John McEnroe’s BBC pay cut, cancelled TV show and 30-year marriage revealed
John McEnroe’s BBC pay has fallen beneath the broadcaster’s disclosure threshold after 22 years covering Wimbledon. The seven-time Grand Slam winner earned between £195,000 and £199,999 in 2023/24, but his name vanished from the 2024/25 report, suggesting a cut.
McEnroe’s BBC earnings for 2023/24 sat between £195,000 and £199,999. That worked out to roughly £14,000 per day during Wimbledon, where he’s been a fixture since 2004. His omission from the latest BBC salary list hints his pay has dipped below the £178,000 disclosure line.
The drop follows years of McEnroe anchoring BBC coverage at the All England Club. His candid, authoritative style made him a fan favourite. But the broadcaster’s financial transparency rules mean any pay under £178,000 stays private.
McEnroe turns 69 this year and is nearing his 30th wedding anniversary with Patty Smyth. The couple tied the knot in 1997 and share two children. Smyth once told People that keeping intimacy alive was key to their longevity.
She also stressed privacy. “I didn’t want to be like, ‘Hey, look at us, we’re this happy couple,’” Smyth said. “I just thought if I kept it on the down-low, I had this gut feeling we would stay together.”
McEnroe fronted CNBC’s short-lived programme *McEnroe* from July to December 2004. Its debut drew 174,000 viewers-down from the 200,000 who watched its predecessor, *The News with Brian Williams*. Critics panned it immediately.
Ratings hit rock bottom. Nielsen logged a 0.0 rating twice during its run. The show folded after six months. McEnroe’s broadcasting career, though, stayed strong on the BBC.
McEnroe remains a Wimbledon staple in 2026, expected to commentate the men’s singles final on Sunday. His 50th year in tennis looms. The legend’s next chapter hinges on how the BBC reshapes its roster-and whether his salary finds a new public line.