Saskatoon StarPhoenix

WOMEN NEED TO PLAY BEST-OF-FIVE

For females to be accepted on an equal basis, they should face same format as male players

- JOHN LEICESTER

PARIS After a bruising start, this ultimately morphed into a pointsscor­ing week for women’s tennis.

Quick recap: Novak Djokovic put both feet in his mouth by suggesting that male players should be paid more, and by condescend­ingly praising women athletes for overcoming “a lot of different things that we don’t have to go through. You know, the hormones and different stuff.”

Sigh. Hardly the sort of forwardloo­king, 21st-century leadership one wants to hear from the topranked man. Billie Jean King, Chris Evert and a few days of reflection subsequent­ly helped to put him right. Djokovic backpedall­ed with a qualified apology. Then, Raymond Moore resigned as the Indian Wells tournament director, falling on his sword for suggesting that women players should fall to their knees in thanks for male counterpar­ts who have “carried this sport.”

Sexism coming back to bite men who should know better. Count this week as a 6-4, 6-4 victory for female players in their unfinished battle for equality. And it will remain unfinished just so long as tennis continues to make women play a different game from the men.

Not having women play bestof-five-set matches, like men, at major tournament­s is core to tennis’ equality problem, because it hardwires gender inequality into the sport. At the Olympic Games, the equivalent would be 80-metre sprints for women, while men run 100. Or 40-metre pools. Or, in football, 60-minute matches.

Truncated Grand Slam tennis for women perpetuate­s offensive myths about weaker and superior sexes. It suggests women aren’t physically and mentally strong enough to play five sets, even though that is patently false. It fuels noxious arguments that women don’t deserve the equal prize money at majors they fought long and successful­ly for, because they play fewer sets than men to win it. In short, it is plain wrong. There will always be those who feel that men’s matches offer better value for money because they are more likely to run longer. That ignores the fact that a hard-fought 3-6, 6-4, 6-2 — to cite just the example of Serena Williams against Victoria Azarenka in the French Open third round last year — can be more memorable than a men’s 6-3, 6-1, 5-7, 6-2 — the score of Rafael Nadal’s fourth-round win at Roland Garros against Jack Sock.

The quantity-trumps-quality mindset is impossible for women to beat completely when they are not playing the same format as men, and not being allowed to sell the same product. Best-of-five tennis can be more dramatic, because the additional length can encourage more momentum swings, comebacks, collapses and epic marathons.

Cheaper tickets for best-of-three major finals than for best-of-five also send the message, even before women have played, that they’re not worth forking out for like the men. At the French Open in June, hospitalit­y packages for the men’s final will cost twice as much as for the women’s final. Organizers say that is because there is greater public demand to watch the men.

“We have much more spectators,” he said.

But popularity is cyclic. As the golden era of Roger vs. Rafa comes to an end, Djokovic cannot be sure that audiences won’t shift from the men’s game. It wasn’t that long ago that Steffi Graf vs. Martina Navratilov­a was a more intriguing rivalry than Djokovic against Andy Murray is now.

Forget the argument that best-offive matches for women couldn’t be shoehorned into cramped Grand Slam schedules. That assumes that men can’t make space. Bestof-three for both men and women in early rounds of the showcase tournament­s, followed by bestof-five for both in the later stages might work.

At least it would be equal.

 ?? MARK
J. TERRILL/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The suggestion that women’s tennis players such as Serena Williams can’t physically handle five-set matches doesn’t hold up anymore.
MARK J. TERRILL/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The suggestion that women’s tennis players such as Serena Williams can’t physically handle five-set matches doesn’t hold up anymore.
 ?? ROBYN BECK/AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Novak Djokovic suggested it’s only right men’s tennis players should be paid more than women.
ROBYN BECK/AFP/ GETTY IMAGES Novak Djokovic suggested it’s only right men’s tennis players should be paid more than women.

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