Breaking
CNShein Gets China's Go-Ahead for Hong Kong IPOTRRyanair uçağı motor arızası nedeniyle Selanik'e acil iniş yaptıCN民眾違闖宜蘭海岸警戒區 海巡開罰6人RUСотрудники Мурманского океанариума получили зарплату благодаря помощи неравнодушныхDEEasyjet-Übernahme: Apollo-Angebot übertrifft CastlelakeRUСК России установил подозреваемого в атаке БПЛА на Брянскую областьRUТуск призвал украинцев к "отрезвлению" на фоне героизации нацистовJP検察官が被告席に、史上初の「付審判」公判ITSky Cinema celebra Christopher Nolan con una collezione dei suoi filmRUНацбанк Украины вводит в оборот банкноту в две тысячи гривенCNShein Gets China's Go-Ahead for Hong Kong IPOTRRyanair uçağı motor arızası nedeniyle Selanik'e acil iniş yaptıCN民眾違闖宜蘭海岸警戒區 海巡開罰6人RUСотрудники Мурманского океанариума получили зарплату благодаря помощи неравнодушныхDEEasyjet-Übernahme: Apollo-Angebot übertrifft CastlelakeRUСК России установил подозреваемого в атаке БПЛА на Брянскую областьRUТуск призвал украинцев к "отрезвлению" на фоне героизации нацистовJP検察官が被告席に、史上初の「付審判」公判ITSky Cinema celebra Christopher Nolan con una collezione dei suoi filmRUНацбанк Украины вводит в оборот банкноту в две тысячи гривен
Newsgather
BackTop Tennis Players Extend Grand Slam Revenue Protest at Wimbledon
Top Tennis Players Extend Grand Slam Revenue Protest at Wimbledon
Developing
Guardian Sport6/24/2026Sports2 min read

Top Tennis Players Extend Grand Slam Revenue Protest at Wimbledon

Quick Look

Top men's and women's tennis players are extending their protest at Wimbledon, limiting media duties through the first week to demand a higher percentage of grand slam tournament revenues and better player welfare contributions, despite a recent 20% prize money increase from the All England Club.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Top tennis players have been in dispute with Grand Slam tournaments for a year, requesting a greater share of prize money and contributions to player welfare funds. The French Open prize money prompted a boycott of non-mandatory media duties.

Font size

The top men’s and women’s tennis players have decided to continue their protests for a greater percentage of grand slam tournament revenues at Wimbledon.

A month after the top players chose to limit their pre-tournament media duties at the French Open to 15 minutes, the players will extend the protest until the end of the first week of the tournament, also limiting their post-match media duties during the event.

The top players on the men’s and women’s tours have been in dispute with the grand slam tournaments since joining together to send a letter to the organisers of each, requesting a greater percentage of prize money revenues, contributions to player welfare funds and the formation of a grand slam player committee.

After a year of minimal movement, the prize money pot announced for the French Open prompted the top players to initiate a boycott of all but their mandatory media obligations during their pre-tournament media day in Paris. They refused to speak with any of the broadcast rights holders, who paid the tournament significant amounts of money.

The All England Club had been hoping to avoid such a confrontation and, after meeting player representatives during the French Open, the club announced a record prize money increase of 20% for this year’s championships, with the total rising to £64.2m. The player group acknowledged the significant rise, but the figure fell short of the £71m figure they had pushed for. According to the player group, the revenue share at Wimbledon stands at 14.4% while the player group was pushing for 16%.

At Wimbledon, the players’ representatives have pledged to extend the protest from the pre-tournament media day on Saturday for the first week of the championships, from Monday 29 June to 5 July.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Top players will limit media duties during the first week of Wimbledon.

    Very likely · Within days

Open Questions

  • How will the All England Club respond to the extended protest?
  • Will the players achieve their 16% revenue share goal?
  • What specific impact will the media boycott have on broadcast partners?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Guardian Sport.

Related Stories

More on this topictennis