Top players donate, lower tier
counts cost of coronavirus shutdown
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[April 01, 2020]
By Sudipto Ganguly
MUMBAI (Reuters) - While top players
donate to coronavirus relief efforts and post cooking and workout
videos online, lower level professionals are counting the cost of
the tennis shutdown with some fearing they will be unable to put
food on the table if it lasts much longer.
Novak Djokovic last week pledged one million euros ($1.11 million)
to help buy medical equipment in his native Serbia, while Rafa Nadal
has called on fellow Spanish athletes to help raise 11 million euros
to fight the pandemic.
Roger Federer - the other member of the Big Three of men's tennis -
contributed one million Swiss Francs ($1.05 million) to help
vulnerable families in his native Switzerland.
By contrast, Georgia's Sofia Shapatava, the world's 375th ranked
women's singles player, has started a petition seeking assistance
from the International Tennis Federation (ITF) for lower-level
professionals.
"Not many will be able to support their everyday life and then come
back to playing after three months without competition," the
31-year-old said in her online petition, which has more than 1,350
signatures.
The men's ATP Tour and the WTA, which runs the women's circuit,
suspended all tournaments until early June after countries started
locking down their borders to contain the spread of the flu-like
virus.
In recent weeks, players who would usually be jetting around the
world to tournaments have flooded social media with videos of their
take on the toilet roll challenge, or their new home workout
routines, cooking and dancing skills.
While tennis is a lucrative sport for those at the top -- the 2020
Australian Open singles champions each took home A$4.12 million
($2.52 million) -- those in the lower echelons often struggle to
make ends meet.
A 2018 International Review Panel report commissioned to address
betting and integrity issues said that players in the lowest tiers
were susceptible to corruption because of the difficulty in making a
living.
Only 250-350 players, the report said, earned enough to break even.
Tennis governing bodies have over the last few years attempted to
improve the pay and conditions for a deeper pool of international
players but it has not proved enough for those who depend solely on
winnings.
The WTA and ATP told Reuters they were working behind the scenes to
help the players. The ITF did not respond to request for comment.
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A man wearing a mask walks past the gate of the All England Lawn
Tennis & Croquet Club as the spread of the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) continues, London, Britain, March 31, 2020. REUTERS/Dylan
Martinez
STRUGGLING FOR FOOD
Britain's Tara Moore, who is ranked 447th in singles, earned about
$2,800 this year before the shutdown.
"It will be tough for many players to survive the next couple of
months as they didn't earn much before," the 27-year-old said on
Twitter in support of Shapatava's petition.
Shapatava, who currently plays secondary ITF events, has collected
$354,725 in career earnings since turning professional in 2004, but
has only made about $3,300 this year.
"It is very weird to listen that professional tennis players
struggle with food, but that is reality," she wrote in a blog.
"Half of the people I know work on (the) side, coach or play club
matches, and since the world is on shutdown that is impossible to
do.
"I will not say that I am in the worst position on the planet,
honestly I am healthy, I will have food on the table and my family
is doing good, but I know people who feel far worse than me."
India's Prajnesh Gunneswaran said a number of players have been
dipping into their savings or have had to depend on family to get by
during the shutdown, which he hopes will not run as long as six
months.
But the ATP Tour's 132nd ranked singles player felt that even in the
present climate tennis players were still in a better place than
many others.
"Being laid off in a regular job means having to look for work. In
our profession we don't have that issue," he told Reuters.
"So in that sense, we are better off than others. So it really comes
down to how long this period is for ... usually outside 250 players
barely manage to break even."
(Editing by Peter Rutherford)
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