Why most tennis players struggle to make a living

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
  • Tennis fails where other sports provide a living for their players.
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    During the US Open in New York, Vox video sat down with professional tennis players and the head of the Professional Tennis Players Association to explain the pay problem in the top-five global sport. Tennis is unique among other professional sports in how players are paid, what costs they are responsible for, and how they are categorized as independent contractors. The result is that - unless you are consistently among the very top-ranked players like Rafael Nadal, Andy Murray, Roger Federer, Serena Williams, and Naomi Osaka - it’s nearly impossible to make a living with income from tennis alone.
    Unlike other sports that provide support for people outside the very top performers, tennis leaves them high and dry.
    In 2021, Novak Djokovic and Vasek Pospisil co-founded a players organization in part to try to address these issues they believe pose an existential threat to the sport. It’s called the Professional Tennis Players Association, and Vox video worked with it to interview players and the organization’s president to shed light on the structural issues that cause such a pay disparity when compared with other global sports.
    The Professional Tennis Players Association site:
    www.ptpaplayer...
    New York Times magazine published a great magazine piece on this issue:
    www.nytimes.co...
    And a more recent ESPN piece on the issue:
    www.espn.com/t...
    For a profile on Taylor Townsend:
    www.nytimes.co...
    The ATP will be trialing a minimum wage for players starting next year:
    www.reuters.co....
    Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: www.vox.com/giv...
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Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @charlesmoxey8122
    @charlesmoxey8122 Год назад +3663

    Wow. I knew tennis didn't have the best payment structure but I didn't know it was this bad. Thank you Vox for bringing this to light

    • @bsktballman08
      @bsktballman08 Год назад +11

      They’re lying, as usual.

    • @charlesmoxey8122
      @charlesmoxey8122 Год назад +51

      @@bsktballman08 Proof?

    • @xfg007
      @xfg007 Год назад +127

      Novak Djokovic has been saying this for ages, that's why he founded the PTPA

    • @kacemat
      @kacemat Год назад +28

      ​@bsktballman08 they really aren't. Honestly, you barely make money from the sport, especially when your below the top 100. The most money you will probably make is from the sponsorships

    • @ChiliM4n
      @ChiliM4n Год назад +30

      And thanks Djokovic for making aware of this and since years trying to have a better pay for small players at his own expense.

  • @monsieur1936
    @monsieur1936 Год назад +2889

    Taylor Townsend is a really good player. She has 63% win rate in singles and 72% in doubles and she appeared in 2 grandslam doubles finals. Still if someone like her can't make enough out of the game, it's fair to assume that Tennis as a sport is RESERVED for the rich.

    • @masterminer5159
      @masterminer5159 Год назад +85

      shes made 4 mil and shes only 27

    • @Boollish
      @Boollish Год назад

      @@masterminer5159
      Sure, $4M is a lot of money to you or me.
      But if she made that money over 10 years, we can say that's $400k a year. Still a lot of prize money, sure.
      But a management company probably takes 5%.
      Then you pay a coach, costs $2500-$5000 a weekend, to travel to big tourneys. So that's another $50k gone. For a single coach. Many top players travel with a whole team and family.
      All travel has to be paid out of pocket. Many players have estimated that room and board, even flying coach and budget hotels, that this is another $50k a year.
      So she's down to $200k a year. But she hasn't paid taxes, or health care, or for training, or the general lifestyle to maintain a professional athletic level.
      All in, she's probably not taking home much more than an average kind-of smart 27-year-old.
      Meanwhile the TOs are taking in big bucks from luxury sponsors. A rank 150 player doesn't net enough money in a career to buy the Rolex that sponsors the serve speed clock.

    • @LebronCCP
      @LebronCCP Год назад +42

      Agree. Also the best women basketball players in the world barely make over 6 figures. Something needs to change. Nba needs to share revenue.

    • @echochamber1234
      @echochamber1234 Год назад +39

      maybe moreso than other sports, but it's not like other pro sports are easily accessible to the middle class. it takes a lot of money and spare time to train a child from a young age to go pro at any sport. to get to "700th best player" in the NBA, there's a lot of investment from a young age we don't see. even worse for a capital intensive sport like F1 or golf.

    • @rangersking6699
      @rangersking6699 Год назад

      @@masterminer5159 she made 4 mil before taxes and before paying her coaches and travel expenses and whatever else. It’s not that simple

  • @radityarian1533
    @radityarian1533 Год назад +1198

    On a side note though, this is why Djokovic and some other players decided to establish the PTPA, their main agenda is to address the inequality of the income for the rest of the players.
    And it’s cool to see a dozens of top players also joined this initiative, to collectively address the issue

    • @joelmonteiro1419
      @joelmonteiro1419 Год назад +64

      I have no idea why the PTPA wasn't mentioned in the video. It's by far the biggest step taken in the right direction.

    • @jeremyneiderhoff
      @jeremyneiderhoff Год назад +37

      ​@@joelmonteiro1419because the ATP and ITF paid for this video. All talk and no real solutions

    • @impresssed1213
      @impresssed1213 Год назад

      ATP and ITF are competitors lol, and on top of that no corporation is gonna pay to be bad mouthed like this. Instead, the reason it wasn't mentioned is because the PTPA didnt pay to be mentioned.@@jeremyneiderhoff

    • @Dakappon
      @Dakappon Год назад

      @@joelmonteiro1419
      Because Djokovic did not take the vaccine, and Vox doesn’t want to promote someone who is against their agenda

    • @OedipusSimplex
      @OedipusSimplex Год назад +23

      @@joelmonteiro1419
      Ahmad Nassar is the Executive Director of the PTPA.

  • @alimfuzzy
    @alimfuzzy Год назад +1086

    My uncle was a world champion rower. His crew beat the olympic champions of same year they won the world championship. He didnt make a cent, and lost money, rowing. He worked as a teacher just to get by. He quit rowing because he couldn't afford it any more.
    He's doing good now he's a principal making a good living.

    • @DrDjDD
      @DrDjDD Год назад +101

      Rowing and many other sports just don't have TV audience and sponsors. When was the last time you saw rowing on TV?

    • @alimfuzzy
      @alimfuzzy Год назад +128

      @DrDjDD that's my point. Not all athletes, even the world's best, can make a living.
      Side note, actually ivy league schools pay rowing coaches a lot, much more than world champions. For some reason, they take it very seriously.

    • @ameykasar
      @ameykasar Год назад +90

      @@alimfuzzy I think what DrDjDD is saying is - "Tennis has a huge audience and huge revenue. Where does it all go if not to the players? Check the pockets of the tournament directors."

