, hey, let's put it away next time, jackass. And he hit me on the back of the head again. He just gave me one of those taps on the back of the head and he was behind me as a reflex. I was triggered. I just turned and I swung and.
Andy Roddick
More with Bob and Mike Bryan on the other side.
Sean
Fox Creative.
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Sean
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Sean
We're down in Australia. We only use it for a week. We're playing our first round match, Aussie open backcourt. I didn't know where I was swinging, but I caught Mike perfect right in the back of the head. And he dropped like a sack of potatoes. And I'm like, oh, God. And I looked down. He's just laying there motionless. And I give him a couple shakes and I don't get. Get anything. And then suddenly his eyes pop wide open like Bob Barker. And he goes, congratulations, you just made SportsCenter. And I'm like, oh. And then he wobbles to his chair, gets smelling salts, does this whole song and dance with the trainer. And anyway, we got kind of scared. We're like, oh, God, that's never happened. The crowd was actually laughing because they thought it was like a skit, like Monster Bahrami. And the only people that weren't laughing was our coach, Macker and, and this guy, Dave Marshall. They knew exactly. They knew the history from Antwerp. They knew what I said to Mike with the card games. They knew Mike was actually out cold.
Bob Bryan
And.
Sean
Just like we did, we locked in. We won the match in three sets. We go back to the locker room, and I'm like, hey, Mike, we got to get our story straight here, man. We're going into a press conference. We expect it to be packed. You know, a couple hundred journalists want to know about the first time that someone's been knocked out on a. On a grand Slam match. And I'm like, hey, let's just get it straight here. Let's just, you know, say, hey, we faked it, blah, blah, blah. Mike's like, hey, tell him the truth, man. Tell him you sucker punched me. You know, I'm like, I'm going to tell him that, you know, you hit me on the back head. I told you I'd knock you out. And I did. Anyway, we. We walked slowly to this press conference, and we open the door and there's two people. It's Bill Simon. And no one's. No one even knows about it. Federer was losing to Sepi on center court. Every eyeball in that whole site was on Federer. It went unnoticed. I guess the TV didn't really pick it up. Nadia, Mike's current wife, was actually watching her first tennis match at the time, and she was watching it from New York, and she texted my wife Michelle back in Florida and said, what just happened there? And Michelle's like, you know, don't worry about it.
Bob Bryan
It's.
Sean
I. I get it. Don't worry. I see this every day. So anyway, you know, the only guy that actually had footage, Footage of this is this guy, Deuce on Vimich, one of our buddies. And he put it to like a boomerang techno beat and had Mike going down, popping back up like a. Like a little. Like a little puppet. But anyway, like. Like Wimbledon in 06, it kind of released this tension, and at 40 years old, we kind of went on a little bit of a resurgence, you know, finals. Anyone else won Miami 1, Monte Carlo Finals of Madrid before I blew my hip out and we went back to number one in the world. But it all started with Mike dropping like a sack of potatoes.
Andy Roddick
Oh, my God, these stories are so great.
Sean
We don't condone violence. Like, these are some. These are some. These are some low moments. But, like, we never. We're as close as we've ever been. Like, we. We didn't hold any grudges, but we never. We never fractured. Like, we didn't go back to the locker room and, hey, Bob knocked me out. We didn't go talk about this to other players. You see that during sometimes in losses and tough matches, the players split up. They go to opposite sides of the locker room and they start talking behind each other's back. We never did that. We always sat right next to each other. We took our lumps and.
Andy Roddick
Literally.
Sean
Yeah, yeah, literally. But, like, we played thousands of matches together. It's going to get ugly sometimes, because.
