Roger Federer’s comments add fuel to ATP-WTA merger debate

Tennis

“Just wondering … am I the only one thinking that now is the time for men’s and women’s tennis to be united and come together as one?”

It would be a seemingly innocuous statement had it been written by any tennis player or fan with time to contemplate the state of the sport.

It’s a nice idea that has been floated more times than anyone can count. But because this time the player was Roger Federer, and the comment was made through the megaphone of Twitter during uncertain times brought on by the coronavirus pandemic, the comment gained immediate traction. The result was a groundswell of support for the Swiss icon’s suggestion.

“You are not the only one,” tweeted No. 2-ranked women’s player Simona Halep.

“I agree [about the need to merge], and have been saying so since the early 1970s,” tennis legend Billie Jean King tweeted. “One voice, women and men together, has long been my vision for tennis. The WTA on its own was always Plan B.”

Rafael Nadal was among the uniformly supportive male players and tennis commentators who chimed in: “Hey @rogerfederer as you know per our discussions I completely agree that it would be great to get out of this world crisis with the union of men’s and women’s tennis in one only organisation.”

Clearly, the social distancing that the pandemic has required, along with the shutdown of economic activity, has led people to step back and take a deep breath, viewing their respective professions with fresh eyes.

“When things are going very well, no one wants to give up anything in any business. You can’t get anyone to focus on change,” Chris Kermode, who was executive chairman and president of the ATP between 2014 and the end of 2019, told ESPN.com. “You tend to get people focusing on different ideas and potential changes when there’s a crisis. So necessity drives a lot of these decisions.”

The crisis is evident: Professional tennis came to a standstill on the eve of the Indian Wells combined event, and no ATP or WTA tournaments will be played until at least July 13, the week after Wimbledon — now canceled — would have ended. The economic impact of the lockdown has been profound, especially for players ranked outside the top 200.

Administrators in both the ATP and WTA were developing a new interest in bridging the divide between the tours in recent months, even before the economic crisis brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic.

At the Australian Open this past January, WTA president Micky Lawler met with Andrea Gaudenzi, Kermode’s successor, as well as Tennis Australia officials, to discuss various ways to create a closer working relationship between the tours. The top item on the agenda: creating a women’s companion event to the season-opening ATP Cup, with as many points of commonality as possible.

“We’re talking about a WTA Cup to launch in 2022,” Lawler wrote to ESPN.com in an email at the time. “It is in the works.”

Vasek Pospisil, an ATP Player Council representative who has been an outspoken critic of the prize-money structure in tennis and a perceived lack of player power, wrote in response to Federer: “Hey @rogerfederer & @RafaelNadal. Great idea. The ATP has been working on this since they brought the vision forward to us in January. “

The main stumbling block to bringing the tours under one umbrella for a long time has been the reluctance of the ATP Tour, which has historically been more profitable, to underwrite its own resources into the WTA Tour.

Also rank-and-file ATP players traditionally have been lukewarm to the idea of merged tours at best. Count Nick Kyrgios as a skeptic not entirely bewitched by Federer’s suggestion. “Did anyone ask the majority of the ATP [players] what they think about merging with the WTA and how it is good for us?”

Another great obstacle is the governance structure in tennis is a great obstacle to any realignment plans. The sport is more or less run by committee, with four different governing bodies and seven stakeholders with skin in the game. The governing bodies are the ATP, WTA, ITF (International Tennis Federation) and the Grand Slam Board (a panel that represents the interests of the four Grand Slam events).

“If it’s ever advantageous for both sides to merge, it will happen,” said Kermode, who more than doubled ATP prize money and presided over soaring attendance figures over his five-year tenure. “But until that point, it won’t. If one tour is doing better than the other, why do it? Both must have an incentive to merge.”

In a follow-up tweet, Federer said he was not advocating for “merging competition on the court,” but for merging the ATP and WTA. He wrote, “It’s too confusing for the fans when there are different ranking systems, different logos, different websites, different tournament categories.”

