World No. 2 Aryna Sabalenka believes women and men ought to be compensated equally in tennis.
The Belarusian star introduced up the pay disparity after clinching the Cincinnati Open this week, for which she was paid precisely half of the $1,049,460 prize cash claimed by the lads’s champion, Jannik Sinner.
“From the TV viewpoint, from the ticket promoting, from each viewpoint, it is unfair,” Sabalenka told The Guardian on Wednesday. “In fact, guys are all the time going to be bodily stronger than girls however it does not imply we’re not working as arduous as they do. Ladies need to be paid an equal sum of money that males do.”
Sabalenka makes a sound level for the reason that Cincinnati Open, like all ATP 1000, is a event the place women and men play best-of-three set matches, not like majors the place males battle it out in five-setters.
The organizers of the Cincinnati Open additionally confronted backlash for the pay disparity within the doubles occasions, which noticed the lads’s winners Marcelo Arevalo and Mate Pavic ($322,000) netting greater than twice their feminine counterparts, Asia Muhammed and Erin Routliffe ($154,000), for his or her respective victories.
The backlash was so extreme that the organizers issued a statement justifying the pay hole whereas expressing their dedication to attaining parity in prize cash by 2027.
Fortunately for Sabalenka and different feminine gamers, the pay disparity will not be a problem on the upcoming U.S. Open, the place each genders are compensated equally for successful {hardware}. In reality, the U.S. Open was the primary Grand Slam occasion to supply equal prize cash in 1973, inspiring the organizers of the Australian Open, Wimbledon and French Open to observe of their footsteps in subsequent years.
Past the majors, nonetheless, the pay disparity stays a prevalent challenge throughout ATP and WTA occasions. For instance, World No. 1 Iga Swiatek received $364,000 for successful the 2022 Italian Open, whereas Novak Djokovic netted $916,000 for a similar occasion. That Djokovic received almost thrice the prize cash turned a contentious challenge, forcing Italian Open organizers to ensure equal prize cash by 2025.