Tennis news 2026: World number one Aryna Sabalenka says she is ready to boycott the grand slams over prize money dispute

Date:

Share post:

World number one Aryna Sabalenka said Tuesday she was ready to boycott the Grand Slam tournaments in order to have a greater share of the prize money.

“I feel like the show is on us. Without us there wouldn’t be a tournament and there wouldn’t be that entertainment,” the four-time Grand Slam winner told a press conference at the Italian Open.

Watch the biggest Aussie sports & the best from overseas LIVE on Kayo Sports | New to Kayo? Join now and get your first month for just $1.

“I feel like definitely we deserve to be paid more percentage. “I think at some point we will boycott. I feel like that’s going to be the only way to fight for our rights.

“We girls can easily get together and go for this because some of the things I feel like it’s really unfair to the players. I think at some point it’s going to get to this.” Last year almost all the leading players signed two letters to the four Grand Slam bosses demanding an increase in prize money, payments into a player welfare fund to improve retirement and maternity benefits, as well as involvement in decisions that affected them.

The letters set a target of a 22-percent share in tournament revenue, which would bring the majors in line with the nine combined 1000-level events run by the ATP men’s tour and the women’s WTA tour.

READ MORE

‘Difficult time for me’: Three-peat dream over as world No. 2 withdraws from French Open

How painful loss to icon put world No.1 on course for staggering feat even ‘Big 3’ couldn’t manage

Aryna Sabalenka celebrates winning a point against Naomi Osaka during their match on Day 8 of the Mutua Madrid Open.Source: Getty Images

However Poland’s Iga Swiatek, a four-time French Open singles champion, believes boycotting tournaments “is a bit extreme”.

“I think the most important thing honestly is to have proper communication and discussions with the governing bodies so we have some space to talk and maybe negotiate,” said Swiatek, who has also won Wimbledon and the US Open.

“Hopefully before Roland Garros there’s going to be an opportunity to have these type of meetings and we’ll see how they go.” On Monday, players said in a statement that an announcement by the French Open last month of a 9.5-per cent prize money rise was not good enough.

It said that last year Roland Garros generated 395 million euros ($463 mn), a 14-percent increase.

However the total purse went up by just 5.4 per cent, reducing player share of revenue to 14.3 per cent.

It estimated that this year’s revenues would pass 400 million euros, leaving the player cut still below 15 per cent.

Source link

Related articles

‘Little f***ing rat’: UFC star explodes as champ leaks ‘bullying’ footage in nasty rivalry’s fresh twist

Just days before his title clash with Sean Strickland at UFC 328, Khamzat Chimaev has broken one of...

Fowler’s Man City crowned champions while watching TV as six-year reign finally over

Manchester City were crowned Women’s Super League champions for the first time in 10 years without playing after...

Atlético say ‘no excuses’ after bowing out to Arsenal in UCL

Diego Simeone refused to blame Atlético Madrid's Champions League semifinal exit on the referee's failure to award them...

Alex Eala rallies past Magdalena Fręch in gritty Italian Open opener

Down 1-3 in the deciding set, Alex Eala once again showed her trademark resilience on clay -- grinding...