SPORTIME Amagansett maps out 2026 season with JMTA, Pro-Am events
SPORTIME Amagansett's season roadmap blends 33 Har-Tru courts, JMTA training, and the 12th annual Pro-Am, keeping the club at the center of Hamptons tennis.

A club bulletin that reads like a season map
SPORTIME Amagansett is laying down one of the clearest early markers of the 2026 Hamptons tennis season, and it does it with unusual range: high-volume court access, junior development, adult play, family programming, and a marquee Pro-Am that keeps the club firmly in the local conversation. The bulletin does not feel like a single announcement so much as a working map of who the club serves and why it matters to players who want more than a summer court rental.
That broader ambition is exactly what makes the Amagansett property such a force in East Hampton tennis. The club is positioning itself as both a social hub and a performance center, the kind of place where a family can build a summer routine, adults can find organized play, and juniors can move into serious training without leaving the same campus.
What membership actually unlocks
The membership pitch is built around access, and a lot of it. SPORTIME Amagansett says members get unlimited play on 33 Har-Tru courts, daily game arranging at all levels, and priority access to clinics, lessons, events, and club tournaments. That mix is important in the Hamptons, where court time is often the first thing players worry about when the season fills up.
Just as notable is the timing. The club’s extended outdoor season runs from mid-April into early November, which gives members a far longer stretch of playable tennis than a typical summer-only calendar. For Hamptons families, that long window is the difference between a seasonal stop and a dependable base.
The bulletin also says membership demand is expected to stay high. That matters because the club’s appeal is not just about court count, but about certainty, especially for players who plan their summer around knowing where they will train, arrange matches, and plug into the tennis scene.
JMTA keeps the development lane open
If membership is the access story, JMTA Summer Tennis Training is the development story. SPORTIME Amagansett points readers toward JMTA and other proprietary programs led by SPORTIME’s coaching staff, making clear that the club wants to remain a home for players who are serious about improvement as well as those who want to play casually.
That dual identity is one of the club’s strongest assets. A site that can support adult leagues, social hitting, and family tennis at the same time as structured junior training has more pull than a one-lane operation. In practice, it means the same club can serve a younger player building habits over the summer and an adult player looking for regular, organized competition.
The emphasis on JMTA also helps explain the club’s place in the Hamptons ecosystem. SPORTIME Amagansett is not presenting itself as a passive venue that simply opens its gates for the season. It is framing itself as a training environment with a coaching staff, a pipeline for summer development, and a program structure that keeps players returning for more than just the weather.
Why adults and families keep finding a place here
The bulletin makes a point of bundling adult play and family programming alongside JMTA, and that combination gives the club its local edge. In a market where many tennis facilities specialize narrowly, SPORTIME Amagansett is trying to hold the whole family calendar together, from junior instruction to adult match play.
Daily game arranging at all levels is part of that promise. So is priority access to clinics, lessons, events, and tournaments, which gives members a path from casual hitting to more structured participation without leaving the club’s orbit. For players trying to decide where to anchor their season, that kind of continuity matters as much as the number of courts.
The club’s scale strengthens the pitch. With 33 Har-Tru courts and an outdoor season stretching from mid-April into early November, SPORTIME Amagansett can offer the sense of a full tennis environment rather than a handful of isolated sessions. That is part of why the club reads as a central destination for local players who want social tennis and serious development in the same place.

The Pro-Am is the club’s public-facing moment
The clearest event on the calendar is the Johnny Mac Tennis Project Pro-Am, now entering its 12th year. Tickets are live for the August 22, 2026 event at SPORTIME Amagansett, and the bulletin describes it as a world-class tennis experience featuring legends of the game, supporters, and friends of the nonprofit.
That Pro-Am matters for reasons that go beyond one night on the calendar. It links the Hamptons tennis scene to one of the sport’s most recognizable charitable and celebrity-driven traditions, which gives the club a wider profile than an ordinary local event ever could. It also reinforces SPORTIME Amagansett’s role as a place where tennis is not only played, but staged and celebrated.
For players and families deciding where to spend their season, the event says something about the club’s identity. SPORTIME Amagansett is not just offering court access and training blocks. It is setting the tone for the local tennis conversation, with a calendar that stretches from spring membership value to late-summer showcase.
What the 2026 roadmap tells Hamptons players
Read together, the bulletin points to a club that understands exactly what Hamptons tennis demand looks like. Players want access that lasts beyond July, juniors need a real development track, adults want organized play, and the community still responds to signature events that give the season a pulse. SPORTIME Amagansett is trying to meet all of that at once.
That is why this bulletin feels less like club marketing and more like an early map of the season ahead. The 33 Har-Tru courts, the mid-April-to-November window, the JMTA training lane, and the August 22 Pro-Am all point to the same conclusion: if you want to know where the Hamptons tennis agenda is being set, this is one of the places to watch.
This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.
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