US Open Tennis's ten nearest neighbors are dominated by business and financial media — not other sporting events, not tennis players, not sports broadcasters.
The shape is flat: scores run from 0.98 down to 0.96 with no single standout, and the composition of the cluster tells the real story. Eight of the ten neighbors are News Publishers, with the remaining two being Magazines. The Wall Street Journal leads at 0.98, followed closely by Reuters Business (0.98), Bloomberg (0.97), and WSJ Business News (0.97). Real Time Economics (0.97), Bloomberg Businessweek (0.97), and CNBC (0.97) continue the pattern. The two Magazines in the top 10 — Fortune (0.97) and Inc. (0.96) — are themselves business-focused titles. The only Sporting Events entity in the top 10 is Wimbledon, which does not appear until well outside the top 10 in the similarity results shown here — and in fact does not appear in the top 10 at all. No tennis players, no sports leagues, and no sports media appear among the ten nearest neighbors.
This audience shape places US Open Tennis squarely inside a business-media readership cluster, suggesting its followers overlap far more with consumers of financial and professional news than with general sports audiences.