Flavio Cobolli meets Alexander Zverev in the men’s singles final at the French Open on Sunday 7 June 2026, with UK listeners able to follow the match on BBC Radio 5 Live, BBC Sounds and BBC Sport Online from 14:00 UK time. BBC coverage is also available on BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra and the BBC World Service, while television coverage in the UK is on HBO Max UK and TNT Sports 1 UK. [1][7]

The BBC audio team for the match features presenter Katie Smith, main commentator Russell Fuller and co-commentator Ryan Harrison on both Radio 5 Live and Radio 5 Sports Extra, with Daniela Hantuchová joining the Sports Extra broadcast as an additional co-commentator. On the BBC World Service, Russell Fuller and Ryan Harrison provide the match coverage. [1]

Fuller is one of the BBC’s best-known tennis voices and has covered major events for years, while Harrison brings recent tour experience as a former ATP player, and Hantuchová adds the perspective of a former top-10 singles player and doubles specialist. That combination gives BBC audio listeners both technical detail and a player’s-eye view of the final. [1]

On TNT Sports 1 UK and HBO Max UK, presenter Craig Doyle leads the studio coverage, supported by a heavyweight pundit line-up that includes Mats Wilander, Jim Courier, Tim Henman, Anne Keothavong, John McEnroe, Àlex Corretja, Henri Leconte and Chris Eubanks. [1]

That is an especially deep bench of tennis analysts. McEnroe and Courier are both former Grand Slam champions, Wilander is a multiple major winner and one of the sport’s most respected tactical voices, Henman and Keothavong are familiar British broadcasters with strong national profile, and Corretja, Leconte and Eubanks add further variety through their different playing eras and styles. For viewers looking for context as well as live action, TNT’s panel is designed to cover every angle of a major final. [1]

The match has major significance for both players. Reports ahead of the final noted that Zverev is still chasing an elusive first Grand Slam title, while Cobolli arrives as the higher-pressure outsider trying to disrupt the German’s expectations on the biggest clay-court stage in tennis. [1][7]

For fans outside the UK, the official Roland-Garros site is also carrying preview content for the final, underlining the global interest in a championship match that will be watched closely across Britain, the United States and Australia. [7]

More information on the tournament is available via the official Roland-Garros website.

Article generated: 7 June 2026, 14:10 GMT

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