
Grand slam organisers ready to make concessions for players amid dispute
The Guardian has learned that during discussions with representatives of several top-10 world-ranked men and women players at Wimbledon last week, the All England Club offered to hold talks over creating a player council to give athletes a voice in decisions over scheduling, as well as indicating a willingness to contribute to their pension and healthcare provision for the first time.
Similar offers are understood to have been made by the other major championships, the Australian Open, French Open and US Open, with the discussions set to resume at the final grand slam of the year in New York next month. The details have yet to be agreed with the players planning to submit a formal proposal later this year.
Player representatives held two meetings with Wimbledon and French Open officials, and executives from the Australian Open and US Open, at SW19 with sources involved on all sides describing the discussions as positive. The talks had begun in May at Roland Garros, where leading players, including Jannik Sinner and Coco Gauff, met with the grand slam heads and made a series of demands, including a greater proportion of their revenue to be shared in prize money; contributions from the four majors to player healthcare, pensions and maternity pay; and a formal say in decisions regarding tournament scheduling.
The offer to begin talks over creating a player council for the grand slams is seen as a significant concession by the players, who have always insisted that the dispute is not primarily about prize money. All the grand slams have introduced significant changes to their playing conditions in recent years without consulting the players, including Sunday starts at the Australian and US Opens, playing on the first Sunday at Wimbledon and more evening sessions everywhere, which has led to 3am finishes in Melbourne and Paris in particular.
Many of the players feel such changes have had a detrimental effect on their preparation for tournaments and want a formal say on such decisions in the future, particularly as there is a feeling some of the grand slams want to introduce Saturday starts to give them three full weekends of action to sell to broadcasters. While the issue of prize money was not discussed in detail at Wimbledon there is an acceptance by the players that it has continued to increase significantly each year, with the All England Club paying out £53.5m this year, a rise of 7% on 12 months ago.
Wimbledon declined to comment on the details of private conversation, but confirmed discussions had taken place during the championships.
'We always welcome the opportunity to engage with the players and are regularly in touch with them year-round,' a spokesperson said. 'We were happy to continue those conversations at Wimbledon. Listening to the players' feedback and maintaining a constructive relationship with them is very important to us and these discussions will continue.'
The grand slams are also facing potential legal action from the Professional Tennis Players Association (PTPA), the international players' union set up by Novak Djokovic, who filed an anti-trust lawsuit against the ATP Tour, WTA Tour, and International Tennis Federation in March, accusing the sport's governing bodies of suppressing competition, manipulating prize money and imposing a restrictive ranking system on the players.
Sign up to The Recap
The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action
after newsletter promotion
The PTPA filed an amended complaint against the tours in New York last week, which included an addendum that they would hold off naming the grand slams as co-defendants. Ahmad Nassar, the PTPA chief executive, said that they have since held productive discussions with the grand slams and expressed confidence they can reach an agreement.
'We filed a 180-page amended complaint, but we also filed a one-page letter about our talks with the grand slams, saying that we want 90 days to continue those discussions,' Nassar said. 'Ninety days is the timeline in the letter we filed with the court that said that we're holding off on naming the grand slams as defendants in our court case. We've been having productive discussions with them about resolving the issues that we outlined in the 180-page complaint.
'The one page to me means far more than 180 pages. That's the window to really roll up our sleeves and address the issues over the schedule, player representation, and compensation.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
17 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Livvy Dunne sizzles in new beach snaps after reigniting her feud with the New York Times
Olivia Dunne and her MLB boyfriend Paul Skenes made the most of some brief downtime this week by soaking up the sun in Montauk. Dunne, 22, had some precious time with her boyfriend during a break in the MLB season for the All-Star game. The former LSU gymnast shared several pictures of herself with Skenes and their dog, Roux - who appeared to be getting more attention from Dunne than Skenes was. The MLB pitcher, who plays for the Pittsburgh Pirates, is widely considered to be one of the most talented stars in the game, even at the age of 23. But this week, it has been Dunne making the headlines as Skenes enjoys some needed downtime at the midway point of the 2025 baseball campaign. In an interview on the 'What's Your Story?' podcast Dunne repeated a long-standing grievance with the New York Times after posing for a photoshoot with them back in 2022. Recapping her journey to becoming a Sports Illustrated Swimsuit model, Dunne explained: 'It all started because of a hit piece [that] the New York Times wrote about me. 'They came to our gymnastics facility at LSU, took pictures of me. They said, "wear your team-issued attire, put on a leotard," and they took a picture of me standing in front of the beam like any gymnast would and then they blew it up on the screen and put the headline, "Sex Sells". 'Okay well, you just came into the facility and took pictures of me in our team-issued attire and blew it up on a screen. So I was like, well this is crazy. And there was obviously a lot of backlash to the New York Times because of that. 'I decided I was going to put that same picture that they posted and captioned "Sex Sells" on my Instagram story and write "@ The New York Times, is this too much?" Because, come on, you know what you're doing. You just put a picture of me in a leotard for clicks and then caption it "Sex Sells." 'And then people loved that. They were like this is so great because no, it's not too much. You're in your team-issued attire, which is a leotard for gymnasts." [...] There was a lot of positive feedback from that. 'So, Sports Illustrated reached out to my agent. I was so excited about that. That was always a dream of mine. There's some legends and some amazing athletes that have been in Sports Illustrated.' In May, Dunne, who called time on her athletics career last month, was named as one of four cover stars for SI Swimsuit's 2025 edition after appearing in two previous issues. In five years at LSU, Dunne became the most-followed and highest-paid female college athlete with over 13 million combined TikTok and Instagram followers and a NIL (name, image and likeness) valuation of $4.1million. With more time on her hands, Dunne has been at plenty of Pittsburgh Pirates games to cheer on Skenes. But while he has been a sensation in baseball, his team are struggling and have a 29-59 record so far, which leaves them last by 12 wins in the National League Central.


