Scottish Daily Mail

10 times Martina’s Wimbledon pay? It’s because I’m worth it, insists McEnroe

- By Mike Dickson Tennis Correspond­ent

HE was at the centre of a gender pay row earlier this year when it was revealed he had earned ten times the amount handed to his fellow BBC Wimbledon pundit.

But John McEnroe has hit back at critics of his sizeable pay packet – insisting that he is worth every penny.

The American tennis champion – who is among the BBC’s highest-paid talent, earning between £150,000 and £199,999 a year –said he thought male and female broadcaste­rs should be rewarded on the basis of merit, not gender.

His comments come after Martina Navratilov­a ignited a Wimbledon pay row when she revealed in March she was paid a tenth of what her fellow ex-champion received for covering the tournament in 2017.

Now McEnroe, 59, who will be back on our television screens next week, has insisted that the value of on-air commentati­ng talent is difficult to quantify. He said: ‘If you work at a paper and there’s a woman and man – you’re going to get paid based on the job you do in the opinion of the paper. Right?

‘If the girl does the better job she should get more money. That’s what it boils down to.’ McEnroe is unaware of what his fellow commentato­rs and presenters are paid, including Miss Navratilov­a.

However, Czech-American Miss Navratilov­a, 61, told BBC’s Panorama: ‘John McEnroe makes at least £150,000.

‘I get about £15,000 for Wimbledon and unless John McEnroe’s doing a whole bunch of stuff outside of Wimbledon he’s getting at least ten times as much money.’

She added: ‘We were not told the truth, that’s for sure. It’s still the good old boys’ network. The bottom line is that male voices are valued more than women’s voices.’

At the time, the BBC insisted the pair performed ‘different roles’.

However, Miss Navratilov­a hinted earlier this month that she had received a substantia­l pay rise in the wake of the wider BBC pay debate.

She said she was ‘very happy’ to be working for the corporatio­n at Wimbledon this year and that ‘it’s good to see the BBC taking gender pay equality seriously’.

McEnroe said he had not spoken to his fellow BBC pundit since the row as they are ‘not often in the same place’. Asked who he rates among his colleagues, he singled out Sue Barker, who is the BBC’s highest-paid sports broadcaste­r after Gary Lineker and Alan Shearer, according to official figures.

‘I believe Sue does a very good job,’ he said. ‘She is juggling and has got people in her ear all the time, that’s already a lot tougher than what I do.’

McEnroe has transforme­d himself from the enfant terrible of Wimbledon as a player to a hugely popular fixture on the nation’s screens during the big fortnight.

His sharp eye for the game and credibilit­y as a former great, combined with a dry New Yorker wit, makes him a hit with many of Wimbledon’s viewers.

The gender pay gap has been in the headlines since salaries of top BBC talent was revealed last summer.

Radio 2’s Chris Evans topped the list on more than £2million, while the highest paid woman was Claudia Winkleman on between £450,000 and £499,999.

McEnroe will be commentati­ng for the BBC at Wimbledon, starting next week.

 ??  ?? Pay row: McEnroe and Navratilov­a
Pay row: McEnroe and Navratilov­a

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