Image: Live Media Publishing Group / Alamy Stock Photo
Why fashion’s obsession with tennis isn’t just a phase and how Jannik Sinner became its quietly powerful poster boy.
While Wimbledon stayed strict with its all-white code on court, Gucci was busy rewriting the rules off court and it started with Jannik Sinner.
The Italian tennis star, now as known for his forehands as his fashion fluency, was the centerpiece of a private Gucci dinner held in London during Wimbledon week. Dressed in a deep, tailored suit that whispered quiet luxury, Sinner proved once again that tennis isn’t just a sport it’s a full-blown aesthetic movement.
Though the guest list was ultra exclusive and the event ultra private, images from the evening were enough to send the fashion world into a full spin cycle. Velvet blazers, undone bow ties, silver trays, and espresso martinis created a vibe that felt less like a sports celebration and more like a modern day Gatsby court side afterparty.
Sinner is young, powerful, introverted yet impossibly magnetic, he is the kind of man who can land a forehand winner and a luxury campaign in the same breath.
And Gucci knows exactly what they’re doing.
Tenniscore Isn’t a Trend. It’s a Culture Shift.
In recent years, tennis has quietly become fashion’s favorite sport. What started as a Pinterest aesthetic (pleated skirts, ribbed tanks, vintage Polo sweaters) has evolved into a full cultural shift.
Gucci’s decision to host an exclusive dinner during Wimbledon isn’t just good PR. It’s strategy. It signals a recognition that tennis no longer lives solely on the court. It’s spilling into streetwear, runways, and celebrity closets.
In the age of personal branding, athletes can no longer rely solely on wins and stats. To stand out, they must become icons. Sinner, with his unshakable calm and natural elegance, fits perfectly into that mold. He doesn’t need to shout. He doesn’t even need to pose. His presence is the campaign.
And yet, there’s nothing accidental here. The carefully chosen setting. The moody lighting. The guest list likely composed of editors, influencers, and fashion insiders with just enough reach to keep things aspirational. This is a masterclass in culture-building.
Why It Matters Even If You’ve Never Held a Racket
So maybe you don’t follow tennis. Maybe you didn’t know Jannik Sinner until this week. But that’s exactly the point. These campaigns and these moments are designed not for the sports fan, but for the fashion-forward consumer. The one who scrolls for inspiration. Who pins a photo not because they love tennis, but because they love the mood.
And if CULT Brief has learned anything this season, it’s that fashion is no longer about showing up loud. It’s about showing up curated. Consider this dinner the official serve: tennis is in and it’s not leaving the fashion world anytime soon.