Daily Record
18 minutes ago
- Daily Record
Rory McIlroy shows his true colours at The Open with the most incredible verdict on Scottie Scheffler's brilliance
The career Grand Slam star has made up a six-shot deficit in the past to win but he knows Scottie's different Rory McIlroy admits Scottie Scheffler's run to The Open could end up inevitable. But, with a passionate crowd at his back as he dreams of an epic Claret Jug triumph on home soil, the World No.2 isn't giving it up. McIlroy wants to at least ask Scheffler a question by making a flying Sunday start and trying to put some strain onto the American flyer. The career Grand Slam star has made up a six-shot deficit in the past to win. However, making up half-a-dozen on an in-form Scheffler feels a different challenge altogether. Right now, the World No.1 is cruising and McIlroy knows that reeling him back would be up there with anything he's ever done. One thing is for sure, he won't lack support. The Northern Irish icon is being pulled around Portrush on a wave of emotion and he's going to try and get them rocking again to maybe, just maybe, rock Scheffler onto his heels and halt his charge. McIlroy said: 'He's playing like Scottie. I don't think it's a surprise. Everyone's seen the way he's played or plays over the last two or three years. He's just so solid. He doesn't make mistakes. 'He's turned himself into a really consistent putter as well, so there doesn't seem to be any weakness there. 'Whenever you're trying to chase down a guy like that, it's hard to do. He's incredibly impressive, Yeah, look, Scottie is, it's inevitable. 'It's going to be tough to catch him if he keeps playing the way he does. I've got more than half a chance. I've got a chance. I've come from a few shots behind before at big tournaments and was able to win. If I can get off to one of those hot starts again, maybe Scottie feels a little bit of that a couple of groups behind and you never know. See what happens. 'Scottie is the best player in the world right now. I think it's clear for everyone to see. He's just consistently so good each and every week he tees it up, so it's going to be a tall order to be able to catch him, but I'm going to look forward to the challenge.' McIlroy has left nothing on the Dunluce in his quest to get this job done. It's been a rollercoaster of epic highs, some bad moments and some things no-one has ever seen, such as the Saturday incident on the 11th when he hit a shot out of the rough and a second ball suddenly jumped out of the turf which had been embedded and leapt up to his waist. He said: 'That is the most weird, ridiculous thing I've ever seen. Then my ball came out really weird and spinny. It's never happened to me before. It could never happen on any other course, but a links course as well, when the rough is all matted down. It was very strange.' McIlroy dropped a shot there, yet the response was magnificent with an eagle-bomb which sent the place wild landed on the next hole, just as he had done with another raking putt on the very first green to get the atmosphere raucous and surge their belief. He said: 'The eagle on 12 was one of the largest roars I've ever heard on a golf course. That was a really cool moment. To get those shots back straight away was nice and I felt like I played the last few holes really solid. 'It was an incredible atmosphere out there. I feel like I've at least given myself half a chance. Obviously like the dream start to be able to be three-under through four and have five and seven to play. To not birdie those was a little disappointing. The atmosphere has been electric. It was insane all day, but the noise after that putt went in was incredible. 'I've come here really just trying to embrace it. If I hadn't won a major this year, if I hadn't have won the Masters, I might have felt differently. 'It's almost a celebration of what I've been able to accomplish. I want to celebrate with them too. I'm having an incredible time. I'm really enjoying myself and I'm excited. I don't know how you can't draw energy after that.' McIlroy's pre-match plan was simple as he said: 'Grab some dinner, try to sleep as much as I can. Don't have any rugby to distract me tomorrow morning. Watched New Zealand-France and the Lions game. I'll try to find something to watch. 'I started Oppenheimer last night. Try to get through another hour of it and maybe finish it in the morning. 'Apart from that, just keep my mind off of things. I always do better with distraction. So if I can just distract myself and get my mind on something else, that's always a good plan for me.'


The Independent
18 minutes ago
- The Independent
Germany's Kathrin Hendrich sent off for pulling French player's ponytail
Germany defender Kathrin Hendrich was sent off for pulling the ponytail of France captain Griedge Mbock in a bizarre moment in the Euro 2025 quarter-final. The incident also resulted in a penalty as it took place in the box, and it left Germany a goal and a player down after just 15 minutes as Grace Geyoro successfully converted from the spot. In what was a nightmare start for Germany, Swedish referee Tess Olofsson was sent to the pitchside monitor when the VAR spotted an incident in the penalty box as Germany defended a France free-kick. Replays showed that Germany defender Hendrich pulled the ponytail of France's Mbock as she attempted to get onto the end of the cross from the left side and referee Olofsson awarded a penalty and showed Hendrich a straight red card after the review. Hendrich appealed the referee's decision and had to be persuaded to leave the pitch by her team-mates. It also resulted in a further reshuffle in the Germany defence, with the eight-time champions already without captain Giulia Gwinn and back-up right back Carlotta Wamser. "What are you doing!?" 😐 A moment of madness as Germany's Kathrin Hendrich is sent off for a hair pull and gives away a penalty — ITV Football (@itvfootball) July 19, 2025 The record eight-time European champions Germany have never lost to France at a major tournament, in five attempts, and defeated Les Bleues in the Euro 2022 semi-finals three years ago. But France have won their last 11 games in a row and were impressive in the group stages with victories over England, the Netherlands and Wales. They also beat Germany in last year's Nations League semi-finals. France have a real opportunity to win a major tournament for the first time and defeating Germany, who looked shaky during the group stage and lost 4-1 to Sweden to finish runners-up, will be a major test of their credentials.