About

Meet Dave Alzate, your coach

From a Colombian kid who could barely breathe to taking his first steps as a pro and becoming a full-time coach — for Dave, tennis isn't just a sport. It's the game that saved his life.

Dave Alzate, tennis coach in Regina SK, hitting a one-handed backhand during a training session
My story

The game that gave me my life back

I'm Dave Alzate, born and raised in Colombia. I came into the world with asthma, and I had my first attack when I was just two months old. As a kid, pneumonia nearly took my life twice — once at eight, and again at ten.

When the doctors finally stabilised me, they were blunt: I had to start exercising, or I wouldn't get better. That's the exact moment tennis found me. I picked up a racket, and everything changed. Since that day my health turned around — I've been strong and asthma-free ever since.

Tennis didn't just become my passion; it quite literally saved my life. That's why I coach. Everything I do on court is about giving back to the game that gave me a future — and helping the next person discover what it can do for them.

"Tennis saved my life. Now I get to spend mine giving that gift back — one player at a time."

— Dave Alzate

On the court

I took my first steps as a pro in Colombia

From the moment I started at ten years old, I was hooked. I trained relentlessly and climbed through Colombia's junior ranks, competing against the best players of my generation.

From there I took my first steps onto the professional pathway in Colombia — starting from the bottom and earning my way up rung by rung.

At nineteen I made the move that defined the rest of my life — I became a coach. I've lived this game from both sides of the net, and I know how to turn hard-won experience into something that works for you.

Picked up a racket
Age 10
First steps in Colombia
Pro path
Coaching career
Since 19
Dave Alzate, tennis instructor in Regina, Saskatchewan, reaching up to execute a serve

"The best coaches never stop being players at heart."

— Dave Alzate

College tennis

My university years

Some of my proudest moments on court came while competing for my university — and they still shape how I coach today.

Dave Alzate, tennis coach in Regina SK, celebrating gold medal win in university mixed doubles
🥇 Gold medal

Mixed doubles champions

Teaming up for mixed doubles, my partner and I clicked from the first point and took home the gold. Doubles taught me communication, court positioning, and how to lift a teammate under pressure.

Dave Alzate and university tennis team holding the zone championship trophy — now offering tennis lessons in Regina, SK
🏆 Zone champions

Winning it all as a team

With my university squad we went all the way and won the entire zone championship. Standing on that clay court holding the trophy with my teammates is a feeling I'll never forget.

How I coach

The principles behind every lesson

Make it enjoyable

People improve fastest when they're having fun. Every session is designed to be positive and rewarding.

Coach the individual

No two players are the same. I adapt drills, pacing, and goals to suit you, not a one-size-fits-all script.

Build lasting skills

Technique that holds up under pressure. I focus on fundamentals that keep paying off for years.

My journey

From fighting to breathe to giving back

  1. Age 10

    Tennis finds me

    After surviving childhood asthma and pneumonia, doctors said I had to exercise. A racket changed everything.

  2. Juniors

    Competing nationally

    Trained relentlessly and rose through Colombia's junior ranks against the best of my generation.

  3. Pro path

    First steps as a pro

    Took my first steps onto Colombia's professional pathway, working up from the very bottom.

  4. Age 19

    Becoming a coach

    Turned to coaching to give back the gift tennis gave me — a mission that's led all the way to Regina.

Let's find your starting point

Book a trial lesson and we'll talk through your goals before you ever pick up a racket.

Book a trial lesson