Tennis is not just rackets, balls, and courts. It's big money. Prize money for tournaments is counted in millions of dollars, but even more so — sponsorship contracts. Roger Federer has earned over 1 billion dollars in his career, of which only 130 million were prize money. The rest is advertising. We tell you how the tennis sponsorship market is structured, who pays and how much, and how a beginner player can find a sponsor.
Main categories. Watch brands: Rolex, Audemars Piguet, Richard Mille. They associate themselves with precision, elegance, status. Rolex sponsors all Grand Slam tournaments except Wimbledon, which has its own sponsor — Slazenger. Richard Mille makes watches for Rafael Nadal and other stars (the cost of the watches is from 500,000 dollars).
Cars: Mercedes, BMW, Jaguar, Kia. Provide cars for tournaments and players. Mercedes is the official car of the Australian Open. Banks: Barclays, BNP Paribas. Insurance companies. Sports brands: Nike, Adidas, Asics, New Balance, Lacoste, Fila. Sponsor equipment (uniform, shoes, rackets). Racket manufacturers: Wilson, Babolat, Head, Yonex. Drinks: Gatorade, Powerade, Evian, Coca-Cola. Airlines: Emirates (sponsors US Open and several tournaments), Qatar Airways.
In Russia, sponsors include Gazprom (sponsored the Kremlin Cup), Rosneft, VTB, Sber. Rarely — individual contracts with players (for example, Medvedev collaborated with Tinkoff).
Novak Djokovic (as of 2026) has a contract with Lacoste (clothing) — 10 million euros per year. Asics (shoes) — 2 million. Audemars Piguet (watches) — 5 million. Jacob’s Creek (wine) — 1 million. In total, about 20 million euros per year from sponsors alone. Rafael Nadal: Nike — 15 million, Richard Mille — 6 million, Kia — 5 million. Daniil Medvedev: Lacoste — 5 million, BMW — 2 million, Tinkoff — 1 million. Arina Sobolenko: Nike — 3 million, Bulgari (watches/jewelry) — 1.5 million, Wilson — 500 thousand.
Contracts are usually signed for 3-5 years. They include bonuses for winning Grand Slam tournaments and for first place in the ranking.
Players outside the top 50 can expect 50-200 thousand dollars per year from one sponsor.
Money — of course. Equipment: rackets, strings, shoes, uniform. A tennis player can spend no money on this. Services: sometimes sponsors pay for a coach, a physiotherapist, flights. For example, Nike has a program to support young talents (cover tournament expenses). Promotion: the sponsor does advertising with the player, increases his visibility, which leads to new contracts. Status: a contract with Rolex or Mercedes automatically increases the player's prestige.
There is a "workhorse" — the player must appear at sponsor events (press conferences, photo sessions), wear clothing with the sponsor's logo, give interviews.
First: results. Ranking, Grand Slam tournament wins, stability. Second: media presence. The player must be liked by the public, be photogenic, give vivid interviews. Charisma is more important than talent? Often yes. Third: behavior. Sponsors do not like troublemakers, drug addicts, rebels (but sometimes this attracts attention, as with John McEnroe).
Fourth: nationality. The sponsor is interested in entering the player's country's market. For example, Japanese companies (Yonex) sponsor Kei Nishikori. Chinese — Li Na (ended her career). Fifth: potential for growth. Young players (18-20 years old) can sign a 5-year contract with the hope that they will become stars. This is a risk, but it pays off.
Step 1: build up your ranking. Even top 500 is interesting to local brands. Participate in challengers and futures. Step 2: create media presence. Lead Instagram/TikTok, show training, life. Followers are currency. 10,000 followers can attract a sponsor for a sports clothing store.
Step 3: contact the tennis federation. In Russia — FTR (Russian Tennis Federation). They sometimes allocate scholarships and help find sponsors. Step 4: look for local sponsors. A beauty salon, an auto repair shop, a bakery. They need advertising. Your photos in their uniform with their logo is cheap advertising. Step 5: crowdfunding. Platforms Planeta.ru, Boomstarter. Write: "Help me go to a tournament in Europe." In return — postcards, t-shirts.
Do not hesitate to write letters to companies. Briefly: who you are, achievements, how many subscribers, what you offer in return. Example: "10,000 views of my photos with your logo per month."
In 2026, agencies appeared that help young athletes find sponsors for a percentage (usually 10-20%).
Inequality. The top 10 earn millions, players in the top 100 earn thousands. The gap is huge. Commercialization. Players are forced to participate in tournaments not for sport, but for sponsorship obligations. Burnout. Constant photo sessions, interviews, tours distract from training. Risk of injury. The sponsor may terminate the contract if the player does not play for a long time (for example, Juan Martin del Potro lost several contracts due to injuries). Policy. In 2022, Wimbledon excluded Russian and Belarusian players, some sponsors threatened to terminate contracts. Regulation. WTA and ATP have rules for placing logos on clothing (no more than two manufacturers).
In 2026, the issue of ethics is relevant: do companies with a questionable reputation sponsor (bookmakers, oil corporations)? Players are forced to choose between money and conscience.
Sponsorship in tennis is the engine of the entire sport. Without it, half of the players would not be able to travel, and tournaments would not have prize money. It's business, but without it, tennis would be the preserve of the rich. As long as sponsors believe in stars, stars believe in themselves. And we, the spectators, enjoy the game.
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