Khaleej Times

Coco wants tennis to be the leader in promoting equal pay across all sports

- Team KT sports@khaleejtim­es.com

US Open champion Coco Gauff believes tennis can ‘be the leader' in promoting equal pay across all sports – with the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championsh­ips among the WTA competitio­ns to have implemente­d the equality-centric policy.

In 2005, the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championsh­ips introduced an equal prize money policy, becoming the first non-grand Slam and third profession­al tennis event to follow suit after the US and Australian Opens blazed the gender pay parity trail.

Last summer, the WTA also approved a plan to achieve equal pay across the tennis calendar by 2033. As part of the proposal, all tournament­s at the 500 and 1000 level that feature both men and women will pay players equally by 2027.

Speaking in a press conference on Monday ahead of her fourth appearance in Dubai, Gauff discussed the gender pay gap.

“For me, I think the biggest thing is that in most sports in the world, people watch the men's game more than the women's. I think we continue to bring fans. The problem is also that we have to market women's sports better, market ourselves better," the American said.

“(Over) the past couple years, I feel like the marketing for women's sports has been invested more in, and therefore there's been more watch-ability for people. If we continue to invest in women's sports, then it will profit almost the same as the men, and garner equal pay.”

Gauff added: “I'm grateful for (tennis). On most tournament­s on the tour, the Grand Slams obviously, we have equal pay. Hopefully tennis can be the leader of that and fiddle down into other sports, as well.”

Meanwhile, the 19-year-old tennis sensation admitted she has altered her mindset to be more positive amid adversity after previously dwelling on defeats too much in the past.

 ?? — SUPPLIED PHOTO ?? Coco Gauff during Media Day at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championsh­ips.
— SUPPLIED PHOTO Coco Gauff during Media Day at the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championsh­ips.

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