Djokovic, Pospisil to lead new players association called PTPA

Novak Djokovic and Vasek Pospisil would be the co-presidents of a new player representative body they are trying to set up called PTPA.

Published : Aug 29, 2020 15:29 IST , NEW YORK

The PTPA, backed by Novak Djokovic, aims “to solicit support from players to form an association with a mandate to promote, protect and represent the interests of its players ... and protect the future of tennis.”
The PTPA, backed by Novak Djokovic, aims “to solicit support from players to form an association with a mandate to promote, protect and represent the interests of its players ... and protect the future of tennis.”
lightbox-info

The PTPA, backed by Novak Djokovic, aims “to solicit support from players to form an association with a mandate to promote, protect and represent the interests of its players ... and protect the future of tennis.”

World number one Novak Djokovic and former top-30 member Vasek Pospisil would be the co-presidents of a new group they are trying to set up to represent men’s professional tennis players.

A letter e-mailed to players pushes the formation of a Professional Tennis Players Association, abbreviated PTPA.

Sent around shortly before Monday’s start of the US Open, the letter says its objective is “to solicit support from players to form an association with a mandate to promote, protect and represent the interests of its players ... and protect the future of tennis.”

"Unlike many other professional sports, men’s professional tennis has never had a representative body that is represented for players by players,” the e-mail said.

RELATED|

The men’s tennis tour is organised by the ATP; the women’s tennis tour is run by the WTA. Djokovic is the president of the ATP Player Council and Pospisil has been a member for two years, but he tweeted Friday night that he was resigning.

"It has become clear that, as a player council member within the current structure of the ATP, it is very difficult, if not impossible, to have any significant impact on any major decisions made by our tour,” Pospisil wrote.

 

There was talk earlier this year, prompted largely by tweets from 20-time Grand Slam champion Roger Federer, about the possibility of merging the men’s and women’s tours.

RELATED|

This proposal would set up something just for men ranked in the top 500 in singles and top 200 in doubles.

"The goal of the PTPA is not to replace the ATP but to provide players with a self-governance structure that is independent from the ATP and is directly responsive to player-members’ needs and concerns,” the email said.

The letter said the PTPA would be governed by board of trustees with up to nine members, elected annually.

The trustees would appoint two co-presidents with two-year terms -- and that first leadership duo would be Djokovic, a 33-year-old from Serbia who owns 17 Grand Slam singles trophies, and Pospisil, a 30-year-old from Canada who won the 2014 Wimbledon doubles title and is currently No. 92 in singles.

RELATED|

Among the areas the PTPA would look into are ATP and tournament rules and regulations, revenue sharing, disciplinary actions, pensions, travel, on-site food and amenities, insurance and medical care.

There would be a dues structure with players paying an amount based on their ranking -- from a high in singles of $1,500 for those from 1-50 down to $75 for those in spots 401-500, and a high in doubles of $1,000 for those 1-30. The total fees listed in the letter would bring in $317,500 each year.

The e-mail asks players to sign a letter backing the PTPA, and says “if a significant number of players support this initiative we will move forward” with writing bylaws and proposing a board of trustees.

At least one player is on the record as saying he’ll sign on- 2016 Wimbledon runner-up Milos Raonic.

"Players have had plenty of time to think and reflect and take a look at certain parts which they may not be happy with and discuss,” Raonic said Friday after reaching the Western & Southern Open final.

"A lot of us were kept in the dark by our leadership for six months. We were disappointed with many things. I voiced my opinion on many things, such as ... executives in other sports taking pay cuts to support us. As tennis players, we weren’t making a dime for months and months. ... Lower guys weren’t making a dime,” Raonic said.

“But our executives were staying home and didn’t feel it necessary to take any pay cuts. I pushed for that on every single phone call we had,” he added.

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment