Randoald Dessarzin : The Jurassian Foxes Coach Who Refused Limits episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 15, 2026 · 31 MIN

Randoald Dessarzin : The Jurassian Foxes Coach Who Refused Limits

from The Free League

Randoald Dessarzin is, before anything else, a Jurassian. The Pully-Lausanne Foxes head coach carved from the stubborn rock of his region, driven by an unwavering belief in basketball as both a craft and a calling. He is the coach who once carried the modest BC Boncourt squad to the highest levels of Swiss professional basketball. That achievement opened the doors of the storied JDA Dijon, in France’s top league, launching him into a journey marked by triumphs and turbulence.Looking back, he speaks calmly of the storms that sometimes circled his career toward the end of his Burgundy chapter. He himself never felt personally endangered by the media squalls. What troubled him, rather, was the thought that his young children, fortunately still too small to read the papers or hear schoolyard whispers, might one day feel the weight of those public tempests.During a season that had begun with promise (five wins, one loss, tied with Cholet) tragedy struck. A young prospect of the club, Jonathan Bourhis, also a member of the French junior national team, died in a car accident. When the sporting management refused to allow the entire team to attend the funeral, permitting only two foreign players to go, the decision tore the locker room apart. Two camps emerged, bitter and irreconcilable. Dessarzin never managed to heal the wound. It remains a dark memory in a long career that nevertheless carried him to the European Cup and later to Africa, where he led the Ivory Coast national team.He reflects on how the modern basketball game demands as much psychology as strategy. Once, players simply followed directions. Now they question everything, search for shortcuts, enter the business world of agents at fifteen, and chase personal statistics, with defense, the invisible currency of champions, too often left in the shadows. He misses the earlier era, when loyalty to a club had weight and the horizon of a career was not constantly shifting.Interview by David Glaser Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Randoald Dessarzin is, before anything else, a Jurassian. The Pully-Lausanne Foxes head coach carved from the stubborn rock of his region, driven by an unwavering belief in basketball as both a craft and a calling. He is the coach who once carried the modest BC Boncourt squad to the highest levels of Swiss professional basketball. That achievement opened the doors of the storied JDA Dijon, in France’s top league, launching him into a journey marked by triumphs and turbulence.Looking back, he speaks calmly of the storms that sometimes circled his career toward the end of his Burgundy chapter. He himself never felt personally endangered by the media squalls. What troubled him, rather, was the thought that his young children, fortunately still too small to read the papers or hear schoolyard whispers, might one day feel the weight of those public tempests.During a season that had begun with promise (five wins, one loss, tied with Cholet) tragedy struck. A young prospect of the club, Jonathan Bourhis, also a member of the French junior national team, died in a car accident. When the sporting management refused to allow the entire team to attend the funeral, permitting only two foreign players to go, the decision tore the locker room apart. Two camps emerged, bitter and irreconcilable. Dessarzin never managed to heal the wound. It remains a dark memory in a long career that nevertheless carried him to the European Cup and later to Africa, where he led the Ivory Coast national team.He reflects on how the modern basketball game demands as much psychology as strategy. Once, players simply followed directions. Now they question everything, search for shortcuts, enter the business world of agents at fifteen, and chase personal statistics, with defense, the invisible currency of champions, too often left in the shadows. He misses the earlier era, when loyalty to a club had weight and the horizon of a career was not constantly shifting.Interview by David Glaser Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Randoald Dessarzin : The Jurassian Foxes Coach Who Refused Limits

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This episode was published on March 15, 2026.

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Randoald Dessarzin is, before anything else, a Jurassian. The Pully-Lausanne Foxes head coach carved from the stubborn rock of his region, driven by an unwavering belief in basketball as both a craft and a calling. He is the coach who once carried...

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