French Open, TNT Sports agree to 10-year, $650 million deal: Sources

PARIS, FRANCE - JUNE 01:  The Roland Garros logo is seen outside the VIP village on day nine of the 2015 French Open at Roland Garros on June 1, 2015 in Paris, France.  (Photo by Julian Finney/Getty Images)
By Andrew Marchand
Jun 7, 2024

Warner Bros. Discovery has a 10-year, $650 million deal in place to be the new home of the French Open in the United States beginning in 2025, executives briefed on the agreement told The Athletic.

The move comes as WBD, which is the home of TNT Sports, is in the midst of negotiations with the NBA as it tries to hang on to some rights to games. TNT Sports executives have said they would be pursuing outside rights regardless of whether they retain the NBA or not.

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The agreement between the French Open and TNT Sports was first reported by Variety. A TNT Sports spokesperson declined to comment.

NBC has been the longtime home of the Open, which it shares currently with Tennis Channel. NBC’s current 12-year agreement averaged $12 million per year, according to sources briefed on the contract.

TNT Sports already owns the European rights to the French Open as it operates Eurosport pay-TV Networks. In the U.S., beginning next year, the event will air on Warner Bros. Discovery cable networks and Max with Bleacher Report acting as its digital hub.

TNT Sports recently made a deal with ESPN to sub-license first-round and quarterfinal college football playoff games over the next five years.

While the NBA has been its crown jewel property for decades, TNT Sports also features the NCAA Tournament, MLB playoffs, the NHL postseason and NASCAR, among other properties.

Meanwhile, the NBA and TNT Sports executives remain in contact. As The Athletic first reported in April, the league has a framework agreement with a new partner, Amazon Prime Video, for $1.8 billion per year. ESPN also has the outline for an agreement at $2.6 billion per season, while NBC is prepared to pay $2.5 billion.

The NBA and TNT Sports have remained in contact. WBD CEO David Zaslav has publicly stated he could try to invoke matching rights to retain the NBA. On Thursday, commissioner Adam Silver called the issues “complex.” While the NBA prefers three partners, there is a chance the league could try to avoid any legal confrontations by carving a regular-season package with a small playoff offering to finalize all the deals.

Either way, Zaslav and TNT Sports chairman Luis Silberwasser continue to make deals to add variety to its United States offerings.

(Photo: Julian Finney / Getty Images)

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Andrew Marchand

Andrew Marchand is a Sr. Sports Media Columnist for The Athletic. He previously worked for the New York Post and ESPN, where he predominantly covered sports media and baseball. In 2023, Marchand was named one of five finalists for The Big Lead's "Insider of the Year" in all of sports.