Daily Mail

MURRAY WOES MEAN KYLE IS SET TO CASH IN

- By KIERAN GILL

KYLE EDMUND’S run to the semifinals of the Australian Open can spark a multi-million-pound boom for the 23-year-old Brit. Industry insiders say there is a gap in the market with Andy Murray, 30, coming towards the end of his career and likeable Englishman Edmund can fill it. The young Yorkshirem­an was beaten 6-2, 7-6, 6-2 by Croatian sixth seed Marin Cilic inn Melbourne yesterday but boosted his career earnings of £1.5million by around £500,000. And that can just be the start for Edmund, who is set to rise to world No 27 on Mondayy and will now attract considerab­le attention at Wimbledon this year. ‘British tennis is on the look-out for a new male star to boost the appeal of the game beyond the Murray era,’ James Melville, director at the sponsorshi­p agency Ninety-Five, told Sportsmail. ‘Now that Edmund has reached the semi-finals of a Grand Slam, his commercial appeal is going to be huge. ‘He’s gone from someone who was only known in tennis circles to someone who will have mainstream appeal. That represents a huge opportunit­y for companies to sponsor him as he’s likely to have another decade at the top of the game. His on-court earnings have huge potential, but this also applies off court as he now has the potential to receive seven-figure sums from sponsors.’ Edmund has signed a multimilli­on-pound deal with Nike. It was thet biggest of its kind for a British player not called Murray since Tim Henman’s H reign. And A the more mainstream Edmund becomes, b the more brandsb will look to sign himhi up, including watch, car, clothing, food and drink companies. compa ‘It’s about managing the demands from sponsors versus how much time he is willing to give up,’ Melville added. ‘Murray struck the right balance — he’s got a portfolio of sponsors but he’s been very careful in who he has chosen. ‘Edmund has to get it right. He should look to Murray to provide a template on juggling the demands of tennis and commercial commitment­s. ‘He cannot lose sight of what the No 1 priority is and that is playing tennis. Because the better he does on court, the better he will do in terms of commercial opportunit­ies off the court.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom