The Million-Dollar Serve: How Netflix’s Six Kings Slam Changed the Sport’s Economics

Sports Analyst

When Netflix premiered Six Kings Slam, it wasn’t just another tennis event—it aimed to redefine how fans consume the sport. For the first time ever, six of men’s tennis’ biggest names clashed in a live, knockout-style exhibition, exclusively streamed to Netflix’s 300+ million subscribers at no extra cost.

The format & the stakes
Held under the umbrella of Riyadh Season at the ANB Arena, the tournament ran October 15–18 (with a rest day on the 17th in line with exhibition norms). The six participants were: Novak Djokovic, Carlos Alcaraz, Jannik Sinner, Alexander Zverev, Taylor Fritz, and Stefanos Tsitsipas (Tsitsipas stepped in for Jack Draper, who withdrew due to injury). The structure gave byes to Djokovic and Alcaraz into the semifinals, while the remaining four contested quarterfinals.

But beyond the prestige was money: each player was guaranteed US$1.5 million just to take part, and the champion would take home a total of US$6 million (i.e. $4.5M additional on top of the appearance fee). That makes it among the richest one-off events in tennis history.

Netflix’s bold move into live sports
This edition marks Netflix’s first foray into live tennis streaming. The event will be entirely captured by a production setup of over 20 cameras, courtesy of IMG as host broadcaster. For Netflix, this is a strategic push—offering live sports content that complements its on-demand library. 

Drama, rivalries & reception
The narrative practically wrote itself: Sinner (Six Kings Slam 2024 champion) defending his crown, Alcaraz chasing redemption, Djokovic adding prestige to the field. In the semifinal, Sinner defeated Djokovic 6–4, 6–2 to set up a blockbuster rematch vs Alcaraz in the final.

The Controversy

The Six Kings Slam 2025 on Netflix hasn’t been all hunky dory. Some fans have complained about awkward camera angles and excessive cutting to closeups, arguing that the broadcast sometimes felt disorienting for tennis purists.

Why it matters
Six Kings Slam isn’t a title that counts toward ATP rankings, but its implications stretch far beyond. It signals a shift where streaming giants take center stage in live sports, reshaping how marquee tennis series might evolve. For the players, the mega payouts open new economics. For fans, it’s a fresh way to “watch and wait” rather than just follow scores.

Shop by Category

Home
Shop
Wishlist0
Back to Top

Search For Products

Product has been added to your cart
Compare (0)