John McEnroe spent two weeks entertaining and sometimes dividing viewers on the BBC during their Wimbledon coverage. The retired 'bad boy of tennis' made some bold claims, calling for headphones to be banned during a walk-on and telling Fabio Fognini to retire immediately after his first-round match against Carlos Alcaraz - something he did a few days later.
But the American is still plenty busy after finishing his two-week punditry stint at the All England Club. McEnroe has his fingers in lots of pies, which has helped him to amass a staggering net worth estimated to be around £74.3m ($100m).
The BBC isn't McEnroe's only employer, though according to last year's figures, they pay him a hefty rate of around £195,000 and £199,000. The former world No. 1 works for multiple broadcasters while on-site at tournaments like Wimbledon.
Over the last couple of weeks, he was also heard in the ESPN commentary booth. In true McEnroe fashion, he also caused a stir on the American airwaves, as those across the pond weren't happy that they had to listen to the seven-time Major winner, while UK viewers watching the BBC got to hear from Andre Agassi on men's semi-finals day.
"Going from John McEnroe's commentary to Andre Agassi's commentary is such a genuinely wonderful experience that everyone should experience," one tweeted.
He also works for TNT Sports at the other Grand Slam tournaments. At the recent French Open, he showed up a few minutes late to the live studio on finals day and then suggested he was actually early because he only should have been there when the match started.
He explained: "I was on the way and all of a sudden someone called from TNT UK and they said, 'Hey where's John?' and I am stuck in traffic because there is a marathon on, so I came later than I thought. I was planning on being here at 1.15pm just in case anyone needed me."
Tennis commentary isn't McEnroe's only gig. The 66-year-old's voice is also familiar to a whole generation of young fans who have come to know him in a completely different role away from the sporting world.
McEnroe is the narrator of the coming-of-age Netflix comedy show Never Have I Ever, written by Mindy Kaling, which focuses on an Indian-American teenager named Devi Vishwakumar.
Kaling approached McEnroe about the voiceover role at a post-Oscars party, and the rest is history.
He previously told the LA Times: "I didn't realise until I got into it - I was, like wait a minute: I'm in the head of a high school girl who's Indian American? And I'm supposed to be like her uncle, as well as her psychiatrist, as well as a few other things? And there's a lot of lines?
"I was happy because I've done a lot of cameos over the years, [which] are fun, but this one seemed like I was actually, in a way, part of the cast."
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