Some of the disparities between the tours and how they operate could be overcome with relative ease. A shared logo, website, ranking system and data bank would be welcomed by most players, as would a common, subscription-based broadcast partner for events of lesser interest to major networks.

A closer partnership might also open the door to more combined events, not all of them at the highest level like Indian Wells. But that could get tricky. It would mean cutting “jobs” in half for both tours, or creating events with larger draws and more days of play. Tournaments currently on the calendar would have to be culled, but they all have stakeholder rights.

Other issues, like sponsorship deals, broadcast contracts and prize-money allocations would present even more formidable challenges to how the game has been run for decades. “I think the aim would be to work more closely together,” Kermode said. “One organization certainly won’t happen in the short term.”

The current crisis may give the tours greater incentive to move forward, and a crisis such as this one always enhances the spirit of cooperation. But it’s also difficult to see what concrete steps can be taken in the near future, as the tours are immersed in ironing out the details of a multi-million dollar relief package aimed at providing financial support to lower-ranked players on both tours who, even at the best of times, can barely scratch by.

It’s impossible to say what the climate will be like when the tours resume, and the sense of shared hardship and the need for mutual support begins to fade. It’s unlikely that a merger will be high priority as the tours try to make up for lost ground. A merger that radically transforms the ingrained structure of the professional game would be an extremely difficult, complex, and costly undertaking even at the best of times.

The governance structure in tennis is a great obstacle to any realignment plans. The sport is more or less run by committee, with four different governing bodies and seven stakeholders with skin in the game. The governing bodies are the ATP, WTA, ITF and the Grand Slam Board (a panel that represents the interests of the four Grand Slam events).

The ATP and WTA mainly run their respective tours, sanctioning tournaments that provide their constituents with the framework for a career. That includes providing playing and earning opportunities, rankings, marketing and media outreach. Neither the ATP nor WTA is a labor union, nor can it be under present U.S. labor law. The players are not really employees of the tours (or the game in general). They are individual contractors who, if they tried to unionize, would violate anti-monopoly laws.

The ITF is the governing body of the global recreational game, as well as the owner and/or promoter of various professional competitions, including a circuit for aspiring ATP and WTA pros and the Davis and Fed Cups. National associations like the USTA are affiliates of the ITF and provide it with a great deal of funding. That enables the affiliates to enjoy, among other things, not-for-profit status.

The Grand Slam Board speaks for the four majors when they have a common interest (e.g., an official Grand Slam Code of Conduct) or need to act in unison. But each of the Grand Slams is also an independent stakeholder, free to do as it pleases. French Open promoters vividly demonstrated that in mid-March when, without consulting their fellow stakeholders, they postponed this year’s tournament until September. It is scheduled to start just days after the conclusion of the US Open — if that event even happens.

French Tennis Federation officials took a lot of heat for their action; yet as more and more tournaments fell by the wayside in the ensuing weeks, including Wimbledon, many changed their minds. They welcomed the chance that at least three Grand Slams could be played this year (the US and French Opens) despite the pandemic.

ESPN analyst Brad Gilbert said, “Everyone was upset about the French Open moving, but after a while I was thinking, ‘good for them.’ I hope in a few months we have an insanely crowded schedule to worry about. Maybe we could end up with the three greatest months in tennis — ever.”

Tennis has a Gordian knot of governors, but then it’s an international sport of individuals, rather than teams. Golf has a similar baroque structure, with independent entities including the PGA, LPGA, the R&A, and USGA working in concert to administer different aspects of the sport, including separate pro tours for men and women.

“It’s easy to write that tennis is dysfunctional because of all those governing bodies,” Kermode said. “But it’s not unusual in international sports to have that. In the end, when you’re thinking of change, you always have to ask, ‘What are the benefits?’ The answer will tell you if something is worth doing.”

The benefits of merging the tours and advancing the game into a new era lacking some of the gender-based imbalances of the past is a particularly appealing idea under the present circumstances, especially with revered names advocating for it. This hiatus has encouraged people to think of better ways to do things. But once they start doing things again, those lofty ideas may be moved to a back burner as the day-to-day realities of life on both tours again take over.

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