Andy Roddick
As much pride as I have in these stories, because I think they're the way that you tell them in this whole twin thing that you have is like something that outside looking in is just not something that anyone can understand. Even if you could understand the twin thing. Like, imagine taking that into these pressure situations, a lifetime of work, realizing you're dependent on someone else. Like, it's just the layering of what you all have done, the mental gymnastics involved, the shared of money houses, like, your personal lives, that you know someone so intimately back. I mean, it's just like. I think it's just a fascinating story. And I think these funny stories kind of give just like a little glimpse. And frankly, I think I like them because they're endearing. And also it makes you guys feel like, normal, right? Like, there's this, like, excellence, but also mixed in is, like, this petulance that we all kind of feel sometimes. When you all kind of look back at the totality of your career. Right. So winning every major, all the Master Series, Olympics, Davis cup, what are your kind of biggest pride points either for the other person? Like, we did it together, or is it titles or is it, you know, consistency? What. What are the kind of the biggest pride prints where you look back and, like, what makes you emotional? Looking back, we did.
Bob Bryan
We played for 23 years together, and we did stay together. Yeah, we had our moments, but we. We did it as a team, as brothers. That's what really made that process on the tour special. You got your best friend on the road doing it. And it wasn't always high moments. Right. We had, you know, I don't know how many Grand Slam finals we lost. We had some really difficult ones. Right?
Sean
14.
Bob Bryan
14. It's a lot. Right. But we stuck it out. Yeah. And just to be able to now share that kind of beyond the court now and just kind of reminisce. And I feel like our relationship's tighter now than it's ever been. We got kids, we want them to all play together. But looking back, we went really hard and we have really no regrets just because we didn't take any vacations. Right after we came back from the World Tour Finals, we were back working out together in the gym. We just really professional and just really. Yeah, we set the bar really high and we wrote down our goals every year and we really went after them together, like, kind of had this shared energy, this shared mission, the shared focus to do it and to help promote doubles. Because, I mean, doubles was suffering a little bit during the middle of our career. So we wanted to make doubles bigger and kind of, you know, have a platform there, but to make it through the meijer of all those, you know, ups and downs and kind of the roller coaster and stay strong with your twin. And we have unconditional love for each other. So that's probably what I'm most proud about.
Sean
Yeah, look, I mean, that kind of summarizes our bond, our relationship, which is, at the end of the day, the most important, that we are still talking to each other. We live on different sides of Florida, but we're on the phone four times a day. You know, if I see something cool at a Heat game, I'm calling Mike. Oh, dude, this guy had this dunk, you know, so we still share this bond. I would love to see Mike get down to Miami and, you know, get the band back together, because we've spent millions of hours jamming together. But yeah, and look, I was proud of Mike. When I was injured, I had my hip replaced. You know, I was proud Mike went out and he won a couple more slams with Jack Zuck. Yeah, that did, that hurt me to see him out there having success without me for a moment.
Bob Bryan
It did, it did.
Sean
It was tough when he was playing the Wimbledon final on tv, I was in the gym doing push ups and. But at the end of the day, I was actually proud of him. You know, that's a Brian out there representing. And he took me back. I got my hip replaced. And then five months later, he took me back. He didn't have to. And you know, one of my greatest moments is actually coming back and defending that Miami Open title in my backyard, you know, with a metal hip and doing, doing that with Mike. You know, that was, that was the one time I actually got a little misty eyed out during the trophy ceremony you mentioned.
Andy Roddick
And I've always thought you guys were really interesting also because you kind of become obsessed with stuff away from the court also. Like as. As much of a maniac as. As Mike is about everything, he kind of takes that away from the court also. And you, you kind of made a quick reference to your band. But like, every single week ever, like you would if you're staying at the same hotel and you're walking down the hallway, you would hear music coming from, from their room. And it's something you, you guys have become great musicians. And I know Michaela sang the, the national anthem at, at the US Open, so it's weird that you kind of have this, like, this, like this sub job, but you've trained yourself to be good in even A different space. It's like you didn't get enough of each other, having to play off of each other for paychecks. You had to do it in your spare time, too, for a long time.
