The Business of Tennis
Why the Australian Open is streaming live tennis with gaming-style player avatars
By Jan 16, 2025The Business of Tennis
Carlos Alcaraz surpasses 40 million dollars in career prize money after winning Monte Carlo
By Apr 14, 2025The Business of Tennis
University of Virginia men’s tennis team secures permanent 'in perpetuity' funding
By Apr 13, 2025The Business of Tennis
Charleston Open will pay women same as men starting in 2026
By Apr 06, 2025The Business of Tennis
Top ATP, WTA players pen letter to Grand Slams seeking greater share of revenue
By Apr 04, 2025The Business of Tennis
Chairman Andrea Gaudenzi will take over as interim ATP CEO after Massimo Calvelli departs
By Apr 04, 2025The Business of Tennis
Novak Djokovic, Coco Gauff and other players ask Grand Slam tournaments for more money and more say
By Apr 03, 2025The Business of Tennis
Wimbledon plans to upgrade the fans' favorite hill for 150th anniversary
By Apr 03, 2025The Business of Tennis
Tennis star Coco Gauff launches own management firm
By Apr 03, 2025The Business of Tennis
Carlos Alcaraz doesn't support the lawsuit from tennis players' group Novak Djokovic founded
By Mar 19, 2025The Business of Tennis
Why the Australian Open is streaming live tennis with gaming-style player avatars
The Australian Open is getting in on the newest trend in the sports world by re-creating tennis matches in video-game form.
Published Jan 16, 2025
Advertising

Daniil Medvedev's digital avatar smashes his racquet against a net camera on the Australian Open's animated live stream.
© Tennis Australia/Associated Press
Advertising

About 165,000 viewers tuned in to watch Joao Fonseca upset No. 9 seed Andrey Rublev in animated form.
© Tennis Australia/Associated Press