    • @alimfuzzy
      @alimfuzzy Год назад +6

      @@ameykasar unfortunately, FIFA can answer that.

    • @RandyMahnke
      @RandyMahnke Год назад +12

      ​@@DrDjDDIn Germany there's often rowing on TV, we are a big rowing nation

  • @jaredvaughan1665
    @jaredvaughan1665 Год назад +2804

    I support Djokovic's efforts to create a player's union.

    • @daariashaheen6411
      @daariashaheen6411 Год назад +33

      Is this the reason why he is so hated ?

    • @grokker99
      @grokker99 Год назад +4

      If players are employees theyll have to follow employer rules.

    • @tylerdracing
      @tylerdracing Год назад +133

      @@daariashaheen6411 No, that would give him positive support. Negativity comes from being anti vax and anti medicine. And he forged documents to lie to Australian officials to try to sneak in the country.

    • @rodriguerra3639
      @rodriguerra3639 Год назад +30

      @@tylerdracing also no, he was already hated before that

    • @kpcvids
      @kpcvids Год назад +16

      ​@@daariashaheen6411 no, it's because he doesn't believe in COVID, among other things 💀

  • @lavaregion6968
    @lavaregion6968 Год назад +584

    This is sad since Tennis is one of the most popular sports in the world. While the top players are extremely rich, the bottom ones are struggling to live.

    • @RealShaktimaan
      @RealShaktimaan Год назад +38

      That's how it is in every sport. Including golf.

    • @parkercrossland410
      @parkercrossland410 Год назад +1

      To play, not to watch/support, which is where money comes from

    • @lavaregion6968
      @lavaregion6968 Год назад +36

      @@parkercrossland410 it’s also the 5th most watched in the world

    • @xuxon24
      @xuxon24 Год назад +12

      People tend to watch the big 4 the other don't get the same popularity

    • @parkercrossland410
      @parkercrossland410 Год назад +13

      @@lavaregion6968 Take away any country/region that isn't a 1st world market. The NFL/College Football destroy tennis in terms of revenue generated because they have a massive foothold in America.
      America and Western Europe. You need to have a strong hold in one or more of these markets to make bank. If you look at revenue generated, tennis would fall under 1 billion annually when you combine the varying parties (slams, atp, wta, the rest), meaning it falls 8th or 9th, 10th even if we include motorsports.
      People may watch it, but not the people that generate revenue.

  • @shiftt.
    @shiftt. Год назад +457

    I appreciate the fact that Novak through the PTPA (players association) is doing his best to push for better financial conditions for players. It's better for everyone.

  • @TheCivilizedSavage5326
    @TheCivilizedSavage5326 Год назад +537

    They are forgetting the fact that those other sports (NFL, NBA, NHL, MLB) have a Collective Bargaining Agreement...which is why they get nearly 50% off revenues and have top tier minimum salaries.

    • @scorpioninpink
      @scorpioninpink Год назад +175

      That's why Djokovic and other players created the PTPA but it is being demonized because he started it and top players like Nadal and Federer didn't support it.

    • @Alex-ii9sp
      @Alex-ii9sp Год назад +89

      Right, the players associations' are unions, organized labor. That is what the PTPA is trying to be. It is only in its infancy now but if enough public support is given and enough players come on board, you could see a future where the major tennis orgs are forced to come to the negotiating table with a group of unionized tennis players.

    • @johnmclachlan3602
      @johnmclachlan3602 Год назад +8

      Strike!

    • @backto-il9ne
      @backto-il9ne Год назад +24

      Theya are not "forgetting" that fact. They are aware of it and that is why they are championing to have a similar collective bargaining agreement in tennis.

    • @juiceman_3
      @juiceman_3 Год назад +9

      The big difference is sports that have competitions/tournaments as a main source of revenue rather than a league can’t operate the same when it comes to revenue

  • @scpatl4now
    @scpatl4now Год назад +1212

    I would love to know what the directors of these tennis organizations make.

    • @steffen_852
      @steffen_852 Год назад +107

      Chief executive (Wimbledon) Michael Downey received £654,000 last year

    • @romanmir01
      @romanmir01 Год назад +10

      if they are smart they should be making multiples of what players make

    • @midknight
      @midknight Год назад +18

      @@steffen_852 that’s a lot for a single tournament

    • @lavaregion6968
      @lavaregion6968 Год назад +36

      @@midknight well the winner of Wimbledon got $3 million dollars so what do you say to that. In tennis, you make the big bucks if you do well

    • @SF3284
      @SF3284 Год назад

      ​@@lavaregion6968LMFAO did you watch the video? 5:00

  • @clintonsmith9189
    @clintonsmith9189 Год назад +76

    This video really needed to talk about why the 18% of player profit share number isn't higher and what can be done.

    • @Maltamilkbone
      @Maltamilkbone Год назад +8

      The 18% figure appears worse than it actually is considering the total revenues in tennis are sub-three billion. A larger share of tennis’s revenues are going towards fixed costs as opposed to other sports leagues that can dedicate a higher percentage of total revenue to variable costs (player earnings/salaries).

  • @brandontaylor7129
    @brandontaylor7129 Год назад +161

    This is exactly why I had to stop. I turned pro briefly after college but I was only able to secure short term sponsorships..not enough security. That's why turning pro in tennis is really about luck. Sometimes the best players slip through the cracks because they don't have the financial resources.

    • @michaelgrimm8078
      @michaelgrimm8078 Год назад +11

      It is not just pro tennis, any sport same. NFL has more salary, but in the same time there is a lot more competition. You did good and right choice.

  • @tds7078
    @tds7078 Год назад +106

    Love that VOX made a video on this topic.
    The ATP/WTA has so many interesting obstacles in the way of athletes.
    As a former player, investigating corruption within the sport at the professional level interested me while in undergrad so I wrote a paper on the topic.

    • @bachvutuyetvoi3789
      @bachvutuyetvoi3789 Год назад +3

      can u share your paper, I'm so curious and would love to learn more. Thank you!

    • @Thrilla4romManila
      @Thrilla4romManila 2 месяца назад +2

      Please publish your paper

  • @TheMe9595
    @TheMe9595 Год назад +647

    I feel like this won’t change unless we see players forming a union and striking some tournaments.
    I’m also curious to know if golf has the same issue or if they have a different system.

    • @HKim0072
      @HKim0072 Год назад +6

      Numbers are always opaque.
      Sounds like PGA was lower before. PGA is touting 55% goes to the players now, but there is always murky counting rules.

