The ATP Tour delivers compelling stories throughout the season — athletic, emotional, and historical. For editors, blogs, and social teams, IMAGO provides clear licensing models and transparent release information for tennis photography. Whether through single licenses, credit packages, or personal consultation, IMAGO’s flexible solutions serve the needs of media, brands, NGOs, education, and the creator economy. Matches become visual narratives that are both timely and archivable.
The Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) organizes the ATP Tour, comprising the ATP Masters 1000, ATP 500, and ATP 250 tournaments, along with the ATP Finals and the United Cup as an official team event.
While the Grand Slam tournaments are run by the ITF, they contribute to the ATP World Rankings. In addition, ATP-sanctioned exhibitions such as the Laver Cup offer unique visual and editorial opportunities.
IMAGO / ZUMA Press Wire | Jannik SINNER of Italy celebrates his victory with the trophy during the seventh day of the Rolex Paris Masters 1000 tennis tournament at Accor Arena on November 02, 2025 in Nanterre near Paris, France. Copyright: Matthieu Mirvillex
Technology & Officiating (2025): The ATP has implemented Electronic Line Calling Live (ELC Live) across all tournaments. Wimbledon has adopted the system, while Roland Garros continues using on-court officials for clay events. This brings consistent officiating and visual uniformity, changing how match photography is composed.
Rankings, Points, and the Race: Core Framework
IMAGO / Depositphotos | Grand Slam champion Serena Williams of United States celebrates victory after 2019 US Open semi-final match against Elina Svitolina at Billie Jean King National Tennis Center
Season Rhythm and Visual Motifs
The ATP calendar is global and surface-based: hard court season starts the year, followed by clay, then grass, and back to hard in late summer and autumn.
Large Masters events offer extended draws, providing more rounds and night-session lighting — visually dynamic for photographers.
For creators, sequences (serve, return), wide-angle shots (arenas, fan zones), and detail frames (footwork, grip tape, sweat) work well across formats.
IMAGO / Alexander Stroh | Alexander Zverev (GER) plays against Cameron Norrie (GB) at the ATP, Tennis Men's World Tour, Erste Bank Open in the Wiener Stadthalle. Overview of the arena.
Tournament Categories: Editorial Contexts
The highest ranking points outside Grand Slams, with top player line-ups and prime-time atmospheres. Visually rich in emotion, movement, and lighting contrast.
Traditional tournaments in cities such as Rotterdam, Basel, and Washington. Offer mid-season narratives and consistent editorial coverage opportunities.
A platform for emerging players, local heroes, and comeback stories. Ideal for portraits, behind-the-scenes, and feature content.
The season finale gathers the year’s best singles and doubles players. The United Cup adds a mixed team component, ideal for human-interest and storytelling imagery.
IMAGO / ZUMA Press Wire | Alexander Bublik (KAZ) returns the ball to Felix Auger Alissime (CAN) during the semi-final of Rolex Paris Masters 1000 tournament at La Defense Arena Stadium - Nanterre - France. Copyright: Pierre Steveni
IMAGO / HMB-Media | Carlos Alcaraz bei den Rolex Paris Masters 2025. Copyright: HMB Media Antonio BorgaHB
Newsrooms: Focus on timely relevance — match points, injuries, upsets, records.
Blogs & Magazines: Emphasize context — tactics, rivalries, eras, surface comparisons.
Social & Creators: Favor short-form visuals — vertical formats, macro details, crowd reactions.
IMAGO delivers real‑time images from the ATP Tour directly from the venues, captured by its network of partner photographers. This visual material shows key moments, match‑defining points, and athletes’ emotions, as well as reactions from spectators and the wider environment. Reliability is rooted in journalistic quality standards and many years of experience in sports imagery. Partner photographers upload their work directly to the IMAGO platform, giving editors, publishers, and creators worldwide access to authentic, timely, and properly licensed content — ideal for breaking news and live events.
Webshop: Direct purchase of single image licenses or use of credit packages that can be redeemed flexibly over one year.
Enterprise Solutions: Personal consultation, tailored research, and framework agreements for professional users via a sales manager.
All access paths lead to simple, proper licensing — suitable for spontaneous blog posts as well as long‑term content strategies.
An image license grants usage rights, not ownership. IMAGO provides three clearly defined categories in the webshop:
Rights Managed (RM): One‑time, clearly defined use — ideal for editorial articles. For commercial or special applications, please get in touch.
Royalty Free Classic (RF): Flexible multiple use, e.g., for blogs, websites, or social media channels.
Royalty Free Premium (RF Premium): Extended usage rights for advertising, campaigns, branding, and product communication.
All license types specify where, for how long, and on which platforms an image may be used. For more details, consult the FAQs or contact the IMAGO team.
IMAGO archives decades of tennis history: Borg/McEnroe, Lendl, Becker/Edberg, Sampras/Agassi, Federer/Nadal/Djokovic, and current generations. Archive galleries offer comparable motifs (serve sequences, trophy shots, celebration poses) and suit anniversaries, retrospectives, and data‑driven features.
IMAGO / Claus Bergmann | Portrait of Roger Federer (Switzerland) with bleached blond hair.
Check metadata: round, court, surface, opponent, date — for accurate captions.
Think context: training, staff, fans, and venue shots complement match imagery.
Plan variations: wide + medium + close‑up for scalable distribution (web, print, social).
Confirm rights: verify license type and release status before any commercial use.