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The potential addition of an Australian Open lead-up event in Saudi Arabia threatens to disrupt the traditional summer of tennis and stir an ethical debate within the sport.
High-level conversations are underway between ATP Tour officials and Saudi Arabia about a new Masters event that would cut into Australian tennis fansâ brief window to watch the sportâs best up close, according to a UK report in The Times.
The oil-rich Saudisâ Public Investment Fund already won the ATPâs Next Gen Finals for the next five years, starting next month, on top of splashing cash to break into other major sports, most notably soccer and golf.
Novak Djokovic received a warm welcome from Adelaide tennis fans in a lead-in tournament to the Australian Open.Credit: Getty Images
Tennis legends Martina Navratilova and John McEnroe both aired their disapproval this year about the sportâs entry into Saudi Arabia, with Navratilova citing the countryâs âhuman rights issuesâ.
But speaking purely about the impact on Australiaâs summer of tennis, Kooyong Classic tournament director Peter Johnston told this masthead the Saudi interest was ânothing to be afraid ofâ.
âOnly four countries have a grand slam, and itâs kind of unusual for a country of our size to have so many events,â Johnston said. âIf you try too hard to have events in every city; youâre going against the grain of the tour, where there is so much demand globally â and itâs hard to make all those events financially stable.
âYouâre better off embracing the broader world, passing the [financial] risk offshore, capitalise on what youâve got, and use that as a lead-in promotion, which used to be in Doha ⊠you will still get 100 of 100 players [in both genders] for the Australian Open.â
The Saudi development follows Tennis Australia chief executive and Australian Open boss Craig Tiley welcoming in June the Middle East nationâs interest in the sport as an opportunity for more players to make a living.
âThere are lots of changes always going on, so youâve got to watch whatâs going on, and weâve been staying close to it, but ultimately, thatâs a decision for the menâs and the womenâs tour,â Tiley said at the time.
âOne thing thatâs really important to note is that the four grand slams run independently … itâs most important that we take care of what we need to take care of, and thatâs our five weeks of tennis in January.â
This masthead contacted Tennis Australia for Tileyâs reaction to Saudi Arabiaâs latest interest in the sport.
Sydney, Perth, Brisbane, Adelaide, Hobart and Canberra will host ATP and/or WTA tournaments this summer ahead of the 2024 Australian Open at Melbourne Park, while Johnstonâs Kooyong Classic is also scheduled the week before the grand slam.
Alex de Minaur in action during the 2023 Kooyong Classic.Credit: Getty Images
However, the worldâs best menâs players, from Novak Djokovic to Carlos Alcaraz and Australiaâs Alex de Minaur and Nick Kyrgios, would instead prepare for the Melbourne slam in Saudi Arabia if this idea goes ahead.
The fledgling United Cup, which is set to be held for the second time in Sydney and Perth in December and January after replacing the ATP Cup, would almost certainly be scrapped if the Saudi Arabia event went ahead.
Any moral concerns did not stop Djokovic, Alcaraz or womenâs world No.1 Aryna Sabalenka and Tunisian star Ons Jabeur committing to a big-money exhibition in Saudi Arabiaâs capital city Riyadh on December 26 and 27.
Amnesty International described last yearâs Saudi tennis exhibition as âthe latest jamboree of Saudi sportswashingâ, in reference to the country signing up âsmiling, high-profileâ sports stars who âstudiously avoid talking about human rightsâ.
But Kyrgios has repeatedly backed Saudi Arabiaâs move into tennis, believing it would result in tennis stars being paid more commensurate to their worth than the status quo.
The former world No.13, who has played only once this year due to injuries, also skipped Davis Cup duty again late last year to accept what he described as a six-figure payday at an exhibition event in Saudi Arabia.
âFinally. They see the value. We are going to get paid what we deserve to get paid. Sign me up,â Kyrgios tweeted in June about the ATPâs negotiations with Saudi Arabia, followed by several money emojis.
The potential Saudi Masters could finish as few as seven or eight days before the 2025 Australian Open, with most of the top menâs players typically opting not to compete the week before grand slams.
A 16-hour-plus flight from Riyadh to Melbourne so close to the Australian Open would not help that situation, possibly leading to weakened fields for tournaments, such as the Adelaide International, before the slam.
Johnston could also envision a scenario where the Saudi Masters started in late December, after Christmas, and did not eat as significantly into the Australian summer.
He is a tournament director at various events across the world, including in China, and embraces calendar flexibility, even experimenting with a Wednesday start this year to accommodate the expanded Shanghai Masters.
The WTAâs season-ending Finals could also be Saudi-bound after a disastrous venture to Cancun, Mexico, in the past week, with horrendous weather conditions marring the event.
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