    • @kkt391
      @kkt391 Год назад +25

      There is PTPA but voices in Tennis is too scattered.

    • @lobstertantrum9511
      @lobstertantrum9511 Год назад +2

      Unless the players themselves formed a tennis club and combined their earnings

    • @2531Prasad
      @2531Prasad Год назад +15

      If the game is Player A vs Player B then all you technically need is a referee and a playground . You can livestream your game and keep all the generated income and pay the referee . Create your own league literally in your backyard
      Really the question should be how much value is it generating , if I make a new sport and Cost to organize that sport is 25 mil a day.
      If I have 0 audience that's 25 mil down per day.
      On the contrary Bellaporch became worth 10 mil in last 2 years with 0$/day organisation cost.
      It's all about how many eyeballs you can capture, if we treat sport as fun activity and consider sports income as a reward that will make more sense .
      You'll form a union and strike against what ? People not buying your merchandise ?

    • @CrescentCitySweaters
      @CrescentCitySweaters Год назад +1

      Golf is currently in a state of flux with the possible PGA/LIV Golf merger that for antitrust reasons might not be a merger. They’re kinda still working that out on the fly

  • @rebekah.fisher4
    @rebekah.fisher4 Год назад +261

    I think the topic should be 'why most athletes in indiviudal sports stuggle to make a living’. It would yield the same conculsion as to tennis. If anything tennis might be the most 'well off' out of any of the other sports.

    • @rangersking6699
      @rangersking6699 Год назад +25

      Tennis definitely is not the most well off for the athletes lol

    • @janzy1980
      @janzy1980 Год назад +65

      Yeah the comparisons with teams sports that arguably generate a lot more revenue than tennis aren't the best ones. I would have liked to see a comparison with combat sports like boxing and UFC included. These guys have it the worst...

    • @alternativethoughts13
      @alternativethoughts13 Год назад +25

      I would like to know about that too. How difficult it is in individual sports. I’m pretty sure Badminton, Squash and other racquet sports have the same issue.

    • @parkercrossland410
      @parkercrossland410 Год назад +11

      Lack of merchandizing, lack of "immortality" (teams exist after players retire), too globalized to legitimately capture the casual Western audience. If America created their own national tennis circuit back in the 80's/90's and got a decent chunk of the top players to stay, the money would have come.

    • @redda2
      @redda2 Год назад +13

      Yup it's all individual sports with this issue, not just Tennis

  • @now2307
    @now2307 Год назад +37

    I can’t believe this is not addressed all these years. Even being a 100th player among thousands of good players is a big deal. It takes a lot of practice, dedication, struggle. Hope they compensate these players one way or the other.

    • @markaven5249
      @markaven5249 Месяц назад

      I know. I feel like the top 10 players should get together and create a tax for themselves, pool 10% of their earnings and make the itf and challenger tournaments pay way more money out

  • @harisselmanovic1030
    @harisselmanovic1030 Год назад +734

    When Djokovic founded the PTPA the idea was to provide collective bargaining power to tennis players. It’s funny how Nadal and Fed didn’t support him. Just tells you the level of privilege they possess and lack of care for those underprivileged. Their PR can say whatever they want but this was their chance to make a real historic difference in tennis and Fedal sided with the tournaments.
    Hopefully the PTPA continues to grow and the young players have more compassion and join the movement right away!

    • @bingo1646
      @bingo1646 Год назад +14

      True

    • @The_Jazziest_Coffee
      @The_Jazziest_Coffee Год назад +124

      you know i really am deeply opposed to djokovic for a ton of reasons, and definitely a lot of them are quite petty and relate to his incidents
      but i can't deny, the fact that he actually has made efforts to improve the personal power towards tennis players compared to the other two goats says a lot about himself, and that he truly cares

    • @syedshahrukhraza2923
      @syedshahrukhraza2923 Год назад +124

      @@The_Jazziest_Coffee That's coz Djokovic grew up poor in war-torn Serbia whereas Fedal grew up rich and became even richer through tennis. It's just a fact of life that if you are in a privileged environment, your mindset will eventually start to compartmentalize the suffering of those less fortunate than you.
      I'm a Federer fan btw.

    • @vonbraun8051
      @vonbraun8051 Год назад +67

      I have a friend who was a linesman on the ATP tour (back when they used humans to call lines). He got to know a lot of the players and observed a lot of what the players were like. He told me that without a doubt the nicest guy was Djokovic. Djokovic was kind to everyone--ball kids, volunteers, janitors, cops, everyone--and not just when press was around (like a lot of other players were). Yes, he said Federer was nice guy too, but Djokovic really impressed him most that way.

    • @Vynetic
      @Vynetic Год назад +1

      Is Federer and Nadal not supporting this association real? What is the association for and is it still working?

  • @gorankuk
    @gorankuk Год назад +79

    They should mention PTPA, that is a trying to address this same problem. Also how Djokovic who was trying to help met so much resistance from players with privilege like Nadal, Murray and Federer who did not want to support this movement. Press was as well not very kind and they all tried to show how PTPA is going to break tennis. They turn back on players who were struggling to survive on the tour instead of helping them.

    • @blessmeaachoo8348
      @blessmeaachoo8348 Год назад +11

      The video is kinda promoting ptpa since all the graphs and research shown in the vid were conducted by ptpa and the non-tennis player who was speaking is a part of ptpa + ig the players that are talking also openly support ptpa. Sometimes they don’t need to say things like this out,cuz if ptpa is openly mentioned in this vid it basically would show the tennis organisations in a bad way which they would not like. Ptpa must’ve collaborated with vox to make this vid therefore are mentioned in the video. Silent marketing

    • @Fernball21
      @Fernball21 Год назад +2

      The man Ahmad Nassar was subtitled as the president of the PTPA

    • @ets160
      @ets160 Год назад +1

      This is literally a PTPA supported video

  • @olggg9740
    @olggg9740 Год назад +27

    Great to see Hubi speaking out about the issue!

  • @matt9904
    @matt9904 Год назад +66

    The most basic tactic by management against workers is divide and conquer. That is why they always oppose unions. So in a sport without teams the job of breaking worker solidarity is already done.

  • @seph9980
    @seph9980 Год назад +12

    As a tennis fan, this always lived in the back of my head. It turns out, these players are living this difficult reality. This is perplexing as a fan.

    • @Cguy-bj8uc
      @Cguy-bj8uc Месяц назад

      Badminton is even worse. The top 20 earns enough for a living, the rest has to rely on part time jobs unless they are lucky and born in countries like China where their accomodation is taken care of.
      For example, the round of 16 of Wimbledon participants earns more money than the CHAMPION of the All England open of badminton. Which is suppose to be one of the most prestigious tournament in badminton

  • @userabn214
    @userabn214 Год назад +249

    Herbert Hurcaz is really nice person.

