Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Women’s tennis has a problem: The biggest players aren’t playing

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FORMER Wimbledon champion Garbine Muguruza has announced she will take an extended break from tennis this summer.

The former Wimbledon champion Garbine Muguruza has become the latest high-profile woman to walk away from tennis, further depleting a tour that is already starved of star power.

In an Instagram post, Muguruza said that she was “spending time with family and friends” before adding that “I am going to lengthen this period till summer, therefore I am going to miss clay and grass season”.

While Muguruza's post implies that she should be back for the autumn, there is no firm commitment. Like Ashleigh Barty — another Wimbledon champion who retired suddenly a year ago — she appears to have lost her enthusiasm for the tennis carousel.

At 29, Muguruza is two-and-a-half years older than Barty, and has more miles on the clock. She is closer in age to 31-year-old Simona Halep — another Wimbledon champion — who hasn't played since testing positive for a banned substance at last year's US Open.

It's understood that Halep is still several weeks away from being ready to bring her defence to a tribunal.

Another big name who has been absent since Sept is 25-year-old Naomi Osaka, a fourtime major champion on hard courts.

In Osaka's case, she is taking maternity leave in preparatio­n for the birth of her first child, and has insisted that she is keen to return to profession­al tennis in the future.

And yet, as with Muguruza, Osaka has not always given the impression of enjoying the touring life.

With Serena Williams having retired last year, and Venus Williams a very occasional visitor, the WTA Tour is now dominated by Eastern European women.

This season, the trio of Poland's Iga Swiatek, Belarus's Aryna Sabalenka and Kazakhstan's Elena Rybakina have been the most effective performers, although the Czech Republic's Petra Kvitova — yet another Wimbledon champion — beat Rybakina in Sunday's final of the Miami Open.

Given that tennis's commercial pull is hugely reliant on star names and reliable rivalries, you can see how the absence of so many potential draw cards is hurting the WTA's balance sheet.

In fact, the WTA board recently sold off a 20 percent stake in the tour's commercial operations to private equity firm CVC, in an attempt to balance the books.

With the exception of Romania's Halep, the other women mentioned above all hail from relatively large markets: Muguruza from Spain, Barty from Australia, Osaka from Japan, and the Williams sisters from the USA. It is an unfortunat­e reality that these nations offer more commercial opportunit­ies than the former Eastern bloc.

In Muguruza's case, she has suffered a prolonged form slump that dates back to her last tournament win — which came at the WTA Finals in Guadalajar­a 17 months ago.

She delivered a career-worst season in 2022, registerin­g only 12 wins alongside 17 defeats, and has lost all four matches that she contested this year.

As a result, Muguruza's ranking has slumped to No132 in the world — her lowest figure since she was a dynamic 18-year-old. — telegraphs­port

 ?? ?? Garbine Muguruza intends to skip the clay and grass seasons to spend time with family.
Garbine Muguruza intends to skip the clay and grass seasons to spend time with family.

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