The 2026 Wimbledon tournament produced ESPN’s most-watched women’s championship match at the grass-court Grand Slam since the network began covering the event, driven by a dramatically contested all-Czech final that averaged 1.9 million viewers on Saturday and benefited from the kind of mid-match collapse and recovery that keeps audiences watching through the closing games.
Linda Noskova’s victory over Karolina Muchova reached that viewership total despite Noskova wasting five match points and a 5-2 lead in the second set before ultimately winning the third set to claim the title. The drama of the second-set implosion and the uncertainty it created about the eventual outcome contributed to the match’s extended and engaged audience, a 48 percent increase from the previous year’s women’s final, which ended quickly and one-sidedly.
The men’s final and overall tournament performance
The men’s championship, in which Jannik Sinner successfully defended his Wimbledon title in four sets, averaged 2.4 million viewers on Sunday. That figure represented a 16 percent decline from the previous year’s men’s final, which featured two of the sport’s most prominent stars in a four-set contest. Sinner’s continued success in major finals did not produce the viewership level of his 2025 title match, though the audience remained substantial.
The overall 2026 Wimbledon ranked as ESPN’s second-highest in total tournament viewership since the network began exclusive coverage of the event in 2012, averaging 853,000 viewers per day across all rounds and representing an 18 percent improvement over the 2025 edition. Only the 2019 Wimbledon drew larger overall audiences, a tournament that featured a memorable five-set men’s final and both women’s finalists were highly recognizable global names.
Serena Williams and the Day 2 record
The most significant individual viewership record of the fortnight came on the tournament’s second day when Serena Williams played her first singles match in nearly four years. That Tuesday afternoon match averaged 1.8 million viewers despite airing in the middle of a US working day, setting a record for ESPN’s coverage of any Day 2 at Wimbledon and outperforming the previous year’s men’s semifinals.
Williams’s return to Grand Slam singles competition generated audience interest well beyond the core tennis viewership base, drawing casual sports fans and cultural observers who might not otherwise tune in to a first-round match at a major tournament. That crossover appeal, combined with the narrative weight of her comeback and the uncertainty about whether she could compete at the level of the current generation, produced viewership numbers that reflected her unique status in the sport.
Italian viewership for Sinner
In Italy, where Sinner has become the country’s most popular active athlete, the men’s final averaged 4.2 million viewers on Sky Italia with a market share exceeding 33 percent. The Italian viewership represented a significant audience mobilization for a match played in the morning local time, though it was below the 5.7 million who watched Sinner’s championship win the previous year, which had featured a more anticipated opponent and a different competitive context.
The combination of record numbers for the women’s final, the overall 18 percent tournament audience growth, the historical Day 2 figure for Serena Williams, and the substantial Italian audience for Sinner collectively describe a Wimbledon edition that delivered commercially even as the matchups and storylines differed from recent years. Dramatic tennis, a globally significant return, and compelling competition across both draws produced the kind of viewership performance that broadcasting partners and tournament organizers will reference when evaluating the event’s current commercial health.