    • @brandon_den
      @brandon_den Год назад +6

      NGL he talks a little strange

    • @epointerwinboie
      @epointerwinboie Год назад +67

      @@brandon_denEnglish is not his first language

    • @TheebX92
      @TheebX92 Год назад +5

      I heard he burned an orphanage

    • @StewNWT
      @StewNWT Год назад +3

      @@brandon_denhe’s polish

    • @brandon_den
      @brandon_den Год назад +3

      @@epointerwinboie not the language but the way he slurs his words. But hey I like hin

  • @Colonel_MaelRadec
    @Colonel_MaelRadec Год назад +26

    I didn't know this was happening at all. I love tennis, I was a tennis player, and I always wanted to dedicate myself to it at a professional level but to see how the system works saddens me enormously. The amounts of money are very low compared to other sports.

  • @dusko2494
    @dusko2494 Год назад +74

    Novak Djokovic is the only big name to shine light on this topic also be is the founder of the PTPA players association. Nadal and fed have always been silent on the topic.

    • @move3spaces246
      @move3spaces246 Год назад +6

      Fedal are truely an embarrassment to Tennis! They 100% should be involved! But…they just don’t care!

    • @alexxanbr1038
      @alexxanbr1038 Год назад +13

      Not only silenced!!! They went openly against his decision and calling his action as disruptive of 'tennis unity'. They consent with all heavy criticism that was going all toward Djokovic. And protected the interest of the organizer of events:/. They simply don't care about lower ranked outside of their bubble.

  • @nuke___8876
    @nuke___8876 Год назад +88

    Tennis players aren't going to change the structure of who the leagues/tournaments are set up at the moment. What they could do is try to form some sort of union and then refuse to participate in any league/tournament that doesn't meet their minimum demands. Paid travel and lodging, and a player-negotiated pay-out system seem like good starting points.

    • @ohgin12345
      @ohgin12345 Год назад +2

      Or they can fix matches. That's the only way they can make a living

    • @scorpioninpink
      @scorpioninpink Год назад +28

      They already did. Djokovic started the PTPA exactly to address the inequality in Tennis but ATP and Tennis Media demonized him. Why do you think he was unjustly disqualified at the US Open in 2020 by accidentally hitting a line woman? Or how he was deported from Australia and Ban from the US Open in 2022? It was all because of PTPA.

    • @nymike06
      @nymike06 Год назад

      That's not going to happen.

    • @MonicaHolly143
      @MonicaHolly143 Год назад

      ​@@scorpioninpinkno,it was becuz he refuse to get vax simple as that

  • @jukukwakuattionu5080
    @jukukwakuattionu5080 Год назад +13

    Dustin’s story is true m’y one of the saddest, such an amazing player. Fast and accurate ground strokes. An amazing serve placement and speed on both the 1st and 2nd. So good and a serve and volleyer. It’s so sad 😭😭😭😭

    • @piscesgroovesupreme
      @piscesgroovesupreme 11 месяцев назад +2

      He would've been an absolute legend if he'd had the financial and medical support he needed throughout his career. It really is heartbreaking.

  • @FNFNFN99KKK
    @FNFNFN99KKK Год назад +113

    A sad reality and tennis is a class sport.

    • @knav5216
      @knav5216 Год назад +5

      No. It isn't sad. That's how it's supposed to be. Same with other sports, the players should be paid less. Sports = past time. It isn't a job. They're even called "players". If they want to earn top dollar, they need to stop playing with their lives and work a real job or have a business.

    • @corneilusdonaldson1858
      @corneilusdonaldson1858 Год назад +41

      ​@knav5216
      Wow, having such a narrow aspect of life is just as sad.
      How one makes money should be as be as vast as their imagination.
      With some players making well more than they deserve, there's no reason why ANY professional athletes should be struggling to make ends meet, period.

    • @walterwhite3417
      @walterwhite3417 Год назад +5

      @@knav5216so who should bag all the tv and ticket revenue? Executives?

    • @knav5216
      @knav5216 Год назад +1

      @@walterwhite3417 you got it. They're the ones that do the hard work to keep the sport relevant and efficient. Since players will be paid less, ticket prices, merch, should go down. It's a win-win. Even if players are paid less, there will still be people who will play. This time for the right reasons, just for fun. Not for money.

    • @knav5216
      @knav5216 Год назад

      @@corneilusdonaldson1858 there's nothing professional about sports. 😆
      Did they take the bar/board exam? Sports is just for past time. For people who are lazy. Similar to prostitutes, these players just want easy money. 😆

  • @slobodankarapandzic3018
    @slobodankarapandzic3018 Год назад +52

    Novak and Vasek Pospisil started PTPA to fight for lower rankings player
    But major opsticles for them was Roger and Rafa , because they ignored him and talk that is not moment to divide and make cracks in perfect tennis organization

    • @Silver0426
      @Silver0426 Год назад +21

      Nadal And Roger are very selfish players. 😢Is all just about them!😢Roger dream was not to help players like Djokovic, his dream was to become a billionaire 😢😢😢

    • @stefanvasilache5252
      @stefanvasilache5252 Год назад

      @@Silver0426he is billionaire from sponsors and business not from tournament prize money. 😊

    • @capor23
      @capor23 10 месяцев назад

      @@Silver0426 and what is wrong with having that dream ?

  • @EighthRobin
    @EighthRobin Год назад +10

    Thank you so much for showing just how hard it is to do well in professional tennis. There is a bg iceberg of what the public sees (slams and big tournaments), and the lower ranked challenger and itf tournaments where it is so hard to break through.

  • @W4TSKY
    @W4TSKY Год назад +111

    I saw so many ad posts from WTA players for the hotels they were staying at during the US Open. Even from Rybakina. Think about that. The #4 tennis player in the world has to reach out to hotels for sponsorship deals just to be able to afford to stay long enough to compete in a grand slam. That’s sickening.

    • @akbarberlian
      @akbarberlian Год назад +1

      wow man..

    • @radityarian1533
      @radityarian1533 Год назад +18

      I don’t think that’s the case for the top players, could be the other way around considering the big name they already established. I mean the hotel would be benefited a lot by being endorsed by the top players right?

