Where, when and how to follow the Roland-Garros tournament live?

Where, when and how to follow the Roland-Garros tournament live?
Where, when and how to follow the Roland-Garros tournament live?

The Parisian Grand Slam begins this Sunday, May 26 at Porte d’Auteuil and will be broadcast on French television.

Parisian clay will put on a show. The 2024 edition of Roland Garros which begins on Sunday May 26 and ends June 9, will bring together the greatest players in the world.

Novak Djokovic as well as Rafael Nadal will be present. The 37-year-old Spanish champion, fourteen-time winner of the Parisian Grand Slam, will have a lot to do in his first round as he will face the German Alexander Zverev, currently 4th in the world. The Majorcan could play his last Roland-Garros there. His fans should therefore be there. Novak Djokovic, for his part, who has not won any tournament this year, will play against Frenchman Pierre-Hugues Herbert in his first match. Jannik Sinner, second in the world, Carlos Alcaraz, 3rd and Casper Ruud, 7th in the ATP ranking, will also compete for the famous trophy. Among the ladies, the Polish Iga Swiatek, world number 1, appears to be the favorite of this edition, as does her rival the Belarusian Aryna Sabalenka, number 2 at the WTA.

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Ten hours live on France Télévisions

Great moments should therefore take place on Parisian clay and tennis fans will not miss a beat thanks to comprehensive television coverage. France Télévisions, the official free-to-air broadcaster of the event, will offer nearly ten hours of live broadcast per day. For the first time, the group will broadcast all of the matches from the Simonne-Mathieu court (an offer which was until then exclusively reserved for Prime Video). Every day, from 11 a.m., the public service will alternate between its different channels (France 2, France 3, France 4) to offer the best matches of the day.

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To bring these days to life, France Télévisions will be able to count on a team made up of journalists Inès Lagdiri, Benoît Durand, Matthieu Lartot and Fabien Lévêque and consultants Justine Hénin, Mary Pierce, Patrick Mouratoglou, Michaël Llodra and Michaël Jeremiasz.
Laurent Luyat will host the day from the terrace located on the Philippe Chatrier court and will receive champions as well as consultants on his stage throughout the day. For their part, Nelson Monfort and Olivia Leray will offer post-match interviews and reveal the atmosphere reigning in the aisles of Roland-Garros.

Every day, Cécile Grès and Claire Vocquier Ficot will present “All the sport” on France 3 from the famous terrace and will devote a large page to the Parisian tournament. With the exception of the eleven night sessions, all meetings will be available on the France.tv website.

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Night Sessions on Prime Video

France Télévisions will not be the only broadcaster of the French Open. Prime Video is continuing its partnership with the tournament and will offer eleven evening sessions on its channel, including two quarter-finals, Tuesday June 4 and Wednesday June 5. Thus, every evening, from Sunday May 26 and until the quarter-finals, the platform will broadcast the poster of the day. Prime Video will also co-broadcast live the women’s and men’s, singles and doubles semi-finals and finals from Thursday June 6 to Sunday June 9.

Every evening, Clémentine Sarlat or Thibaut Le Rol will take the air from 7:30 p.m. from the platform’s studios located on the terrace of the Philippe-Chatrier court and in the aisles of the stadium. They will offer a pre-match and a debrief after the meeting with Marion Bartoli, Tatiana Golovin, Fabrice Santoro, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and Guy Forget (who will intervene from time to time) the Prime Video consultants. Camille Pin and Frédéric Verdier will bring the meetings to life. Benoît Daniel will serve as field reporter.

Prime Video will innovate in its broadcasting by offering its subscribers the Stadium FX option allowing tennis fans to follow the match without commentary with just the atmosphere of the court.

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