WATCH: Rafael Nadal's surgery update and Naomi Osaka's baby news | The Break

Advertising

On screens big and small, tennis fans will have no shortage of entertainment in 2023 and beyond.

On the heels of the teaser for the Zendaya-led movie "Challengers," comes "Fifteen-Love," a British crime drama series that's headed to Amazon Prime later this year. The trailer for the series, set in the world of top-level tennis, premiered Wednesday, on the same day that the final five episodes of the first season of "Break Point," the sport's groundbreaking documentary series, premiered on Netflix.

Created by Hania Elkington, “Fifteen-Love” chronicles the fictional Justine Pearce, played by Ella Lilly Hyland, who has a deep run at a Grand Slam tournament as a teenage prodigy, before her career is cut short by a wrist injury. Five years later, the former player has a new life as a therapist at her old tennis academy, but when makes an earth-shattering allegation against her former coach Glenn Lapthorn, played by Aidan Turner, all involved in the pair's lives begin to reconsider everything they thought they knew.

While a fictional account, "Fifteen-Love" does have a tie to reality: Former British Billie Jean King Cup player, and current coach and commentator, Naomi Cavaday, worked on the series. And in writing it, Elkington said that she was inspired by the courage shown by real-life female athletes who've recently shared their own truths.

“The voice of women in sport has never been heard as loudly and clearly as over the last two years,” Elkington said last year, as reported by Variety. “From Simone Biles to Naomi Osaka, Emma Raducanu to Pam Shriver, the pressures and realities of being at the top of your game on the world stage are finally breaking through to us, making us look again at the price our young prodigies can pay for the goals they work so hard to achieve.

"Writing this drama, and the people I’ve met through my deep-dive into researching it, has been revelatory. I hope that 'Fifteen-Love' has the same effect on its audience, and can become another valuable part of this urgent, emerging story.”