By Jason Silver
Athelo Group
As streaming continues to dominate the entertainment industry, sports and TV are blending seamlessly into the popular sports docuseries genre.
Shows like Drive to Survive and Full Swing have proven they can captivate large audiences of sports fans, casual viewers, and even newcomers to the sport.
What makes these sports docuseries so compelling to a variety of audiences? It seems like Netflix has the answer.
Quick Highlights:
- Between October 2024 and February 2025, Netflix increased its sports catalog by 98.6%.
- After watching the Netflix series Drive to Survive, 34% of US viewers became an F1 fan.
- From 2021 to 2024, 33% of consumers watched sports documentaries.
- In just one week, Quarterback recorded 3.3 million views, with over 21 million hours watched.
- As of Q2 in 2025, sports count for 12% of commissioned documentaries, an increase from 3% in 2019.

The Beginnings of the Sports Docuseries
The sports docuseries trend began with HBO’s Hard Knocks, which debuted in 2001. This groundbreaking series offered unprecedented access to NFL locker rooms and facilities, giving viewers a behind-the-scenes look at top teams. Hard Knocks remains a staple, releasing new seasons to this day.
In 2020, ESPN and Netflix released The Last Dance. During the global pandemic, when sports fans were desperate for content, the series offered an in-depth, behind-the-scenes look at one of the greatest athletes of all time, Michael Jordan. The show quickly became a cultural phenomenon.
The Last Dance averaged 5.6 million viewers per episode, won an Emmy for outstanding documentary, and became ESPN’s most-watched docuseries, surpassing even the beloved 30 for 30 series.
The Potential of Success and Viewership
As Netflix continues to release new series across various sports, the impact on viewership is often compared to that of Drive to Survive, Netflix’s Formula 1 docuseries.
First airing in 2019, Drive to Survive has continued to captivate audiences, with its seventh season released this year. Many credit the series with introducing Formula 1 to a broader, more diverse audience.
The numbers speak for themselves. Average viewership of Formula 1 in the United States soared to 934,000 in 2021, a 71% increase since the first season. Today, the racing championship draws an average of 1.3 million viewers per race.
This success has sparked other sports, both niche and mainstream, to create their own docuseries in hopes of attracting similar new, younger, and casual audiences.

The Netflix Blueprint
Sports docuseries make up a small slice of the streaming landscape, accounting for just 0.72% of titles and 0.74% of streaming revenue.
While these numbers seem small, the picture changes when Netflix is excluded. Without Netflix, sports docuseries represent 0.75% of titles but only 0.56% of streaming revenue, showing how the platform has set itself apart in this subgenre.
One example of Netflix’s success is the NFL docuseries Quarterback, which topped the U.S. most-watched chart within just two weeks and also cracked the top 10 in Canada, Switzerland, and Ireland. Following Quarterback‘s success, shows like Receiver and Any Given Saturday adopted a similar production style and achieved comparable success.
Netflix’s formula focuses on unique storytelling, highlighting the stars not just as athletes, but as individuals. It offers a behind-the-scenes look at their personal lives, revealing the highs and lows of the sports that brought them fame.
Can the Drive to Survive Effect be Repeated?
It’s far from a sure thing.
Drive to Survive showed how a sports docuseries can transform viewership, but not every title sparks that same magic. When Netflix released the track and field series SPRINT in 2024, fans hoped for a Formula 1–style boom. The series earned positive reviews, but the sport’s overall audience has yet to see a major lift.
Some projects have faced even steeper challenges. Netflix’s rugby series Six Nations: Full Contact made brief appearances in the top 10 of several countries, yet it never broke into the global top 10 and was cancelled after just two seasons.
The tennis docuseries Break Point met a similar fate. It ran for two seasons before ending, and one fan pointed out that in 2023 it ranked 617th among Netflix shows, well behind its Formula 1 and PGA Tour counterparts at 121 and 274. Those numbers underline just how difficult it is to match the reach of the genre’s biggest hits.
While Netflix continues to produce high-quality sports storytelling, the success of a docuseries often depends on finding the perfect mix of sport, personalities, and drama. The Drive to Survive effect isn’t impossible to repeat, but it’s a high bar to clear.

Recent Difficulties for Sports Docuseries
In some of the recent series released, Netflix has received complaints about its approach to certain sports.
Many fans of track and field pushed back on the SPRINT series, with one report claiming, “It doesn’t want to tell a story. It wants to sell the sport.” A common criticism is that the series focuses almost exclusively on winners, leaving out the struggles and realities faced by athletes who don’t reach the podium.
As the genre’s popularity has grown, some athletes have taken a more active role in shaping their own narratives. Star soccer player David Beckham, for example, served as executive producer on his own docuseries and chose its director. While not inherently an issue, critics pointed out that controversial parts of his story were missing, raising concerns about athletes controlling the narrative.
Adding to the challenge, Netflix has already released 13 sports docuseries in 2025, with seven more planned before year’s end. With so many titles flooding the market, there’s a real possibility of viewer fatigue. In a crowded field, not every series can replicate the success the genre has enjoyed in the past.
What to Look For in the Future
As interest in the genre grows, many other sports are exploring docuseries of their own. Sports like CrossFit and surfing could benefit athletes such as Athelo Group’s Dani Speegle, Emily Rethwill, Brisa Hennessey, and Zoe Benedetto.
For these projects to succeed, they need to tell stories that authentically reflect the sport rather than simply spotlighting a few star athletes. Taking more time between releases could also help maintain audience interest and avoid oversaturation.
Docuseries have real potential to expand a sport’s audience, but success will depend on how streaming platforms approach production and storytelling as they work to keep public interest high.