• FEWER FANS: The US Tennis Association was definitive about having closed doors, but the French Open and the two tours are leaving open the possibility of having at least some on-site spectators at some point this year.
  • LESS MONEY: The WTA is cutting prize money at its biggest events by 30 percent if there are fans - and by 40 percent if there aren’t. The ATP’s Masters 1000s will have similar reductions. While the WTA will have smaller drops for lesser tournaments - down to 18 percent for its bottom level - the ATP’s percentage cuts will be higher the smaller the tournament. The loss of ticket sales, hospitality suites and more means the U.S. Open’s net income “will be down roughly 80 percent” to USD 40 million, USTA CEO Mike Dowse told AP. He said player compensation is down 9 percent.
  • RANKING POINTS: The WTA and ATP haven’t decided how they will handle their rankings, which were frozen when the tours were suspended in March. That determination will be based on when play actually resumes.
  • TRAVEL AND TESTING: No one knows for sure how such an international sport will fare as athletes hop from country to country. The USTA originally proposed chartering flights from around the globe and making sure players were COVID-free before they travelled, but instead decided to let people fly on their own and get tested upon arrival at what tournament director Stacey Allaster is calling “US Open World.” Testing and safety protocols have not been announced by the WTA or ATP.