Tennis greats Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert have spoken out in opposition to the prospect of the WTA Tour staging its end-of-season finals in Saudi Arabia.
WTA chief Steve Simon mentioned in June the group was “evaluating” the potential of taking a match to Saudi Arabia, whereas describing the topic as “difficult and challenging.”
Recent stories have mentioned Saudi Arabia is in pole place to land the tour’s prestigious WTA Finals match, which sees the highest eight girls gamers on the earth battle it out in a season-ending championship.
However US legends Navratilova and Evert have each voiced objection to a potential transfer.
“I can tell you 100 percent if I were still playing, I would not be going (to Saudi Arabia) for the Championships,” Navratilova advised US tennis journalist Jon Wertheim.
Evert in the meantime mentioned she wouldn’t help the finals heading to Saudi Arabia, which has lavished a whole bunch of hundreds of thousands of {dollars} on sporting occasions lately as a part of a technique critics describe as “sportswashing.”
“I would prefer not to go to Saudi Arabia to play the WTA finals,” she mentioned throughout a ESPN media occasion forward of the US Open.
“Not that I’m going to go play, but for me, I would prefer the WTA not go to Saudi Arabia.
“Obviously they have the human rights issues and everything, just the way they treat women. I would be against it. But I don’t have a vote.”
Leading girls’s gamers nevertheless have been extra supportive.
Speaking at a press convention forward of the US Open on Friday, Tunisia’s Ons Jabeur reiterated her stance that she would help a match in Saudi Arabia.
“As an Arab player, I’m very excited to be there. I am someone pushing for a change, pushing to give more and more opportunities especially for women,” Jabeur mentioned.
‘A great step’
While a transfer to Saudi Arabia could be controversial given criticism of the Gulf state’s report on girls’s rights, Jabeur insisted that sport might assist energy change.
“I know in Saudi they’re changing things and they’re evolving,” she mentioned.
“I’ve been there last year to give a speech and interview. It was very nice meeting a lot of amazing women there. For me, I was trying to push to have something, tennis, there in Saudi.
“I think it’s a great step. I think it’s something that could help the Arab world to have more tennis players, to get more involved in sports.”
American world quantity three Jessica Pegula mentioned she wouldn’t oppose a transfer to Saudi Arabia if the match might have a demonstrable affect on girls’s rights.
“I think that if you look at a pros and cons list, we’d obviously have to see there be a lot of pros overweighing the cons to feel comfortable going there,” Pegula mentioned.
“Whether that’s seeing them as a group maybe have to donate money to women’s sports or women’s rights in Saudi Arabia, to see some sort of change or action going towards helping those causes in their country.
“I think that would be something really important that, if we did end up going there, we would want to see.”
Pegula nevertheless acknowledged that the choice could finally come right down to cash.
“It’s unfortunate that a lot of women’s sports, like we don’t have the luxury to say no to some things,” she mentioned.
“Again, I think if the money was right and the arrangement was something that we could get behind where we could go and create change, then I would be okay playing there.”
World primary Iga Swiatek declined to be drawn on the problem, nevertheless, merely voicing frustration that gamers had been nonetheless ready for a call from the WTA.
“I don’t have a lot of thoughts because we hear many stuff on tour,” Swiatek mentioned. “I’m still waiting for the final decision.
“For sure it’s pretty unfortunate and annoying we don’t have any decision yet.”
On Thursday, the ATP, which runs the boys’s tour, mentioned the season-ending Next Gen Finals might be hosted by the Saudi metropolis of Jeddah till 2027.
This yr’s match will happen from November 28 to December 2, with a report $2 million prize cash.
Jeddah’s profitable bid makes historical past as the primary official skilled tennis occasion to happen in Saudi Arabia.
Source: sportstar.thehindu.com