| Roles | Competed in Olympic Games |
|---|---|
| Sex | Male |
| Full name | Jacques Marie Stanislas Jean•Brugnon |
| Used name | Jacques•Brugnon |
| Nick/petnames | Toto |
| Born | 11 May 1895 in Paris VIIIe, Paris (FRA) |
| Died | 20 March 1978 in Monaco, Monaco (MON) |
| Measurements | 168 cm / 64 kg |
| Affiliations | Sporting club de Paris, Paris (FRA) |
| NOC | France |
| Medals | OG |
| Gold | 0 |
| Silver | 1 |
| Bronze | 0 |
| Total | 1 |
A doubles specialist, Jacques Brugnon is perhaps the least known of the “Four Musketeers”, four French tennis players who dominated the game for nearly a decade. Teamed up with Borotra, Cochet and Lacoste, Brugnon won four Davis Cup finals. He never won a Grand Slam singles title, but won seven doubles at Roland Garros, four at Wimbledon and one at the Australian Open. He also partnered Cochet to a silver medal at the 1924 Paris Olympics. In 1976, all four Musketeers were inducted simultaneously into the International Tennis Hall of Fame.
| Games | Discipline (Sport) / Event | NOC / Team | Pos | Medal | As | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1920 Summer Olympics | Tennis | FRA |
Jacques Brugnon | |||
| Singles, Men (Olympic) | =9 | |||||
| Doubles, Men (Olympic) | Jean-François Blanchy | 4 | ||||
| 1924 Summer Olympics | Tennis | FRA |
Jacques Brugnon | |||
| Doubles, Men (Olympic) | Henri Cochet | 2 | Silver |