After nearly a decade of regretting a missed acquisition, Jeff Blackburn is back in the game — and this time, he’s not letting it slip away.
The longtime Amazon executive, widely credited as a key architect of Prime Video, Amazon Studios, and the company’s push into live sports, is stepping in as Chairman and CEO of Tennis Channel. It’s a move that reunites Blackburn with a brand he once tried to bring into the Amazon fold, signaling Sinclair’s intent to evolve the network well beyond the pay-TV ecosystem.
Why Tennis Channel, Why Now?
Blackburn had his pick of CEO roles after stepping away from Amazon in 2022. But Tennis Channel was the only job he wanted. A lifelong tennis fan and avid player, Blackburn called the network a “jewel” and an “essential part of the tennis ecosystem.” He’d looked into acquiring the network for Amazon nearly ten years ago before Sinclair swooped in and bought it for $350 million. That one stuck with him.
So when the opportunity came around again — this time to run it — he didn’t hesitate.
The Sinclair Strategy
Sinclair CEO Chris Ripley described Blackburn’s hiring as a “pivotal step” toward accelerating Tennis Channel’s digital expansion. Blackburn’s track record fits the mission: At Amazon, he built multi-billion-dollar businesses across media, music, and sports, helped launch “Thursday Night Football” on Prime, and drove the acquisition and integration of MGM.
That experience is tailor-made for Tennis Channel’s current challenges and ambitions. The network has already taken steps to broaden its digital reach, including:
- Launching T2, a FAST channel that airs live matches without requiring a cable subscription
- Offering direct-to-consumer access to its flagship network
- Pivoting to new sports like Pickleball to reach emerging audiences
However, the transition from a linear-first cable network to a digitally dominant global platform requires the kind of operational expertise and strategic clarity that Blackburn brings.
What’s Next?
Blackburn replaces Ken Solomon, who was ousted last fall over concerns about outside business interests. His arrival signals that Sinclair is serious about investing in the Tennis Channel’s future — not just as a domestic cable network but as a globally distributed, always-on sports platform.
If anything, the hire underscores that in a streaming-first world, talent from tech — not just TV — is now essential to growth.