Saudi wealth bolsters WTA’s ambitions for women’s tennis - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
双语阅读

Saudi wealth bolsters WTA’s ambitions for women’s tennis

The tour is also tapping private equity as it seeks to attract new audiences worldwide

CEO Marina Storti is focused on raising the international profile of the women’s tour

Sports teams, leagues and governing bodies across the world have grown accustomed to fielding calls from private equity firms and sovereign wealth funds looking to invest. But the women’s professional tennis tour has the rare distinction of tapping the deep pockets of both.

In May, the Women’s Tennis Association sealed a multiyear partnership with Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund. As a result, PIF became the naming partner for the WTA’s player rankings, while the WTA Finals — the tour’s biggest showcase — will move to Riyadh for the next three years. Prize money for the annual event will increase from $9mn to $15.25mn. 

And that deal came just over a year after the WTA joined forces with CVC Capital Partners. The European private equity firm paid $150mn for a 20 per cent stake in WTA Ventures, a new entity that controls the commercial income generated by the women’s tour.

Marina Storti, chief executive of WTA Ventures, told the Financial Times that the two deals with long-term investors have now primed women’s professional tennis to push ahead with ambitious growth plans.

“We have all the support we need,” says Storti. “We have all of the ingredients. We have the right people. We have some of the best known and most inspiring female athletes. It’s all about execution.”

Since taking the role last year, the former Sky executive has been focused on the task of raising the international profile of the women’s tour.

High on the agenda is increasing online engagement between the tour, its star players, and tennis fans. Since the retirement of Serena Williams — the most successful female tennis player of the open era — women’s tennis has seen a rotating cast of Grand Slam winners, making it harder for casual fans to keep up. For example, at Wimbledon last week, reigning champion Markéta Vondroušová was knocked out in the first round.

Even approaching two years since she bowed out, Williams boasts more than 17mn followers on Instagram, 10 times the figure for Iga Świątek — who has been world number one since April 2022.

Storti says the tour has been making good progress in reaching new audiences, pointing to a 24 per cent rise in social media followers and a trebling of views of its video posts. The WTA has also made changes to its global calendar and signed a new five-year TV deal with Sky. But there is more to be done.

We want the WTA to become a household name, and we want our players to be household names

Marina Storti

“We want the WTA to become a household name, and we want our players to be household names, and we want a brand that’s very relevant and resonates with as many demographics as possible”, Storti says.

Despite the growth over the past year, the WTA and the Association of Tennis Professionals — the men’s tour — still lag behind the four Grand Slam tennis tournaments in terms of their online fan base. The WTA has just 200,000 followers on TikTok, compared with 2.3mn each for Wimbledon and the Australian Open.

In building its online presence, the WTA hopes to call on the expertise of CVC, which has a long record of investing in sport. It previously owned Formula One, and it currently has investments spanning rugby, football, volleyball, and cricket.

“They have a lot of learning from their investments in sports that we can leverage,” Storti says of CVC, which has two board seats at WTA Ventures. “They have a huge amount of connections. That means we can go a lot faster than we would otherwise.”

CVC previously proposed setting up a single entity to merge the commercial interests of both the WTA and the ATP — an idea that has gained renewed traction as Saudi Arabia has swiftly become an influential force in international tennis. PIF also has a multiyear deal with the ATP, while the Saudi Tennis Federation signed up Rafael Nadal as an ambassador earlier this year.

Storti points out that the tours are already collaborating more often, both commercially and on the match calendar. “The alignment is coming from a desire of the two tours to work together a lot more,” she says. “They see the opportunity to create a much better experience for fans and for players.”

PIF has also been highly active in several sports in recent years, including bankrolling LIV Golf’s attempt to challenge the PGA Tour as well as the Saudi Pro League’s efforts to lure the world’s top footballers. But those investments have drawn accusations of “sportswashing” from human rights campaigners.

Saudi Arabia’s increasing involvement in tennis has now attracted similar criticism from campaigners and former players. Human Rights Watch accused the WTA and the ATP of helping Riyadh shift attention away from its “egregious human rights record” through its tie-ups with the tours, and urged the tours to press for change.

“Global tennis organisations should not contribute to serving up repression in Saudi Arabia,” said Minky Worden, director of global initiatives at Human Rights Watch, in a statement earlier this year.

Former tennis champions Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova also wrote an open letter urging the tour not to move the WTA finals to Riyadh, saying it would be “incompatible with the spirit and purpose of women’s tennis, and the WTA itself”.

Storti acknowledges that taking investment from Saudi Arabia has “provoked strong opinions”, but insists the WTA has been “really sensitive” in listening to those with reservations.

“We spent time engaging with everyone, explaining our rationale, but also hearing the questions and addressing their concerns,” she says. “This is a really, really good partnership for the sport. Entering a new country that has a very young population with huge potential for growth, in its own right, is super important.”

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

特朗普的胜利将改变美国,但欧洲可以有一个不同的未来

美国的民主规范看起来异常脆弱。历史学家马克•马佐尔认为,这是一个异常值,而不是前兆。

特朗普团队旨在通过新的“最大压力”计划使伊朗破产

当选总统希望迫使德黑兰放弃其核计划并停止资助地区代理人。

鱿鱼游戏又回来了,比第一季更黑暗

黄东赫,Netflix历史上收视率最高的节目的创作者,将他对资本主义的极端暴力批判提升到了一个新的水平。

投资者希望欧洲在解决经济问题方面更加紧迫

随着唐纳德•特朗普再次入主白宫,与美国的竞争似乎将加剧。

为什么特朗普的关税不一定会导致航运业遭受重创?

美国是全球贸易中的重要一环,但并非全部。

台积电对中国收紧芯片供应,宁德时代想让电动汽车走得更远

台积电正在暂停为几家中国客户生产人工智能和高性能计算芯片;宁德时代正在通过一种新的复合电池组来满足对插电混合动力车日益增长的需求。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×