Bob Bryan
Yeah. Music's a huge passion in our lives. I feel like you do have a lot of time on tour. You know, you practice, and then you have a lot of free hours. So we felt like that secondary passion was huge for us. Bob would always bring his keyboard out, bring a travel guitar, and we'd have that time in hotel rooms working on our chops, you know, and jamming together. But it all goes back to my dad. He was, you know, he didn't allow TV in our house, so we had these instruments in our living room. So he taught us how to play, you know, all the oldie songs. Growing up. When we went off to Stanford, we started kind of learning the theory of music a little bit and studying it. A lot of our friends are musicians just because we love music so much. But, yeah, then we started this band thing, right? And we had this album out in 2008. We had dreams of being rock stars, too, but it never materialized. We printed like, 10,000 of these CDs yet, and they're sitting in a warehouse in Atlanta right now.
Sean
I want to comment on that because I was a big part of, you know, helping write these songs and getting this out on itunes and expecting the dollars to just flow in from these songs. And there was a decision. How many albums do you want to print? And we're like. I'm like, let's print 10,000 of them. You know, we'll sell them at the shows and at the tournaments, and they're going to go like hotcakes.
Andy Roddick
Yeah.
Sean
And eventually we started calling these things Frisbees, because we just toss them off the stage.
Bob Bryan
And then.
Sean
How many T shirts do you want to print? Let's print 10,000. And so we have a warehouse that we're paying for still to this day.
Andy Roddick
Holding a bunch of this junk.
Sean
So if anyone wants a free album and a T shirt, Brian Bros. Band, it's yours.
Bob Bryan
But we have a couple highlights. We have a couple of highlights. We had you on stage singing Ice ICE Baby, maybe 15 years ago, and you killed that. That's somewhere on YouTube. And then we have this one song called Autograph, and we had Novak and Andy Murray rap a verse on it. We actually had Andy Murray read it. He was on the massage table, and we were like, can you just read this? And we recorded it.
Sean
Is that real?
Andy Roddick
I didn't know that part of it.
Bob Bryan
We had him just read the lyrics. We're just like, hey, man, can you just read this? I don't even know if he knew we were gonna put it up on itunes, but we had Novak do it and the BBC played it a few times on the and he just got roasted. Every talk show would go on. They played as he walked out and it just followed him. I remember Judy Murray came up to us and he's like, what'd you do to my son? But yeah, I mean, we love it. We have this one gig in Indian Wells. We play at the Food Court. So we played at the food court 12 years in a row and that's our super bowl, right? And we have these great musicians that join us. Jim Bogus from the County Crows, James Valentine from Rune Fives helped us out. And yeah, so we're still going hard in the studio and stuff.
Andy Roddick
But yeah, where do for, for, for our 11 listeners, where would they be able to find one of those old Frisbees T shirts or, or download some of your greatest hits?
Sean
You cannot find the album or the T shirt. Maybe we'll just bring a truck, a truck full to, to our next tournament that we go to. But you can, you can see our songs on Spotify and we have, I think 50 monthly listeners on Spotify. So hopefully this podcast increases that a little bit. But autograph's the one because we got Djokovic and Murray to sing this before they became Djokovic and Murray. Now, now these are two of the greatest players of all time. And so this might, this might take off now.
Bob Bryan
All right.
Andy Roddick
I, I, I know we have at least 50 listeners. So I expect all of you, if you're listening to this and you've made it this far, you have nothing better to do. You can spend another 12 seconds and go, go listen to, to the show.
Mike Bryan
We'll put a link in the show descriptions. Click down.
Andy Roddick
Perfect.
Mike Bryan
Let's double that number.
