Regina Leader-Post

Most in tennis driven by love of the game

- PAT HICKEY phickey@postmedia.com twitter.com/zababes1

The qualifying for the U.S. Open tennis championsh­ips begins Tuesday and there will be six Canadians vying for a chance to join Milos Raonic and Eugenie Bouchard in the main draw.

The men’s and women’s singles winners will each collect US$3.7 million while first-round losers will receive US$50,000 just for showing up.

The players in the main draw represent the sport’s one per cent. The reality is the various stages of the profession­al tennis tour are largely populated by paupers.

To put their plight in perspectiv­e, the 700th-best hockey player in the world is skating in the NHL with a guaranteed salary of $650,000.

The 700th-best men’s tennis player is unable to pay his bills. In 2016, only 67 players on the ATP Tour earned more than US$650,000.

Each year, parents spend tens of thousands of dollars on tennis academies, coaching, equipment and travel to tournament­s. They dream of watching their offspring at Wimbledon or Roland Garros. The overwhelmi­ng majority end up disappoint­ed.

There are 15 Canadians who played at least 20 profession­al tournament­s, but only a handful of them cover their expenses. Raonic is at the top this year with US$1.38 million (he earned US$5.5 million last year), and there’s a sharp drop to Denis Shapovalov (US$352,159 after picking up US$220,000 at the Rogers Cup), Vasek Pospisil (US$262,980) and Peter Polansky (US$162,623). If you add up the winnings for the 13 Canadian men behind Raonic and Shapovalov, it totals less than US$550,000.

Philip Bester was a French Open junior finalist and was on Canada’s Davis Cup team at age 17. Bester announced his retirement last month after more than 10 years of mixed results. Bester saw a lot of the world, but it was an expensive journey. His official earnings totalled US$272,000, or less than US$25,000 a year. Bester was never ranked higher than No. 225.

 ??  ?? Philip Bester
Philip Bester

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