    • @deusexmachina9776
      @deusexmachina9776 Год назад +10

      last time I checked top players stay in hotels for free, they are just promoting. itf players pay for their own hotels

    • @4end
      @4end Год назад +3

      top players stay in hotels for free, the hotels do it for promotion

    • @dlcrme
      @dlcrme Год назад

      Coco Gauff just won the US Open and promoted her hotel on ig

  • @lynnturman8157
    @lynnturman8157 Год назад +16

    Tennis is pricing itself out of existence, not only for the players but also the fans. Just to sit in the stadium at a grand slam costs a fortune but even just watching it on TV is expensive. You have to have cable or satellite to get ESPN or the Tennis Chanel. The old cliche that tennis is a rich person's sport seems to be true.

    • @RockinFootball_23
      @RockinFootball_23 Год назад +5

      Is it though? For the finals and the main stadium I get it. But for a day pass at a grand slam during the first week is quite affordable. I went to the AO this year and my ticket cost me $60 AUD which lasts me all day and night. That’s some good value as I could watch top 20 players too, not just lower ranked players.
      I get it for the sports subscription services but it’s the same for like every other sport. Other than the main popular sports in the country (AFL for me), everything else is a mess on streaming services. So unless you follow the most popular sport in the country, it is always gonna cost a bit more to follow.

    • @Gigusx
      @Gigusx Месяц назад

      I don't know what you're on about regarding prices of watching tennis online/tv. Most subscriptions cost you 10-20$/month. Tennis Channel is 5 euro/month in some countries from what I'm seeing. I paid 10$ for HBO this month and have access to all of Olympics and other sports. Many online national channels (e.g. RTVE for Spain) streams tennis matches for free. All ATP Challenger matches are available for free. No, it's not expensive to watch tennis at home.

  • @bulelanibotman
    @bulelanibotman Год назад +25

    my god, i actually never thought this was even a case for players in tennis. this needs to be discussed more with the global governing body of tennis because in reality they should be earning more money since its just two people playing each other

  • @esborg
    @esborg Год назад +5

    As a life long tennis player, avid tennis lover, this is heartbreaking to watch. The ATP and WTA need to do better.

  • @larrybranchii
    @larrybranchii Год назад +111

    I love Taylor Townsend! She’s so well spoken, and is a top 10 player in the world in doubles.. and has beaten top 10 players like Simona Halep at the US Open.. couldn’t imagine a solid player like her not getting paid as well as we thought.

    • @Martin-ls9bz
      @Martin-ls9bz Год назад +10

      4 million in prize money alone, I think she's doing alright

    • @ohgin12345
      @ohgin12345 Год назад +1

      And doubles is never a sport that requires much skills anyway. Look at a doubles match and you can tell. Those matches are played by tennis retirees and former singles players who are not very skillful

    • @xuxon24
      @xuxon24 Год назад +1

      ​@@ohgin12345well I wouldn't call it like that exactly but it's not the most popular part of the sport. They play their final and matches really early so they don't make the buzz like the women and men individual tournaments do.

    • @StewNWT
      @StewNWT Год назад +17

      @@Martin-ls9bzshe’s had well over $1 million in expenses. She’s advocating for those who haven’t been as fortunate as her

    • @ohgin12345
      @ohgin12345 Год назад

      @@xuxon24 just saying what it is instead of being a numskull like you and being politically correct all the time.
      Just watch a doubles tennis us open match and was totally unamazed at how cr@p a supposedly world no 1 doubles player is in terms of skill level. An amateur player can surpass him at any time. Austin kracijek if I can recall his name. Only reason why he can actually do well is because this tournament is either filled with ppl in their 40s or players that just play this discipline for fun when their focus is on the singles anyway.
      But it's ok. Continue being a loser in life

  • @ricardiocka
    @ricardiocka Год назад +10

    i woder how tennis compares to other individual type sports like golf, ice skating, gymnastics, surfing, skateboarding, and others. It's hard to compare to team sports like nfl that at this point are more entertainment empires than sports organizations.

  • @Zveebo
    @Zveebo Год назад +105

    Some players do have quite a bit of backing from their local tennis federation. For example, many UK players in the bottom reaches of the top flight rely pretty extensively on what is basically a salary provided to them by the LTA to support them. That’s funded by profits from Wimbledon - the private members club that runs Wimbledon donates 50% of their profits to support British Tennis. Some other countries have similar arrangements.

    • @_o..o_1871
      @_o..o_1871 Год назад +12

      The Romanian tennis federation is not funded so well even tho it is one of our most successful national sport organizations. Most of the tennis federations cannot help the players too much. Those in Canada and the UK are the exception to the rule!

    • @gemmeldrakes2758
      @gemmeldrakes2758 Год назад +8

      Sports Associations in smaller, less wealthy countries don't have the resources to subsidize their players like this. Which is why sports like tennis are dominated by a few countries. If you can't buy a plane ticket to get to the tournament, being a talented athlete becomes a moot point.

    • @michaeladkins6
      @michaeladkins6 Год назад +1

      @@gemmeldrakes2758 Thats why a lot of Junior players have shopped around countries for a good opportunity.

    • @sabarinathan6554
      @sabarinathan6554 5 месяцев назад

      Except south asia. It seems every country supports their players.

    • @sabarinathan6554
      @sabarinathan6554 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@michaeladkins6 i don't get it

  • @sandster
    @sandster Год назад +8

    Thank you Vox for bringing attention to this.

  • @serbianluqualizerskiingbio5821
    @serbianluqualizerskiingbio5821 Год назад +63

    The GOAT Novak Djokovic founded the PTPA precisely because of this. ИДЕМО НОЛЕ!!!

  • @jkjkjk100
    @jkjkjk100 Год назад +24

    I was pretty good junior in my country. I turned pro when i was 15 playing futures. Luckily i decided to call it quit, used my skill to get free ride to college and now have a quite successful career. Nothing fancy like roger or nadal but definitely better than if I continued playing.

  • @Oh_that_mle
    @Oh_that_mle Год назад +10

    This video needs to be shown everywhere! It’s outrageous how much tournaments generate in revenue and how little is actually compensated to players. I think of players who are top tier and get injured and miss months of playing - they aren’t paid. It’s awful.

  • @brian_meaney
    @brian_meaney Год назад +57

    Dustin Brown is not an "American" tennis player. He is German-Jamaican and has only ever represented those countries professionally.

  • @msmilesftw
    @msmilesftw Год назад +3

    This is blowing my mind-thank you Vox for breaking this down-now I’m down the tennis player equity rabbit hole 🕳️

  • @gatorf2
    @gatorf2 Год назад +33

    Huge missed opportunity not talking about Novak Djokovic’s PTPA and the efforts to fix the problems outlined in this video.
    Hope to see a part 2 on this topic talking about the PTPA!