Andy Roddick
I'm not going to take any more of their time. Bob, Mike, you know that I've always appreciated you. You're an inspiration to me. When I came out, you, you won a slam before I did and you know, thankfully for you, you kept winning them after, afterwards. But I think shared experience is, is the, is the biggest source of bond. Obviously you all have tons of shared experience, but I've appreciated our shared experience and common goal. I know I can say without a doubt I would not be a Davis cup champion without the two of you. I hope in at least a Smaller version. You feel the same. Anything you guys ever need, you let me know. You guys are the best. There's only one best doubles team of all time and you just heard from them. Thanks, Bobby. Thanks, Mike. All right, welcome back to Served. I hope you enjoyed listening to the Brian Bros as much as I have for the last 30 years that I've known them. Actually, more than that. That's frightening. I met him when I was, I think 8 or 9 years old at Caswell Tennis center in Austin, Texas. Great, guys. I cannot wait to be there in person in Newport and show my support for my former teammates, the Goats of doubles. The best half quarters of all time, Bob and Mike, Brian. Actually Navratilova and Macaron might want a say in that, but the best. The best half court team of all time, no doubt. Can't argue math past a certain point, right? Okay, so we should be talking about Toronto, but it's now this thing that finishes midweek. Really inconsiderate for podcasters. I'm sure they took that into account when they were making the schedule. So I think we're going to do like a recap show.
Mike Bryan
Maybe just like a little quick served.
Andy Roddick
Yeah, we should do it after the match, but when you click on the app, it says tbd, so we don't know what time.
Mike Bryan
All times Eastern. Tbd. That's what it says.
Andy Roddick
Super. That makes it great. It'll be out Friday at the latest. Friday morning as soon as you get up. Because we'll, we'll run it after probably Thursday night. So we're going to try a quick served episode for a Toronto recap on Friday because we don't even know when the hell people are playing finals anymore at Masters 1000 because we just keep adding, adding weeks to the calendar and no one knows what the hell is going on. But anyways, we'll, we'll have a quick served out Toronto recap. Well, we'll get into the balls and strikes of that on Friday morning at the latest. Is that accurate, Mike?
Mike Bryan
That that's accurate. That is correct.
Andy Roddick
Okay. And something else that we are very excited about in the next couple of weeks. We have the date set, but release date maybe a little bit more unsettled depending on. On some moving parts. But we are going to have Maria Sharapova on. Oh, yeah, on served. I know, it's gonna be so cool. She's hilarious. She is. I can't wait for this. This conversation. And also one of the inductees along with Bob and Mike, Bryan. So we're Going kind of full hall of Fame into the induction ceremony and hopefully we're going to see the best of the hall of Fame coming up as opposed to some of the more recent things that we've seen with it. I can't wait for the. I can't wait for the Share Pova headline. I cannot wait to be on site at the hall of Fame. The museum is magic and Mike, we got a bunch of live shows. I can't keep up. What do we got?
Mike Bryan
Yeah, that's correct. We have the. The draw special will be at the US Open. Fan Week on the 21st. 2 o' clock is when we're slated to take the stage. Draw should be out around 11 to noon. We'll, we'll try and keep it hidden from you. Andy hasn't been too difficult and we'll have fun revealing that live on the air. And then we might even grab some guests, who knows? We'll be on stage for about an hour, hour and a half before you do the Stars event. And then August 23rd, we will be in Newport live ahead of the hall of Fame induction. We're still sorting out time exactly, but all the details are in the show descriptions. Super pumped for that.
Andy Roddick
Wait, so we have a stage? Are we, Are we outside of the stadium? Like, what is. What where? Do you know?
Mike Bryan
What is the stage for us for fan. For Fan week? Yeah, yeah, we're out. We're outside of Arthur Ashe Stadium on that stage. Right outside the gates.
Andy Roddick
Look at us.
Mike Bryan
Right inside Fan week.
Andy Roddick
Look at us. Look at us. Oh, I can't, I can't wait.
Mike Bryan
You know, I can't.
Andy Roddick
I can't.
Mike Bryan
Doing live shows.
Andy Roddick
I can't wait to get all my picks wrong with a live audience. That'll be different than just doing it in front of you knuckleheads. Anyways, that'll be great. We hope that if you can come see us at a live show, they're probably some of my favorite shows. Heckle us, talk to us, interact with us. We can't wait. We feel lucky that anyone's listening, much less people who actually come to live shows. So appreciate you there. Can't wait for the Maria episode. Quick served for Toronto will be out Friday morning. Assuming they get that match in. It's tbd, so hopefully they're not going to schedule it for like Sunday.
Sean
I don't know.
