
Wimbledon 2025 to be shown on new TV channel for first time
Wimbledon 2025 to be shown on new TV channel for first time
The iconic tennis tournament starts later this month with a new broadcaster covering the action at SW19
Wimbledon coverage will be shown by a new broadcaster this summer
Wimbledon will be shown on a new TV channel for the first time in nearly a decade this year.
The iconic tennis tournament has been covered by the BBC since 1937 and the corporation will continue to act as the principle broadcaster of all the action at SW19 this summer. That is due to the fact that the competition is listed as a 'Category A' event by Ofcom, which means that live coverage must be made available for free-to-air channels.
However, a new broadcaster will also be showing the event for the first time this summer, with Ofcom permitting 'secondary broadcasters' to show coverage of major sporting tournaments.
TNT Sports have acquired the rights to show highlights at the 2025 tournament, which gets under way on Monday, June 30 and runs until Sunday, July 13.
The broadcaster - formerly BT Sport - is taking over the five-year deal that was originally signed by Eurosport last year.
Eurosport disappeared from TV screens in the UK earlier this year as it was repackaged as part of TNT Sports, with both channels owned by Warner Bros Discovery.
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It means that TNT Sports will take over the daily 90-minute highlights show that at the end of play each day, as well as live coverage of both men's and women's singles final, from this year, having been available to watch on Eurosport since 2016.
Wimbledon reportedly costs the BBC around £60 million a year, with the current deal keeping them as the principal broadcaster of the tournament set to run until 2027.
Having been shown by the corporation for 88 years, coverage of Wimbledon this year will continue across BBC1 and BBC2, as well as via BBC iPlayer, radio and online.
TNT Sports already hold the rights to air both the Australian Open and French Open in the UK, while the US Open's UK rights are owned by Sky Sports.
Broadcaster and former tennis star Andrew Castle has spoken out about the importance of keeping Wimbledon on the BBC, telling Betway that he "doesn't think they ever would" let a rival take over as principal broadcaster.
'In terms of a domestic audience in the UK is concerned, I'd be very surprised if it wasn't on the BBC and free to air," he said. "But I've been surprised before. I just don't see why or the particular benefit and that's what matters to me.
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'"t's an institution and an event, not a tennis tournament. As long as people see it because it is the big showcase.
"When I think of Wimbledon on the BBC, what is really lovely is there are no commercial breaks," Castle added.
"And from my point of view in commentary, I've got to think about what we are going to talk about in the breaks with Tim Henman, John McEnroe, Nick Kyrgios – that's what I'm thinking about towards the end of a game."
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