  • @Danielevans2
    @Danielevans2 Год назад +8

    Part of the issue is that viewership for the sport is only for the top 10 players and because a match only requires 2-4 people there's less payout. A union would help along broadcasting smaller events throughout the year to give more opportunities too get revenue from playing

    • @Kevinschart
      @Kevinschart Год назад +1

      The issue is that the competitive format is disjointed. All the major sports have leagues that combine resources. It sounds like that doesn't exist for tennis. They can unionize all they want but until they find a way to consolidate the fans and market league play over tournament play there isn't much money to divide. This is not something the players can resolve

  • @Grapevin
    @Grapevin Год назад +30

    Would be curious to see comparisons to other traditionally solo sports like golf. A lot of the issues highlighted seem like an inherent problem with that sort of sport (as most of your numbers were compared to team sports, where a team has to pay a competitive salary to keep players from leaving).

    • @ChandraNYC
      @ChandraNYC Год назад

      Gymnastics is a team sport. Even those competing in the All-Around or on the Individual Apparatuses are members of the team.

    • @ISpitHotFiyaa
      @ISpitHotFiyaa Год назад +7

      Exactly. Compare it to golf and boxing. I doubt the number 300 boxer in the world is making much money either. Nobody's getting pay-per-view to see him fight.

  • @TannerTownsend
    @TannerTownsend Год назад +12

    It’s not fair to compare it to the major team sports. Comparing it to professional golf, another singles sport is more accurate, and the two have very similar issues in regards to pay.

  • @ameya9372
    @ameya9372 Год назад +2

    And this is the reason I love and support Djokovic he brought the issue to light after founding PTPA. I hope he gets the credit for it.

  • @savagepro9060
    @savagepro9060 Год назад +6

    Vox: Why most tennis players struggle to make a living
    Pro Triathletes: 🤭😂😅😆🤣

    • @justinn8410
      @justinn8410 Год назад +1

      One actually makes revenue.

  • @donli5457
    @donli5457 Год назад +2

    Another thing that's worth mentioning is how the nationality of a player could significantly impact their chances of playing big tournaments and getting a better check. Let's say if you're from one of the 4 grand slam countries (Australia, France, UK, US) you have a much higher chance to receive a wild card to play the tournament or the qualifying rounds. Other than the Wimbledon, the other three grand slams will also exchange wild cards for their players to enter another grand slam.
    For example, if you're a promising but low ranking tennis player from the US, you have a chance of playing high prize tournaments like the US Open, Indian Wells, Miami, and Cincinnati. But someone from Romania or Indonesia with equivalent skills will never share these resources. They may receive wild cards for their low-tier home tournaments but the prizes will never compare to the grand slams. In fact, winning a WTA250 title pays you less than getting two bagels at the first round of grand slams.

  • @vlogtheory4016
    @vlogtheory4016 Год назад +27

    Im sure you guys dont want to hear about the UFC and Dana White, its prob 10x worse than this and those guys get beat up for a living.

    • @potatoscrub716
      @potatoscrub716 Год назад

      It’s also the same for boxing with boxers on a headliner undercard. Dana also prevents endorsements with the new rebook deal. Tennis players have it a lot better than combat sports athletes

  • @Atombender
    @Atombender Год назад +1

    "Tennis is a sport where you don't get paid if you don't play." ~Mark Philippoussis.

  • @ashishshrivastava2298
    @ashishshrivastava2298 8 месяцев назад +2

    I was sent here by Dr. Gaurav Garg sir 😊

  • @Tjd1982
    @Tjd1982 Год назад +3

    Look up the CFL, where some players have another job in the offseason. The salary cap is $5.45 million divided by 56 players. The highest paid player is Toronto's QB at $1.68 million over 3 years.

    • @stackhat8624
      @stackhat8624 11 месяцев назад

      I'd like to make $560,000 a year.

  • @kaym7704
    @kaym7704 4 месяца назад +1

    So unfortunate they get paid so little. Tennis is one of my favorite sports. I wish there was a way to support them.

  • @midknight
    @midknight Год назад +3

    Absolutely brilliant report. Thank you for this

  • @extreame7304
    @extreame7304 11 месяцев назад +2

    Now do the same with Track and Field
    I feel like sports that don't have consistant gambling oppurtunity is devalued

  • @felixlpilon
    @felixlpilon Год назад +3

    Easy to Say, but unionize and strike. No players, no tennis. That's how other athletes achieved their current conditions. If actors can Do it, tennis can Do it.

  • @jaquevius
    @jaquevius 4 месяца назад +1

    Elite world class professionals outside of the top 100-150 can usually net more income becoming teaching pros. We had a young pro in his 20’s at my club who was top 100 in doubles and top 300 in singles who couldn’t afford the travel and other expenses. It’s mind boggling. You’re the best 100 out of 7 Billion people and can’t afford to continue.

  • @TriuneWorshipper
    @TriuneWorshipper Год назад +4

    Wearing YSL talking about how people in her career field don’t get paid enough😂😂

  • @mridulsahu687
    @mridulsahu687 Год назад +1

    This is very important issue that you have brought out to everyone. Thanks for this detailed video! Tennis must support its players to grow

  • @stanthebamafan
    @stanthebamafan Год назад +1

    I know a former top-100 player. I don't think he enjoyed it. He said it was a really lonely life, and it was hard to even break even financially.

  • @darkmatter5424
    @darkmatter5424 Год назад +4

    Why does Hubi speak with so much melancholy? I almost want to go up and hug him. He is relatively successful to be honest and I'm pretty sure he has more than decent earning. 😅

    • @pikachude5490
      @pikachude5490 Год назад

      Well he is sponsored by mclaren lol and gets to drive the latest mclarens to every tournament

  • @cadenadeau8524
    @cadenadeau8524 3 месяца назад

    Going pro in tennis is a big struggle. I know so many guys that could have done it but could not afford it. It’s extremely frustrating as I am someone that is trying to do it.

  • @Loyola86
    @Loyola86 Год назад +3

    I get what they’re saying, they should make more money. But the problem is in accepting the structure that limits the possibility of making points within the same country or continent. It should be easier and cheaper to hold those low levels tournaments points.

  • @anonbattler
    @anonbattler 11 месяцев назад +1

    Why are tennis players comparing their conditions to athletes in team sports? Things must be much worse for professional boxers.