Andy Roddick
Who knows? Anyways, thanks for. I hope you enjoyed the Bryan Brothers episode and thanks for listening. Thanks for watching served. We'll see you next week.
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Sean
Yep.
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Bob Bryan
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Episode Title: TWIN LEGENDS Bob & Mike Bryan’s Hilarious Tennis Stories, On Court KO & Winning Gold Medals
Release Date: August 5, 2025
Hosts: Andy Roddick, Bob Bryan, Mike Bryan
Network: Vox Media Podcast Network
The episode kicks off with Andy Roddick warmly welcoming his long-time friends and the legendary Bryan brothers, Bob and Mike. Andy reminisces about their initial interview conducted 15-16 months prior, which he revisits to celebrate their impending and well-deserved induction into the Tennis Hall of Fame.
Andy Roddick [01:10]: "When those two get together and start storytelling, you know, the various parts of their illustrious careers..."
Mike Bryan shares an exciting update about the Hall of Fame Celebrity Pro Classic scheduled for August 22. A brief clip showcases the Bryan brothers gearing up on the grass courts at Wimbledon, adding playful tension as Andy contemplates potentially facing them in the event.
Mike Bryan [02:50]: "We're super pumped. I'm going to be there to see you get your ass kicked."
The conversation delves deep into their shared history in the Davis Cup, highlighting memorable and challenging moments. Andy recounts the intense atmosphere of playing against top-tier opponents like Juan Carlos Ferrero and Rafael Nadal, emphasizing the pressures and personal stakes involved.
Andy Roddick [06:25]: "This is a nightmare... it's like a complete suicide mission."
Sean adds anecdotes about the brutal environments in places like Athens, Georgia, where fierce crowds and hostile conditions tested their resilience.
Sean [11:17]: "Hair pouring beer on our heads... the most intimidating atmosphere in sports."
A significant portion of the episode explores the brothers' internal conflicts, illustrating how high pressures and personal stress led to intense arguments and even physical altercations. One standout story involves a heated car ride where tempers flared over a hard-fought match, culminating in destructive behavior that only strengthened their bond post-conflict.
Sean [34:02]: "We were swinging at each other... mule kicked me off the stairs into the bushes."
Mike Bryan reflects on their 2012 Olympic gold medal win, detailing the unique pressures of representing their country and the legacy they aimed to build in doubles tennis. The brothers share how this achievement resonated personally and professionally, highlighting its impact on inspiring younger generations.
Sean [24:55]: "Winning a gold medal kind of takes you to that global audience. It's the trophy that everyone wants to hold."
Beyond tennis, the Bryan brothers reveal their passion for music, discussing their band endeavors and the challenges of balancing professional sports with personal interests. They share humorous stories about their musical projects, including failed album launches and memorable performances, showcasing their multifaceted personalities.
Bob Bryan [53:27]: "We have a couple of highlights. We had you on stage singing Ice ICE Baby... that's somewhere on YouTube."
The episode wraps up with discussions about upcoming live shows and special episodes, including a highly anticipated interview with Maria Sharapova. Andy and the Bryan brothers express excitement about bringing their stories and camaraderie to live audiences, promising more engaging content for their listeners.
Mike Bryan [60:02]: "We're out on Arthur Ashe Stadium on that stage. Right outside the gates."
Andy concludes by expressing his deep appreciation for the Bryan brothers, celebrating their unwavering partnership and the profound impact they've had on each other's careers and lives. He underscores the importance of their shared experiences and mutual support, cementing their status as the greatest doubles team of all time.
Andy Roddick [56:02]: "You're an inspiration to me... There's only one best doubles team of all time and you just heard from them."
This episode offers listeners an intimate glimpse into the lives of tennis legends Bob and Mike Bryan, blending humor, heartfelt moments, and in-depth discussions about their illustrious careers and enduring brotherly bond. Whether you're a tennis enthusiast or just interested in compelling sports stories, this episode provides valuable insights and entertaining anecdotes from the greatest doubles team ever.