John McEnroe Chris Evert Wimbledon Screengrabs via ESPN

Calls with reporters to preview and promote an upcoming event, whether it’s Wimbledon or the NCAA Tournament, almost never include even veiled criticisms of the host broadcaster from the principals of the meeting. After all, the point is to advertise the event broadcast. But on today’s ESPN call to tout Wimbledon, that guardrail buckled.

Asked to compare ESPN’s long running coverage of three of the four Grand Slams to TNT’s performance in its inaugural effort showing the recently completed French Open, which drew praise in many quarters, commentator Chris Evert said, “ESPN needs a little competition, and TNT, it’s like two players, top players, going at it, and they’re both going to improve in the process. So we will hopefully learn from them. They will hopefully learn from us. I think TNT was really thinking outside the box a little more, because they were so new.”

And John McEnroe said, “TNT is coming in fresh. It was good because they were more willing… they hadn’t done it before, so they didn’t even know. So now I think it’s going to hopefully lift up even ESPN, did a great job for a long time, but now maybe they’re going to be, ‘Hey, we’re going to look at it a little differently too,’”

Evert and McEnroe cited a few notable TNT efforts on the red clay: coverage that quickly transitioned to exciting moments on the court and didn’t just focus on the main match; a studio set outside the main stadium; Andre Agassi’s contribution; and Venus Williams’ role as a fashion correspondent, in effect.

McEnroe said the benefit to being on ESPN has been the ability to hopscotch between matches on the network’s many channels, but in his opinion, that is not so much the case anymore. “But I think ESPN is only on both networks Monday and Tuesday of the second week. I don’t think I have the exact schedule, but to me, that’s an opportunity where you move around.” And referring to his work with his brother Patrick at the French Open on a show aired on TruTV that did hopscotch between matches, “We called it the Match Zone, but basically it was like being able to just sort of keep going. It’s more like golf coverage.”

McEnroe and Evert each worked TNT’s coverage of the French, and many of their peers are also ESPN tennis mainstays. Tennis is fairly unusual in that commentators are largely independent contractors and not employees, so they have the freedom to appear on different broadcasters.

To ESPN’s credit, the spokeswoman did not intervene and insist that questions should be about ESPN’s coverage only. She allowed McEnroe and Evert to speak. While they did not exactly diss ESPN, they certainly suggested it may have gotten comfortable and could use some competition to sharpen its games.

Changes like the one TNT undertook are not going to be replicated in London, at least not for this fortnight. On a call earlier in the day, Linda Schulz, ESPN vice president of production, did not outline any major adjustments. The second week will feature virtual graphics in the studio shows, and announcer booths are outfitted with their cameras so viewers flipping through will not just hear voices for extended periods but be able to see the commentators.

Asked if ESPN might try interviewing coaches during matches at Wimbledon, a first for the sport that TNT did at the French (though only a handful of times), Schulz replied, “This is a really good time for tennis, and with that, as we look at access and what that means, we’re following our model of coverage right now. We’re very confident in our championship presentation. That said, when we lean into access, it’s more what’s really provided on camera, documentation coverage side, and when we get access to the players. I think beyond that and our interview approaches right now, we’re happy with what we do.”

Schulz said ESPN does have coverage that quickly moves court to court, especially in the first week (and ESPN+ subscribers can stream every match). “That first week on ESPN is going from court to court, not missing any of the priority moments. Others have called that a whip-around show.”

Brett Jackson, a coordinating producer, said ESPN would lean into telling the stories of the new faces of tennis. “So we’re seeing a new generation of stars that are garnering attraction, both on and off the court, this year, and we see it as our responsibility to continue to bring their personal stories and their on court success to the audience.”

There are a lot of changes and moments to observe at this year’s Wimbledon. It’s the 50th anniversary of Arthur Ashe’s victory, still the only African-American man to hoist the winner’s trophy. It’s the first year without lines judges, as electronic line calling comes to the All England Club. And the finals will start at 11 a.m. ET, not at the traditional 9 a.m. ET.

No matter the later start, ESPN is keeping the Breakfast at Wimbledon trademarked catchphrase that has been used since 1979, first by NBC and then when ESPN fully took over in 2012. The time change is designed in part to improve viewership in the Americas.

About Daniel Kaplan

Daniel Kaplan has been covering the business of sports for more than two decades. A proud founding reporter of SportsBusiness Journal, he spent the last four years at The Athletic.