ESPN and Wimbledon 2014

·         140 Live Hours on TV – ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNEWS and ABC
·         1000 Live Hours on ESPN3, Fans Choose from up to Nine Courts
·         “Cross Court Coverage” Returns for Monday-Wednesday the Second Week
·         Murray Seeks Repeat, Djokovic a Second, Nadal a Third, and Federer an Eighth…the field a first.
·         Serena Aims for 18th Major, First in 2014; 10th Anniversary of Sharapova’s Win; Old Guard, New Stars to Challenge

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ESPN’s exclusive coverage of The Championships, Wimbledon – from first ball to the trophies – begins Monday, June 23, from the storied grass courts of the All England Lawn Tennis Club and includes an expanded schedule of 1,000 hours on ESPN3 and the return of complete television coverage including “Cross Court Coverage” on three days to start the second week.  ESPN, ESPN2 and ESPNEWS – supplementing Wimbledon programming during FIFA World Cup matches from Brazil – will combine for 140 hours.  The fortnight will climax with the Ladies’ and Doubles Championships on ESPN on Saturday, July 5, and the Gentlemen’s Championship on Sunday, July 6.

Highlights

 The ESPN Tennis Team, the best tennis team in television, at Wimbledon:

Surveying the Fields

  • A look at the recent Gentlemen’s and Ladies’ Wimbledon champions and finalists shows two very different pictures.  Only four men have shared the last 11 titles at the All England Club and in the last 10 years only one other active player has even reached the final (Tomas Berdych, 2010; the retired Andy Roddick did so three times).  Meanwhile, eight different women have appeared in the last five finals.
  • A repeat by Andy Murray on the men’s side would be almost as historic as last year’s triumph for Great Britain, while a defense of the women’s title is impossible – Marion Bartoli suddenly retired barely a month later.

MEN

  • The “Big Four” of men’s tennis – Roger Federer (17 career major wins), Rafael Nadal (14 including the recent French Open), Novak Djokovic (6) and Andy Murray (2) – have reigned in Britain in a shared manner unlike any of the other three majors, with seven, two, one and one crown on the grass, respectively, covering the past 11 years.
  • Overall, the fantastic foursome has won 35 of the last 37 Majors and comprise 28 of the last 30 Major finalists and 56 of the last 66.
  • With the 77-year British drought ended a year ago, can Murray repeat the trick?  His play suffered in the wake of back surgery later in 2013, but a strong performance at the French Open (equaling his career best by reaching the semifinals) and the recent headline-making choice of Amelie Mauresmo, the 2006 Wimbledon champion, as his new coach could provide critical momentum for a successful defense.
  • Beyond that quartet, the leading contenders:  Stan Wawrinka won the his first Major in Australia but is licking his wounds after falling in the first round in Paris,  one-time finalist Tomas Berdych has had an up-and-down year since reaching the semis DownUnder; tireless 32-year old David Ferrer has reached at least the quarters in nine 2014 events including Australia and Paris;  Milos Raonic sits at a career-high ranking and the 23-year old Canadian comes to London off his best Major performance in reaching the quarterfinals at the French Open; and Ernests Gulbis is in the top 10 for the first time following a semifinal appearance in Paris.

WOMEN

  • Serena Williams comes to London still seeking her first Major title of 2014.  It would be her 18th, tying her with legends Chrissie Evert and Martina Navratilova.  In fact, this year she is yet to reach the quarterfinals of a Major.  Owner of five Wimbledon titles, she has won three of the last five years.
  • It’s been 10 years since a 17-year-old Maria Sharapova shocked Serena in the Wimbledon final, but she arrives in London fresh off an impressive second French Open win.
  • Simona Halep has never gone past the second round at Wimbledon, but with seven WTA titles in the last 12 months she has shot up the rankings, giving Sharapova all she could handle the French Open final.
  • Two-time Australian Open winner Victoria Azarenka hopes her recent long layoff for a foot injury can help her at the tournament in which she has reached the semis on two occasions.
  • Others with the firepower to go deep:  two-time Major winner Li Na has reached the Quarters twice, Agnieszka Radwanska has reached the semis and final the last two years, 21-year-old American Sloane Stephens has reached the fourth round in six consecutive Majors, 20-year-old Canadian Eugenie Bouchard reached the semis at both Majors this year, 24-year-old Sabine Lisicki has reached the semis, quarters and final her last three visits, and former champions Petra Kvitova (2011) and Venus Williams (2008, 2007, 2005, 2001, 2000).

DIGITAL MEDIA, AT HOME AND ABROAD; INTERNATIONAL TV

ESPN.com will have previews, reviews, the latest news and videos and more:

 espnW.com

ESPNDeportes.com will provide live scores and draws, in depth news and coverage of Latin American players, columns, blogs, live chats, video, highlights and news, including ESPiando Wimbledon that will recap the day’s play. The site will also feature Slam Central, a special index page dedicated to all four Grand Slams.

