Parental obsession with the sporting success of a child is not uncommon, but rarely does it reach the monstrous proportions it did with Frenchman Christophe Fauviau.
As a court in a small town in south-west France has been hearing, Mr Fauviau, a 46-year-old retired army helicopter pilot, was a "tennis dad" so passionate that he came to live entirely for the triumphs of his mediocre son and highly talented daughter.
Unsuccessful in his own life, he could not abide seeing his children lose - or even to watch any game their opponents might win.
He began to drug his children's rivals by putting tranquilliser tablets into their drinks.
Opponent after opponent - 26 young players over three years - complained of dizziness or nausea or heavy limbs during games in regional and national competitions.
Suspicions were reinforced when Mr Fauviau was seen tampering with an opponent's water bottle.
But it is alleged that local tennis officials were slow to react, paralysed by embarrassment and fear of scandal.
On 3 July 2003, Alexandre Lagardere, 25, a primary school teacher and amateur tennis player, crashed his car into a tree and was killed.
A few hours earlier, he had lost a tennis match against Mr Fauviau's son Maxime.
Mr Lagardere was later found to have consumed the equivalent of six tablets of Temesta, a powerful anti-anxiety drug prescribed to Mr Fauviau.
Mr Fauviau, who admits the basic facts of the case, is on trial for manslaughter or "unintentionally causing a death by administering toxic substances".
He faces up to 15 years in prison.
The jury at the cour d'assises in Mont-de-Marsan must also decide whether the regional tennis league in Aquitaine was guilty of "failing to assist persons in danger".
Since Mr Fauviau's arrest nearly three years ago, his daughter, Valentine, now 15, has continued her tennis career without her father's help, and is regarded as one of the most promising young stars on the French tennis circuit.
She will give evidence to the court this week.
During a break in the proceedings last week, she gave a self-assured interview to journalists in which she said that she hoped to turn professional.
"There are lots of parents who push their children and who are driven crazy by tennis," she said.
"I didn't know what [my dad] was doing ... I didn't need him to help me to beat people ... People ask me how I didn't notice that so many opponents were having problems ... but you know, in tennis, sudden collapses, sun-strokes, are quite common."
Earlier Mr Fauviau gave a halting explanation and an apology to the court and to Mr Lagardere's parents.
After retiring from the army, he said, he had invested all his energy and hopes in the sporting careers of his son and daughter.
He had become so tortured by watching his children play that he came to regard drugging their opponents as a way of treating his own nerves.
"Every match became a terrible anguish.
I became convinced that I was being judged permanently by the success or failure of my children."
By slipping his pills into the drinks of opponents or offering them bottles of spiked Coca-Cola, "it was as if I was treating myself", he said.
Mr Fauviau, tall, thin and pale, appealed to the dead man's parents for forgiveness.
But Mr Lagardere's father, addressing the court the next day, abruptly rejected the appeal.
"There is no question of me offering my pardon to anyone," he said.
The trial, due to last until Friday, will turn partly on evidence that Mr Fauviau's doping of opponents was long suspected by local tennis officials.
- INDEPENDENT
Tennis: Blind ambition drove father to heinous acts
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