• Loading stock data...
Thursday, July 31, 2025
Tuned In returns to NYC on September 16. Hear from the biggest names in sports media. Click here to get your spot
opinion
Tuned In

French Open Brings TNT Early Win in Its Post-NBA Era

The tennis tournament was one of TNT’s first pivots upon recognizing it could lose the NBA. Its first year at the network was a huge success.

Susan Mullane-Imagn Images

Before this weekend’s epic French Open, some thought TNT Sports had blundered by paying $65 million annually for rights that previously cost NBC Sports and Tennis Channel $12 million a year. But after Sunday’s thrilling men’s final at Roland-Garros, TNT can safely argue it’s got its money’s worth. It’s also a sign there may be something to Warner Bros. Discovery boss David Zaslav’s widely derided assertion that the media giant does not need the NBA.

Carlos Alcaraz’s thrilling five-set win over Jannik Sinner was a match for the ages. It was one of those sporting events that makes people pick up their phones and tell friends and family to turn on the TV now. Pair that epic with Coco Gauff’s win in the women’s final, and ratings should be strong for TNT’s first time televising the event. TNT “aced” its debut French Open coverage, making it feel like the prestigious event that it is. 

ESPN controls U.S. media rights to the other three Grand Slam tournaments: the US Open, Wimbledon, and the Australian Open. With young stars like Alcaraz and Gauff, the sport is poised for a resurgence. Which would make TNT Sports CEO Luis Silberwasser’s 10-year deal with the French Tennis Federation look like a wise investment. As ESPN’s Mike Greenberg wrote on X/Twitter on Sunday: “Carlos Alcaraz is 22. Coco Gauff is 21. We saw the future of tennis in Paris this week, and it looks sensational.”

WBD’s TNT was the odd network out after 36 years when the NBA signed 11-year media deals worth an eye-popping $77 billion with ESPN, NBC Sports, and Amazon Prime Video in 2024. TNT will save between $20 billion (Prime) and $27 billion (NBC) in rights fees from 2025 to 2036. That’s a boatload of cash that can be sunk into rights (and, considering WBD’s current quandary, debt reduction). The green shoots from TNT’s strategy to invest in other sports are starting to sprout.

While it was still negotiating with the NBA last year, TNT cut a five-year deal with ESPN to sublicense two first-round games of the College Football Playoff. Now it’s expected to sublicense at least one CFP semifinal game from 2026 to 2028. 

Once it knew the NBA was out the door, TNT got busy, scooping up rights to the French Open, Mountain West Conference, five NASCAR races, and Unrivaled women’s 3-on-3 basketball. It also licensed the iconic Inside the NBA to ESPN for a package of Big 12 football and basketball games. Looking ahead, TNT could pursue the MLB rights, including the Home Run Derby, that expire at ESPN after this year.

If you combine TNT’s new sports-rights deals with its existing NHL, MLB, March Madness, and FIFA soccer rights, the network will still air a lot of sports over the coming years. The money it saves could be used to tackle WBD’s $37 billion debt load as the media giant splits into two publicly traded entities: a Streaming & Studios operation including WBD’s film and TV productions, DC Studios, HBO, HBO Max, and WBD’s film and TV libraries, and a separate Global Networks business that will include TNT Sports in the U.S., Bleacher Report, CNN, Discovery, and free-to-air channels in Europe.

It’s probably good news for TNT that it won’t report to Zaslav anymore. Despite popping up in front-row seats at many of TNT’s biggest sporting events—including Roland-Garros and the NBA’s Eastern Conference finals—his words indicate he never seemed to value sports rights. TNT superstar Charles Barkley believes it was his comment nearly three years ago that WBD didn’t “have to have the NBA” that ultimately led to the breakup with The Association. At the same time, the new TNT could end up televising more sports in the future, and at a cheaper price tag. Maybe there was a method to Zas’s madness.

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

LeBron James
exclusive

LeBron Boat Meeting in France With Jokić Agent Was About New League

The power trio was discussing a new global basketball league.
Jul 15, 2025; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark (22) reacts to the crowd as they take on the Connecticut Sun in the first quarter at TD Garden.

WNBA Viewership Up Across All Networks Compared to 2024

Non-Fever games are up 37% compared to the full 2024 season.
Marcus Morris

Marcus Morris Denies Fraud, Blames Mixup for $260K Casino Debt Arrest

Morris made roughly $107 million across 13 NBA seasons.
Moe Wagner

NBA Adding European Games As It Explores New League

The Magic and Grizzlies will play in Berlin and London in January 2026. 

Featured Today

Las Vegas sign

College Sports Embracing Vegas After Years of Cold Shoulder

The Big Ten became the latest newcomer to Sin City.
2000, Jupiter, FL, USA; FILE PHOTO; Montreal Expos pitcher Hideki Irabu in action on the mound against the New York Mets at Roger Dean Stadium during Spring Training
July 28, 2025

Dead Sports Franchises Are Alive and Well on Twitter

The Expos, Sonics, and Whalers have active social media accounts.
Limited Hype
July 27, 2025

Sneaker Reselling Was Once Easy Money. Success Is Now Complicated

Vendors need to evolve what they’re selling and how they do it.
HAPPY GILMORE 2. BTS - (L to R) Adam Sandler as Happy Gilmore and Rory McIlroy as himself on the set of Happy Gilmore2.
July 26, 2025

‘Cool As Hell’: How ‘Happy Gilmore 2’ Hooked Golf’s Top Stars

The process was “cool as hell,” Adam Sandler tells FOS.

Shannon Sharpe Out at ESPN Following Rape Suit Settlement

He’s been off-air since April, planning to return for the NFL season.
July 29, 2025

NFL Insiders Delivered Crucial Updates Around Midtown Shooting

Top NFL reporters reached sources at the scene of the shooting.
July 30, 2025

Sophie Cunningham Gets Podcast With Cowherd’s Volume, Continuing Breakout

Cunningham’s podcast deal is the latest in a breakout summer.
Sponsored

Game On: Portfolio Players Stories, Brought to You by E*TRADE from Morgan Stanley

Dealmaker Jeffrey Kaplan maps the evolution of sports as an asset class
opinion
July 28, 2025

Why Rumors Nick Saban Could Leave ESPN for Coaching Aren’t Crazy

Saban has not fully ruled out a coaching comeback as rumors swirl.
Jan 20, 2025; Atlanta, GA, USA; Sports personality Stephen A. Smith arrives before the CFP National Championship college football game between the Notre Dame Fighting Irish and the Ohio State Buckeyes at Mercedes-Benz Stadium.
opinion
July 24, 2025

Why Stephen A. Smith Could Succeed in Dwindling Late-Night TV Era

The face of “First Take” has shown interest in talk-show hosting.
exclusive
July 23, 2025

ESPN Locks in Bulk of Bill Belichick’s First UNC Season

The network’s ACC media rights deal will pay off this season.
Mar 29, 2025; Houston, Texas, USA; View of a camera with a Fox Sports logo before the game between the Houston Astros and the New York Mets at Daikin Park.
exclusive
July 23, 2025

Parkins Joins Expanded ‘First Things First’ As FS1 Completes Transition

He’ll join Nick Wright, Chris Broussard, and Kevin Wildes.