Daily Dispatch

Navratilov­a blasts BBC over Wimbledon pay

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TENNIS great Martina Navratilov­a accused the BBC yesterday of a “shocking” pay gap which saw her fellow Wimbledon pundit John McEnroe paid at least 10 times more than her.

Navratilov­a said she was paid around £15 000 (R252 000) by the BBC for her role as a commentato­r at Wimbledon, where she was crowned women’s champion nine times during her tennis career.

It wasn’t until the British broadcaste­r published the salaries of its highest-paid stars last July, in brackets of £50 000, that she realised fellow presenter McEnroe’s pay packet was between £150 000 (R2.5-million) and £199 999 (R3.3-million).

“Unless John McEnroe’s doing a whole bunch of stuff outside of Wimbledon he’s getting at least 10 times as much money”, Navratilov­a told the BBC’s Panorama programme.

The Czech-born American tennis star said she was told she was getting paid a comparable amount to men doing the same job.

“It’s shocking,” she told Panorama, adding: “It’s still the good old boys network... The bottom line is that male voices are valued more than women’s voices.”

Responding to the allegation­s, the BBC said McEnroe’s contract is “entirely different” to Navratilov­a’s and the two are not comparable.

“Martina is one of a number of occasional contributo­rs who is contracted to carry out a fixed volume of work and paid per appearance,” the BBC said in a statement.

“The BBC believes her pay reflects what she is asked to do, her time commitment, her level of broadcast experience, profile and track record and expertise,” the broadcaste­r added, denying gender was a factor.

Navratilov­a worked for the BBC on 10 occasions during Wimbledon 2017, including three live match commentari­es, whereas McEnroe was on call over the entire tournament and had a far greater workload according to the broadcaste­r. The dispute is part of a broader gender pay row at the publicly-funded BBC after the salary disclosure­s last year.

Twelve of the top 14 were shown to be men, as were two-thirds of BBC staff earning more than £150 000. A review commission­ed by the BBC found a 6.8% gender pay gap, but “no evidence of gender bias in pay decision-making”.

Six male BBC presenters voluntaril­y agreed to take wage cuts in January after the broadcaste­r’s female China editor quit in protest over unequal pay.

Carrie Gracie was on £135 000 (R2.2-million) a year as an internatio­nal editor and since quitting her China role has been working for the BBC in London. —

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