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BackWimbledon to propose new player council amid prize money dispute
Wimbledon to propose new player council amid prize money dispute
In Entwicklung
Guardian Sport21.05.2026Sport4 dk okuma

Wimbledon to propose new player council amid prize money dispute

Auf einen Blick

  • Wimbledon will offer to form a new player council at a meeting with player representatives during Roland Garros, following intervention by Tim Henman.
  • The move comes amid ongoing disputes over prize money and player representation with other Grand Slam organizers.

KI-generierte Zusammenfassung

Warum es wichtig ist

A dispute has been ongoing since last year's French Open regarding player demands for increased prize money and contributions to welfare initiatives. Players have expressed dissatisfaction with the percentage increases offered by some Grand Slam organizers.

Schriftgröße

Wimbledon will offer to create a new player council in a meeting with leading player representatives scheduled for Roland Garros next week, with Tim Henman having intervened in the ongoing row over grand slam prize money.

The Guardian has learned the former British No 1 and All England Club Board member held talks with several top players, including representatives of the WTA Players’ Council at the Italian Open in Rome earlier this month. A formal meeting between Wimbledon officials and player agents at the French Open will follow.

Some players may join the meeting depending on their tournament schedules with Jannik Sinner’s representative, Alex Vittur, one of several leading agents to have confirmed their attendance.

Wimbledon, the French Open and US Open have been open to meeting the top players’ representatives to discuss concerns over prize money, welfare and representation since December. But the representatives have insisted they will not discuss the formation of a player council until the grand slam organisers address requests for a greater percentage of revenue for players and contributions to welfare initiatives, such as pension funds. In March, the representatives rejected a proposed joint meeting at the Indian Wells Masters with the three slams on those grounds. It is not clear if Wimbledon will entertain those requests in Paris.

Wimbledon will offer to create their own player council and reaffirm their commitment to growing the sport and increasing prize money, with this year’s Championships prize fund to be revealed at a press conference on 11 June. The players’ representatives will also meet with the French Tennis Federation and United States Tennis Association, but Tennis Australia will not be involved in any discussions in Paris.

In a sign of the sport’s fractured governance the Australian Open has aligned with the Professional Tennis Players’ Association, which is suing the other three grand slam governing bodies in New York’s district court over alleged restrictive practices in a separate dispute.

It is unclear if Henman’s intervention has helped bring the players to the negotiating table, but given his status in the sport the 51-year-old may have helped to smooth relations. Henman is understood to have met representatives of the WTA’s Player Council in Rome, and is a regular presence on both tours and at slams due to his media commitments.

Wimbledon’s tournament director, Jamie Baker, and player relations director, Laura Robson, were also in Rome and both have good relations with the current crop of players.

The dispute has been rumbling since last year’s French Open when a delegation of players, including Carlos Alcaraz, Jannik Sinner, Aryna Sabalenka and Coco Gauff, urged executives from all the slams to increase their prize funds to 22% of revenue by 2030.

Following a modest 7% increase in prize money by Wimbledon that had already been budgeted for in the aftermath of Paris, the US Open and Australia Open increased their prize funds by 20% and 16% respectively, but the French Open’s announcement of a 9.5% increase this year led to a further escalation in tensions.

The players responded by claiming last month that the real-terms increase as a percentage of the tournament’s revenue was 5.4%, as the French Open’s income last year increased by 14% to €395m.

After several players including Sinner, Sabalenka and Gauff openly discussed a future boycott of the slams in Rome all the leading players have agreed to reduce their media activities at the French Open in a coordinated protest, as revealed by the Guardian on Wednesday.

The players will only participate in pre-tournament press conferences with written media and conduct one interview with a host broadcaster.

In addition, they will refuse to conduct their usual one-on-one interviews with global TV rights holders, who pay significant amounts of money for such privileges.

“Of course, we are a little sad about this choice, quite simply, because I think we all find that it penalises all the actors of the tournament, the players, the fans, the press, of course,” Amélie Mauresmo, the French Open tournament director, said on Thursday. “Discussions have begun, and they’ll be even more so tomorrow evening.

“But we’re truly engaged in this communication, in this desire to exchange ideas, to move forward. To also acknowledge that everyone has a step to take towards the other. And I am confident in the exchanges that will take place … So I think that in the interest of tennis in general. I am rather confident.”

Worauf zu achten ist

KI-Ausblick — Möglichkeiten, keine Fakten

  • Further negotiations between Wimbledon and player representatives will occur.

    Sehr wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Tagen

  • Players will continue their coordinated media protest at the French Open.

    Sehr wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Tagen

  • The prize money dispute will lead to further discussions or actions regarding player welfare and revenue sharing.

    Wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Wochen

Offene Fragen

  • Will Wimbledon's offer to create a player council be accepted by player representatives?
  • Will Wimbledon address the players' requests for a greater percentage of revenue and welfare contributions?
  • What will be the specific prize fund details revealed by Wimbledon on June 11?
  • How will the players' coordinated media protest impact the French Open and future events?

Verwandte Themen

This article was originally published by Guardian Sport.

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