  • @logancollins6299
    @logancollins6299 Год назад +7

    Their definition of ‘struggling’ is far different than my definition

  • @robinhoodieradio3394
    @robinhoodieradio3394 Год назад +1

    I appreciate bringing this issue to light. Why was Golf not mentioned in a big way in this video? Golf and Tennis are not team sports. Would have liked to hear more on that aspect.

  • @nilsragnar1347
    @nilsragnar1347 Год назад +5

    5:20 ??? Isn't it really simple, it's a solo sport? If you're top 100 in basketball you're probably in a major team and playing in big games. If you're top 100 in tennis odds are no one knows who you are.

  • @bydariopoggi
    @bydariopoggi Год назад +1

    Such a great, informative and entertaining video. Nice work, Vox!

  • @edleung4046
    @edleung4046 Год назад +15

    I think anyone that goes to ITF/challenger level tournaments knows it. You can see players wearing old clothing, partially worn shoes in matches. One time I went to an ITF tournament by train, and found one of the players had taken the same train as me to the tournament!

    • @bmanna495
      @bmanna495 Год назад +1

      You can also see the vibes in the match are so much more tense than ATP because they really depend on that little prize money or point they get our of it

    • @gioberto855
      @gioberto855 Год назад +2

      Yeah one year at Queens I finished watching this player and on the way back to the train station he and I say hello as he taps his card into Barons Court, mind you he was top 50 at this point

  • @JonathanNeri-d9c
    @JonathanNeri-d9c Год назад

    what a tragic story of women & men who sacrificed for people but are financially challenged. thank you for this docu. kudos!

  • @EveloGrave
    @EveloGrave Год назад +7

    "Why most tennis players struggle to make a living"
    I work a job that isn't entertainment and I struggle to make a living.

    • @pvnh1704
      @pvnh1704 Год назад +4

      How did you make this about yourself lol

  • @fsshue8657
    @fsshue8657 Год назад +2

    Tennis is unique as it’s a meritocracy… more winning = more money. But I think the money side has lagged behind other sports, especially soccer in the valuable US TV market. Years ago, tennis was on ESPN and network TV regularly . Now it’s basically on ESPN+ with some major matches on ESPN. Some of it is the lack of US men’s success but the Williams sisters should have helped.

  • @aliop5762
    @aliop5762 Год назад +4

    Tennis isn't unique in its challenges, many other sports face similar or even tougher issues. For example, if you look at swimming, track, or cycling, the disparities become clear. In the Tour de France, the bottom 50% earn only $200 in prizes.

    • @aliop5762
      @aliop5762 Год назад +2

      The issue is that your are comparing only with American sports and American prize money standards.
      However the main point still stands

    • @jugurthasyphax6341
      @jugurthasyphax6341 Год назад

      Yes but tennis players have this reputation of living La Dolce Vita (traveling the world, staying in 4-star hotels, earning big prizes...), unlike the other sports you mentioned.

  • @himankghosh2333
    @himankghosh2333 Год назад +1

    Professional Chess players be like "This is everyday for us"

  • @daveblack6951
    @daveblack6951 Год назад +4

    This is terrible for the sport! How many great players has the world missed out on!

  • @dorissaclaire
    @dorissaclaire Год назад +1

    I kept waiting for them to compare the revenue of tennis to other sports. I understand tennis players make a lot less than other elite athletes but does tennis as a sport make any money? There’s no way it’s anywhere close to say what American football brings in.

  • @bluetrip_
    @bluetrip_ Год назад +1

    Really happy a significant organization covered this. It's ridiculous.

  • @smartskater11
    @smartskater11 Год назад +29

    The thing is... This is not a situation that is unique to tennis. This is a problem with many other sports as well.

    • @darexinfinity
      @darexinfinity Год назад +5

      I think it's harder to see when comparing Tennis is US professional sport leagues. No other country (soccer excluded) pays that well for sports.

    • @stolenshortsword
      @stolenshortsword Год назад +1

      ok and?

    • @AN-bw7im
      @AN-bw7im Год назад

      Then name those sports

    • @greg_loper
      @greg_loper Год назад

      I hear very similar things in Snooker. Professional Disc Golf is far, far worse. The top earning PDGA player grossed $105,000 this year. Top prize for the world championship was $30,000 this year.

    • @AN-bw7im
      @AN-bw7im Год назад

      In those cases, the total amount of revenue brought in by the sport is much lower than in tennis. The issue with the pay gap for tennis players, from my understanding, is that total revenue brought in from the sport isn't fairly distributed to players compared to other big-name sports@@greg_loper

  • @brentharris
    @brentharris Год назад

    My younger brother attempted to go pro in tennis getting ranked in the ITF... After two years of playing tournaments throughout the US and Mexico he had spent thousands of dollars more than he made on hotels, flights, coaches and entry fees. He had one clothing, shoe and racket sponsorship . He officially retired at the age 21... He now makes more money in sales job than most of the players ranked 250 or more...
    Another thing people don't realize is that in the early stages of many of the pro tournaments, the player has to pay an entry fee just to get into the tournament.

  • @Porthos240
    @Porthos240 Год назад +3

    I just recently learned about this. Didn't know it went this deep! Thanks vox.

  • @SpiritSlayer1
    @SpiritSlayer1 Год назад +1

    307,863 views, 10k likes, 947 comments, 11.5M subscribers. Nice!!

  • @michaelgrimm8078
    @michaelgrimm8078 Год назад +3

    OMG, this music on background... so drama, I guess when I got my delayed paycheck I`ll donate 25$ to "poor tennis players (people who don`t produce anything useful for society and just wants hit a ball by rocket) association. C`mon guys, if you don`t have enough money, mb you need go to a real job? Any sport its same as playing in lottery, you work hard (and must be lucky to have a good characteristics from birth) to win and get contracts and famous so, to get money. With lottery same, you work hard to get money for ticket buying and win in lottery, the more you play, the more chances to win. But don`t cry if you lose.

  • @RavarsenBlogspot
    @RavarsenBlogspot 11 месяцев назад +1

    Tennis is an individual sport and nobody cares enough for it to be an industry.
    I don’t see anyone questioning why 100th swimmer doesn’t make as much as another nba players.

  • @Simon.Freund
    @Simon.Freund Год назад

    Really glad to see Vox bringing this to light!

  • @BrendonJP
    @BrendonJP Год назад +15

    This is pretty simple. There’s not a true demand for people to watch tennis. Outside of the Williams sisters or roger, people aren’t actively tuning into the sport. It’s only gotten popular over the years bc celebs will go to the matches as a moment to show off. If there was one organizational body, then these players wouldn’t struggle

    • @RockinFootball_23
      @RockinFootball_23 Год назад +1

      I think the problem is the viewership for non-grand slam tournaments is low. It doesn’t help that tournaments are held all over the world with time zones that are all over the place. I don’t think celebs are the only reason why people go. I am from Melbourne and the AO is a summer event that many people go, tennis fan or not. The tournament is also actively expanding to make a festival atmosphere to get more people through the gates even if they have no interest in the sport. There are all sorts of activities around the grounds such as playgrounds of the kids, live music etc.

