
Can it really be two months since a mesmerizing Championship Weekend brought the curtain down on an unforgettable and record-setting tournament?
Energetic crowds and electric matches paired with expansive food and drink offerings and daily live music to bring Tennis Paradise to life in a celebration of everything fans love about tennis, both on and off the court.
Like all years, the tournament fortnight ultimately gave way to Coachella and now the valley vibe has shifted again with the departure of many snowbirds as summer approaches.
But the global tennis circuit remains a constant, with the ATP and WTA Tours continuing their kinetic journeys around the planet.
The backdrop has changed, but the reasons we love tennis remain the same: rivalries, comebacks, breakout runs, big-stage nerves and the constant sense that something memorable could happen every time players walk on court.
Save The DateWhether you’re reflecting on the memories you made in 2026 or you’re in the early stages of planning your return to Tennis Paradise in 2027, it’s time to re-connect with the sport you love.
Storylines that began at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden in March continue to evolve as we anticipate the arrival of Roland Garros and then the magical part of the season that is the grass swing, culminating at Wimbledon.
When Jannik Sinner captured his first BNP Paribas Open title in March, he completed the set of all six hard-court ATP Masters 1000s. Just nine weeks later he’s on the cusp of joining Novak Djokovic as the only players to have won all nine Masters 1000s.
FAQsSinner beat Carlos Alcaraz in the Monte-Carlo final - in a match which also saw the Italian dethrone his great rival as World No. 1 - and then backed up to win Madrid. On Thursday he won his Rome quarter-final against Andrey Rublev to set a new record of 32 consecutive match wins at Masters 1000 level, breaking a tie with Djokovic.
His victory in Madrid marked a record fifth consecutive Masters 1000 trophy. Now he has his eyes set on a sixth in Rome before embarking on an even bigger prize: his first Roland Garros title, which would see him complete the career Grand Slam.
Like Sinner, women’s champion Aryna Sabalenka carried her momentum from the desert to Miami and completed the Sunshine Double. But the World No. 1 has not had the going all her own way since. She fell to American Hailey Baptiste in a third-set tie-break in the Madrid quarter-finals and to Sorana Cirstea in the Rome third round.
Australian Open champion Elena Rybakina, who held championship point against Sabalenka in the desert, won the Stuttgart title and continues to turn up the heat on Sabalenka in the battle for No. 1.
That is the beauty of the tennis calendar: Indian Wells may last two unforgettable weeks, but the stories born in Tennis Paradise continue to travel long after the final ball is struck. From the desert to the clay, from Paris to the grass courts of Wimbledon and beyond, the game keeps giving us new reasons to watch, cheer and dream. And before long, all those roads will begin leading back to Stadium 1, where another chapter in Tennis Paradise awaits in 2027.