Tennis' reply to "F1: Drive to Survive" is able to launch. By Chris Oddo | @TheFanChild | Thursday, December 22, 2022
Tennis followers will get a dose of behind-the-scenes motion when Netflix premieres its new documentary “Break Point” on January 13, 2023.
Crews adopted lots of the tour’s high gamers in 2022, angling in for the kind of by no means seen earlier than footage that propelled the sequence “F1: Drive to Survive” to on the spot traditional standing within the sports activities documentary pantheon.
Here’s a snippet from the present notes:
“From the group behind F1: Drive to Survive, Break Point follows a various group of tennis gamers on and off the courtroom as they compete in gruelling slams with hopes of successful a last and even greater desires of turning into world primary. Break Point will get up shut and private with high gamers on the tennis circuit by means of a complete 12 months travelling throughout the globe for all 4 Grand Slams and the ATP and WTA excursions.”
Players, pundits and followers are upbeat in regards to the present’s potential.
“I feel it’s going to make an amazing present, and I feel we gave them some good content material,” Canada's Felix Auger-Aliassime mentioned, in line with the ATP Tour. “For me the primary aim is that it could actually assist tennis. It can assist tennis total. That could be superb if we might see an increase within the variety of followers and a focus for our sport by airing this sequence.”
Auger-Aliassime, Paula Badosa, Matteo Berrettini, Taylor Fritz, Ons Jabeur, Thanasi Kokkinakis, Nick Kyrgios, Casper Ruud, Aryna Sabalenka, Maria Sakkari, Sloane Stephens, Iga Swiatek, Frances Tiafoe, Ajla Tomljanovic and Stefanos Tsitsipas will all be featured within the documentary, which premieres simply earlier than the Australian Open kicks off, on January 13.
"I just want to make fans see what we are living every day to remember we are just human beings after all,” said Jabeur, dubbed the “Minister of Happiness” by friends. “I want them to see what we go through every day with the practices, with the preparation, with all the stress. You can feel and just know that we’re human beings and just support us no matter what."