    • @BrendonJP
      @BrendonJP Год назад

      @@RockinFootball_23 exactly. That’s a part of the problem. Because it’s an international sport, and there are thousands of tennis players, it makes total sense why tennis players struggle

  • @mwelb5251
    @mwelb5251 2 месяца назад +1

    When you consider how much they charge for tickets to the major tournaments, there is no way that players should be broke. How much are those at the top making that they can't even pay the actual players a decent wage

  • @stevyyjay85
    @stevyyjay85 Год назад +1

    Not to mention that some players take or demand money before they agree to play a smaller tournament. I remember that Nadal requested something like $100,000 - 500k before agreeing to play a ATP500 tournament. Some tournaments can afford that, others cannot.
    Also, the prize noney we have today has increased so much in comparison to 30-40 years ago. I remember seeing Steffi Graf winning a GS tournament and the prize money was under $100k in the mid 1980s. And expenses were also pretty high even back then, flying to these events, staying in hotel, paying for your coaches etc. Nowadays, a GS win generated $2 million.
    Graf's prize money earnings:
    1986 - 8 titles - #3 - $612k (0 GS)
    1987 - 11 titles - #1 - $1,1m (1 GS)
    1988 - 11 titles - #1 - $1,4m (4 GS)
    1989 - 14 titles - #1 - $1,6m (3 GS)
    1990 - 10 titles - #1 - $1,9m (1 GS)
    1991 - 7 titles - #2 - $1,5m (1 GS)
    1992 - 8 titles - #2 - $1,7m (1 GS)
    1993 - 10 titles - #1 - $2,8m (3 GS)
    1994 - 7 titles - #1 - $1,5m (1 GS)
    1995 - 9 titles - #1 - $2,5m (3 GS)
    1996 - 7 titles - #1 - $2,7m (3 GS)
    1997 - 1 title - #28 - $230k (0 GS)
    1998 - 3 tiles - #9 - $600k (0 GS)
    1999 - 1 title - #3 - $1,2m (1 GS)

  • @flundyyy
    @flundyyy Год назад +5

    This is directly comparable to minor leagues with MLB and alternative leagues like arena football. They are good but not good enough to warrant exceptional pay. Often they have to take on other jobs to pursue their passion. This is capitalism.

  • @LurkerPatrol5
    @LurkerPatrol5 Год назад +1

    As a huge fan of tennis growing up, I realize only now why my friends and coaches were all saying not to go into professional tennis.

  • @fadezeroo7578
    @fadezeroo7578 Год назад +5

    No one talks about the sponsors. Sponsors are a big part of Tenis.

  • @tompike7239
    @tompike7239 Год назад +1

    I never realised this as a fan. People need to know this and it needs to change.

  • @aben9355
    @aben9355 Год назад +5

    This tells me that the winners of big tournaments are not the "best" players of the world. They are more like the best players that, for some reason, have had the opportunity to play on those tournaments. These reasons, of course, definitely include skill, talent, and dedication, but let's also be honest that some of them is partly because they have been part of the "brand" of big sponsors.

  • @Demetri450
    @Demetri450 4 месяца назад +1

    It's interesting that tennis is one of the most expensive sports to get your child involved in throughout their life even if they have a career.

  • @edgardosace484
    @edgardosace484 Год назад +11

    most athletes (including tennis) who rely on individual effort and talent to earn a living have chosen a difficult path. being this kind of an athlete takes a lot of discipline and motivation to be successful. which most do not have, hence the failure to accomplish the goals he sets to achieve,. unlike athletes who are in a team and are paid guaranteed salaries, they thrive even in a supporting role..

    • @The_Jazziest_Coffee
      @The_Jazziest_Coffee Год назад +1

      discipline and motivation are key factors, but in reality it also comes down to financial backing too
      you won't always win, especially early on when playing in high level competitions, so you need a financial blanket to keep you from falling back

    • @rph8704
      @rph8704 Год назад

      These individual sports don’t have leagues so there’s little structure and hence very lopsided payouts. Boxing, golf, swimming, etc all have this same issue.

    • @eljanrimsa5843
      @eljanrimsa5843 11 месяцев назад

      @@rph8704 I remember back in Boris Becker's days there was a Tennis-Bundesliga in Germany and second-tier players usually derived some form of small but stable income from playing there and representing their club.

  • @durgaprasadsamantula699
    @durgaprasadsamantula699 Год назад +2

    Good thing that they are talking about this pubilcly!

  • @Lommy9999
    @Lommy9999 Год назад +5

    This is exactly what I was thinking while watching the US Open. How can the players afford to not earn a wage (from a regular job), have a big team, travel the world and make a living unless they are the top 10%. Not to mention the huge investment before they even start to earn anything. I think the top prizes should be lower and other players who pay a tournament should earn more.

    • @mitsuhh
      @mitsuhh Год назад +1

      Top prize money should be the same if not more. Players in general should just be earning a lot more

  • @itsleonkremer
    @itsleonkremer Год назад +1

    Valid point in this video. The thing that is weird to me is dat the players presenting the money issue are wearing Yves saint laurent and Comme des Garson (two luxury brands). This does not feel balanced.

  • @rgqwerty63
    @rgqwerty63 Год назад +13

    Its disingenuous to compared the 200th ranked player of an individual sport to the 200th ranked player of a team sport, even if both sports are equally popular. the 200th ranked footballer will still be on a 10th-20th team in the world (as there's 11 players per team + subs) and is regularly featured on TV in high profile matches, while the tennis player is unheard of

    • @michaeladkins6
      @michaeladkins6 Год назад

      The 200th ranked football player does pay for his airline ticket from Miami to Seattle for himself, his coach, trainer and whoever else.

  • @JanikAshe
    @JanikAshe Год назад +2

    Few weeks ago I read forbes highest paid athletes and Federer was around 6th place with 0.1 mil in prize money and 96 million in endorsement😂

  • @spaceinbetween6591
    @spaceinbetween6591 Год назад +2

    Not a good look to be complaining about pay while simultaneously wearing Yves Saint Laurent and Comme des Garçons shirts.
    To be fair, sports is one of those careers you pursue for the passion, not for the stability.