The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Iga Swiatek says female players are united as they seek improvemen­ts

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Iga Swiatek says she and other women’s tennis players are more united than in the past as they seek changes on the WTA Tour, including improvemen­ts to prioritize the athletes’ wellbeing.

“We are not happy with some things,” Swiatek, a four-time Grand Slam champion who was ranked No. 1 until September, said Wednesday after improving to 2-0 at the WTA Finals by beating U.S. Open champion Coco Gauff 6-0, 7-5 in round-robin action.

Some players recently outlined various concerns in a letter to WTA CEO Steve Simon and during two meetings with tour leadership. Among the topics were a guaranteed income and coverage for maternity leave and injury absences, along with an objection to a planned change in rules governing mandatory tournament appearance­s.

“I feel like everything is just based on wanting to have more and more, but not really taking care of our well-being and health,” said Swiatek, a 22-yearold from Poland. “There are some things that the WTA could change for us without any impact on the tournament­s and the things that they already agreed with the tournament­s.”

In a letter Simon wrote back to the players to address some of their concerns — and obtained by The Associated Press — he said working groups with representa­tives from the WTA Board, tournament council and players’ council “are in the process of reviewing scheduling and tournament standards” and recommenda­tions are expected to be made this month.

Among the topics, Simon wrote, is late-night matches — a growing source of frustratio­n for players.

He said other areas being looked at include inconsiste­ncy in tennis balls over the course of a season; anti-doping and integrity; marketing and social media efforts.

Simon wrote that “a great deal is being done and ... there is a great deal of alignment in the areas you have raised and what is being worked on,” and promised to provide an update the week of Nov. 13.

“I really feel like we — me and the other players, like, Ons (Jabeur), Coco ... and also some players that didn’t qualify for the finals — we’re really, really united, and we think the same way,” Swiatek said. “So most of us, even the young ones, the older ones, we all know that this is kind of not good that we’re going to have more mandatory tournament­s. And so we want to really, really have an impact.”

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