📺

Tennis Media

Tennis on television, streaming services, documentaries, podcasts, broadcast rights deals, and the media ecosystem turning Slams into mainstream entertainment. From "Break Point" to billion-dollar TV deals, the business of watching tennis.

Quick Answer

Tennis media in 2026 spans Netflix-era documentaries ("Break Point", "Becoming Jannik", "Federer: Twelve Final Days"), regional streaming exclusives (Tennis Channel US, Eurosport EU, Stan Sport AU), the official ATP Tennis TV platform, and a $1.5-2 billion annual global broadcast market dominated by Grand Slam rights deals (ESPN's 12-year $2B US Open agreement is the largest).

8 Articles in Tennis Media

Gael Monfils' Roland Garros Farewell Is Becoming a Paris Culture Night

Gael Monfils' Roland Garros Farewell Is Becoming a Paris Culture Night

Gael Monfils' final Roland Garros is being staged as more than a goodbye match. With music, friends and Court Philippe-Chatrier, Paris is tu...

Read more →
Carlos Alcaraz, Vanity Fair and the Cost of Becoming Tennis Famous

Carlos Alcaraz, Vanity Fair and the Cost of Becoming Tennis Famous

Carlos Alcaraz in Vanity Fair is not just a glossy tennis cover. It is a story about fame, youth, Sinner, luxury brands and the private cost...

Read more →
Tennis and Music — Players Who DJ, Sing, and Produce

Tennis and Music — Players Who DJ, Sing, and Produce

Tennis and music share a rhythmic pulse that connects players, fans, and artists alike. From the thundering serves on the court to the beats...

Read more →
Best Tennis Video Games Ever Made

Best Tennis Video Games Ever Made

Ah, tennis! A game of precision, skill, and athleticism that has captivated millions around the globe. But what if you could experience the ...

Read more →
Best Tennis Books of All Time

Best Tennis Books of All Time

Tennis has long been celebrated not only for its thrilling matches and legendary rivalries but also for the stories that lie behind the racq...

Read more →
Best Tennis Podcasts to Follow in 2026

Best Tennis Podcasts to Follow in 2026

As tennis fans, we know how exhilarating it is to watch a thrilling match unfold on the court. But what happens when the racket is put down ...

Read more →
Tennis in Movies & TV Shows — The Greatest Tennis Scenes in Cinema

Tennis in Movies & TV Shows — The Greatest Tennis Scenes in Cinema

Read more →
Best Tennis Movies & Documentaries to Watch

Best Tennis Movies & Documentaries to Watch

Tennis in Film and TV: A Love Letter to the Sport Tennis is more than just a sport; it’s a culture, a lifestyle, and an inspiration for coun...

Read more →

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the best tennis documentaries to watch in 2026?

Top tennis documentaries available in 2025-2026 include Netflix's "Break Point" Seasons 1-2 (Drive to Survive-style ATP/WTA insider access), Amazon Prime's "Federer: Twelve Final Days" (2024), Tennis Channel's "Becoming Jannik" (2025 Sinner doc), HBO's "Citizen Ashe" (Arthur Ashe biography), and the upcoming 2026 Serena Williams retrospective on Disney+.

Where can I watch tennis tournaments online in 2026?

Major broadcasters by region (2026): Tennis Channel + ESPN+ (US), Eurosport/Discovery+ (Europe), Stan Sport (Australia), Sky Sport (UK), TSN (Canada). Tennis TV (atptour.com) is the official global streaming platform for all ATP Tour-level events. Grand Slams have separate exclusive deals: AO on Channel 9 (AU), RG on Eurosport + ESPN, Wimbledon on BBC + ESPN, US Open on ESPN.

What is the best tennis podcast in 2026?

Top tennis podcasts: "The Tennis Podcast" by Catherine Whitaker and David Law (UK-based, ~6 episodes per Slam), "Served with Andy Roddick" (former US Open champ's commentary), "Nothing Major" (ATP players' insider perspective), "The Body Serve" (longest-running tennis pod), and Tennis Channel's "Inside-In Tennis Podcast".

What is the value of tennis TV deals in 2026?

Major recent tennis broadcast deals: ESPN paid $2.04 billion for 12-year US Open rights (through 2037), Discovery/Warner Bros paid ~$1B over 10 years for European pan-Slam rights, Stan Sport pays ~$200M for Aussie rights. The total global tennis broadcast market is estimated at $1.5-2 billion annually, with Grand Slams accounting for 60-70% of that revenue.