{"id":298667,"date":"2023-12-08T01:24:14","date_gmt":"2023-12-08T01:24:14","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/sportslifetale.com\/?p=298667"},"modified":"2023-12-08T01:24:14","modified_gmt":"2023-12-08T01:24:14","slug":"gauff-is-one-of-seven-tennis-stars-in-the-top-10-best-paid-sportswomen","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sportslifetale.com\/tennis\/gauff-is-one-of-seven-tennis-stars-in-the-top-10-best-paid-sportswomen\/","title":{"rendered":"Gauff is one of seven tennis stars in the top 10 best-paid sportswomen"},"content":{"rendered":"
Fifty years after Billie Jean King founded the WTA Tour, she can look at the list of highest-paid female athletes in 2023 with pride.<\/p>\n
For even after the crises of a non-vintage season in which they were beset with problems \u2014 some self-inflicted \u2014 seven of the 10 who were the best rewarded this year come from women\u2019s tennis.<\/p>\n
The tour King helped create still enriches its players in a way that has other pursuits looking on with envy, her legacy so far strong enough to withstand the blunders of those in charge.<\/p>\n
The figures emerge at a time when the visibility and appeal of women\u2019s sport is sharply increasing as a whole, but as yet the world\u2019s premier racket game remains at the top of the pile.<\/p>\n
How much longer this will last is open to conjecture, and women\u2019s tennis cannot afford too many more years like 2023.<\/p>\n
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US Open champion Coco Gauff leads a list of the 10 best-paid sportswomen across 2023<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Fifty years after Billie Jean King founded the WTA Tour, she can look at the list with pride<\/p>\n
The retreat from its principled stand on former player Peng Shuai and China following her allegations of sexual assault against a former vice-premier; controversies over the treatment of Ukrainian players amid Russia\u2019s invasion; a shambolic year-end championships in Mexico and generally lacklustre marketing have been among the issues facing it in the recent past.<\/p>\n
Emerging from it all is a colour-coded graph from American sports media company Sportico which shows that things are really not so bad, in spite of the WTA leadership which has been attracting such scrutiny. Martina Navratilova is among those who want chief executive Steve Simon replaced at the top.<\/p>\n
Such graphs from the world of professional sport always attract attention, and always they require context.<\/p>\n
For a start, the numbers will not be completely accurate. Prize money is a matter of record, but supplementary figures, including appearance fees, are often the subject of confidential contracts. Agents, wise to how widely seen these tables are, have been known to inflate what they are bringing in for their clients.<\/p>\n
Of the seven tennis players in the top 10 \u2014 in addition to skier Eileen Gu, gymnast Simone Biles and golfer Nelly Korda \u2014 Iga Swiatek had the most successful year on court, followed by Aryna Sabalenka, who was adjudged to have the highest ratio of official prize money to overall earnings.<\/p>\n
Contrastingly, it will not go unnoticed that two of the highest-paid barely played or did not play at all. Naomi Osaka, returning next month, last hit a ball in anger in September 2022 and welcomed her baby daughter into the world in July. Emma Raducanu, meanwhile, played just 10 matches and comes in at 187th on the prize money list for the women\u2019s tour in 2023.<\/p>\n
Both make the top 10 courtesy of the multi-year endorsement contracts they signed this year off the back of past achievements.<\/p>\n
The lasting effect of that 2021 US Open final is illustrated by Raducanu\u2019s opponent, world No 20 Leylah Fernandez, coming 13th on the overall list with $5million (\u00a33.97m) of personal deals. Whether the commercial activity has been detrimental to their performance is another matter.<\/p>\n
The disparity in results to earnings is not just a phenomenon in the women\u2019s game. According to a list published by Forbes, the only tennis player in the men\u2019s global top 10 is Roger Federer on $95m, and he retired just after Osaka began her long hiatus in September of last year.<\/p>\n
Further proof that earning power in modern sport is not an exact meritocracy is the fact that US Open champion Coco Gauff heads the women\u2019s list. This will be largely down to her nationality, the attention she has long since garnered from her days as a teen prodigy, and the sheer magnetism of her personality.<\/p>\n
Although tennis remains number one for individual women \u2014 for now at least \u2014 Billie Jean\u2019s battle for equal pay goes on. This year 69 men earned more than $1m (\u00a3790,000) on court compared to only 42 female players.<\/p>\n
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Emma Raducanu makes it in fourth with earnings of \u00a312.9m, despite a difficult year on court<\/p>\n
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Iga Swiatek – who ended the year at No 1 in the singles rankings – was behind Gauff in second<\/p>\n
That gap would be wider but for two particular factors, one more obvious than the other. The first is that the all-powerful Grand Slam events pay the same to men and women, dividing up \u00a3190m between them this year.<\/p>\n
The second is that women feel more able to play doubles than men. In many cases their finances are bolstered by being able to participate extensively in that.<\/p>\n
The overall picture is that women\u2019s tennis has an intense level of global competition, but those who rise to the top can still expect unparalleled rewards.<\/p>\n
That said, the WTA cannot afford to show any complacency, or the kind of dysfunction which was apparent this year, if they want to maintain that position.<\/p>\n