ESPN Interactive TV, now in its seventh year at Wimbledon, will provide multi-screen coverage with commentary of five matches in addition to the match airing on ESPN2 or ESPN through the second Tuesday of the tournament through DirecTV.  Fans will also receive interviews, features, press conferences and a studio wrap-around presence hosted by SportsCenter anchor Steve Weissman in London.  Match and studio analysts include former players Jeff Tarango, Chandra Rubin and Fred Stolle. In addition to the video offerings, DirecTV viewers can access results, schedules, draws and other interactive features through the remote control “Red Button.”  In total, ESPN will provide more than 350 hours of coverage through this unique application.

ESPN Classic is airing many great matches from Wimbledons past this month, including championships from 1984, 2004 and 2009 upon their 30th, 10th and 5th anniversary, respectively.  Today, Monday, June 16, through Friday, June 20, ESPN Classic is airing at least two matches at 11 a.m. and midnight (9 p.m. PT) each day.  The anniversary matches:

ESPN International – the home of tennis’ Grand Slam events in the Caribbean and in Spanish-speaking Latin America– will air over 90 hours of live Wimbledon coverage to over 40 million homes on its multiple television networks throughout the region.  In addition to those, ESPN+ in the Southern Cone will present 40 additional original live hours plus daily prime-time highlight programs.  Broadband’s ESPN Play — ESPN International’s multi-screen broadband service — will offer over 700 hours of live coverage throughout Latin American and the Caribbean with over 10 windows of simultaneous early round action available.  ESPN’s Spanish-language commentator team at Wimbledon is led by Luis Alfredo Alvarez and Edurado Varela calling matches with analysts Javier Frana and Jose Louis Clerc along with reporter Nicolas Pereira.

In addition, for the first time ESPN has exclusive media rights to Wimbledon in New Zealand, where fans will receive the same live action as aired in the U.S. (more than 130 hours), featuring the ESPN tennis team – Fowler, Drysdale, Evert, the McEnroes, etc.  Complementing the television coverage, ESPN3.com, ESPN’s multi-screen broadband service in New Zealand will offer over 700 live hours – every match played on a televised court available to broadband subscribers.

ESPN – All Four Slams, All In One Place

Tennis has been part of ESPN since its first week on the air and provided many memorable moments, but it has never been as important as today, with the US Open joining the lineup in 2009, giving ESPN all four Grand Slam events, something no other U.S. network has ever done, let alone in one year. ESPN has presented the Australian Open since 1984, the French Open since 2002 (plus 1986 – 1993), and Wimbledon since 2003, with exclusivity for live television with all other rights extended in a 12-year agreement starting in 2012.  Exclusivity for the US Open in an 11-year agreement begins in 2015.  ESPN3 delivers an unmatched multi-screen presentation of the sport’s four majors, all ATP 1000 and 500 tournaments, WTA Premier Events and season-ending championships for both tours.

ESPN & WIMBLEDON 2014

Date Time (ET) Event Network  
Mon, June 23 – Sun, July 6 (not 6/29) 6:30 a.m. All TV Courts (up to nine), all day; Live@Wimbledon ESPN3 Live
   
Mon, June 23 – Thur, June 26 7 – 11:30 a.m. Early Round Action ESPN Live
  11:30 a.m. – 4 p.m. Early Round Action ESPNEWS Live
  2 – 3:30 p.m. Early Round Action ESPN2 (simulcast of ESPNEWS) Live
Fri, June 27 7 a.m. – 5 p.m. Early Round Action ESPN Live
Sat, June 28 7 – 8 a.m. Breakfast at Wimbledon ESPN Live
  8 a.m. – 4 p.m. Early Round Action ESPN Live
Sun, June 29 3 – 6 p.m. Highlights of Week One ABC Tape
Mon, June 30 7 – 11:30 a.m. Round of 16 ESPN Live
  8 a.m. – 4 p.m. Round of 16, Centre Court ESPN2 Live
  11:30 a.m. – 3 p.m. Round of 16 ESPNEWS Live
Tue, July 1 8 a.m. – 1 p.m. Ladies’ Quarterfinals,  Centre Court ESPN2 Live
  8 – 11:30 a.m. Ladies’ Quarterfinals, Court One ESPN Live
  11:30 a.m. – 3 p.m. Ladies’ Quarterfinals, Court One ESPNEWS Live
Wed, July 2 8 a.m. – 3 p.m. Gentlemen’s Quarterfinals, Centre Court ESPN Live
  8 a.m. – 4 p.m. Gentlemen’s Quarterfinals,Court One ESPN2 Live
Thur, July 3 7 – 8 a.m. Breakfast at Wimbledon ESPN Live
  8 a.m. – 1 p.m. Ladies’ Semifinals ESPN Live
Fri, July 4 7 – 8 a.m. Breakfast at Wimbledon ESPN Live
  8 a.m. – 2 p.m. Gentlemen’s Semifinals ESPN Live
Sat, July 5 8 a.m. – 9 a.m. Breakfast at Wimbledon ESPN Live
  9 a.m. – 3 p.m. Ladies’ Final ESPN Live
  3 – 6 p.m. Ladies’ Final ABC Tape
Sun, July 6 8 a.m. – 9 a.m. Breakfast at Wimbledon ESPN Live
  9 a.m. – 3 p.m. Gentlemen’s Final ESPN Live
  3 – 6 p.m. Gentlemen’s Final ABC Tape

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