MONTREAL -- Bob and Mike Bryan won the doubles final at the US$4.1 million men's Rogers Cup with a 7-6 (5), 3-6, 10-6 victory over Toronto's Daniel Nestor and Edouard Roger-Vasselin of France on Sunday.

The Bryan twins, ranked first in the world for the last 429 weeks, posted their 109th career tournament title. They won $212,000.

The first set came down to one errant service return during the tiebreaker, but the action picked up in the second when Nestor's duo broke the Bryan twins, were broken back, and then broke again for a 3-1 lead.

They served out to force a super-tiebreaker, where the Bryans grabbed the first point on their opponent's serve and didn't look back.

It is a fifth trip to the final for 42-year-old Nestor of the tournament once called the Canadian Open. With a variety of partners, he has a 2-3 record in finals, including 1-2 against the Bryan duo. Nestor's most recent win was in 2008.

It was the 57th time Nestor has faced the Bryans, with the American duo holding a 29-28 edge.

In his career, Nestor has won 87 doubles titles with nine different partners. He has taken eight grand slam events and won gold at the 2000 Olympics with Sebastien Lareau.

It was the first time Nestor and Roger-Vasselin played together. But the French right hander, who won the 2014 French Open doubles with Julien Benneteau, played earlier this year with Milos Raonic of Thornhill, Ont., and Vancouver's Vasek Pospisil.