This is How to Watch the Entire 2019 US Open Tennis Live For Free on Roku, Fire TV, Apple TV, iOS, & Android
ESPN will have exclusive live coverage from tennis’ fourth and final Major of the year, the US Open from Monday, Aug. 26 - Sunday, Sept. 8. On the men’s side, Novak Djokovic will try to win his fifth major in his last six, while on the women’s, Serena Williams is trying to win her 24th major title.
The good news is that for cord-cutters, you can still watch all the matches live even if you don’t have cable with a Live TV Streaming Service, which start at $15 a month after a 7-Day Free Trial.
Most Men’s and Women’s Singles matches will air on ESPN, ESPN2, and with additional live coverage and on-demand access in the ESPN App and ESPN+. Fans will have access to more than 1,300 hours of coverage from all 16 courts streaming live across ESPN3, ESPN+ and the ESPN App.
Over the last eleven Majors, there have been nine different winners including — last year’s winner Naomi Oaska, Caroline Wozniacki, and top-ranked Simona Halep. That streak could continue with former Major winners Petra Kvitova, Victoria Azarenka or top-10 ranked players Elina Svitolina, Karolina Pliskova, Kiki Bertens and Daria Kasatkin.
Serena Williams is trying to win her first title as a mom and her 24th Major title, tying the record held by Australia’s Margaret Court. American Coco Gauff, who has been granted a wild card entry into the main draw, is hoping to do an encore of her Wimbledon run.
Men’s Singles
On the Men’s side, just three male winners, defending champ Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, and Novak Djokovic have won the last eleven Majors. Top seed and defending champion Djokovic is seeking his fifth Major title in the last six.
While the all-time legends continue to dominate the final weekend of Majors, the sport’s stars of the future are closer and closer to being the stars of today. The current top 10 includes #4 Dominic Thiem (25), #5 Daniil Medvedev (23) who won Cincinnati on Sunday, #6 Sascha Zverev (22), #8 Stefanos Tsitsipas (21), and #9 Karen Khachanov (23). Eventually, the generational page will turn.