PTPA declares war on tennis’ broken system: A fight for justice

The battle is on, and things should become very serious in our sport! The Professional Tennis Players Association (PTPA) has started a historic legal battle against the sport’s governing bodies – ATP, WTA, ITF and ITIA!

The PTPA released a statement, accusing the mentioned organizations of corruption, monopolistic control and the systemic exploitation of players. The lawsuits, filed in the U.S., EU and UK, aim to expose long-standing anti-competitive practices that suppress player earnings, jeopardize their health and restrict their career opportunities!

According to PTPA Executive Director Ahmad Nassar, professional tennis is “broken.” In his opinion, players trapped in a system that prioritizes profits over their well-being, and the PTPA wants to fight against that. 

Despite years of efforts to negotiate reforms, the governing bodies of our sport have ignored demands for fairness. Thus, they left legal action as the only path forward for those who want to fix the game and everything around players, the leading actors in this story.

One major issue is financial exploitation. While professional tennis generates billions in revenue, players receive only 17% of it – far less than athletes in other global sports. In addition, the prize money is artificially capped, with governing bodies rejecting tournament owners’ requests to increase payouts for those who are bringing the crowd to the stands! 

Indian Wells 2025

Indian Wells 2025© Stream screenshot

 

The lawsuits also challenge the current ranking points system, which forces players into a grueling 11-month season with little rest ahead of the new one! Players must cover their own travel expenses while competing in extreme conditions, often playing late into the night or in dangerously high temperatures.

Injuries are common, yet scheduling remains relentless year after year. To make things even worse, players face privacy violations, including invasive phone searches and random drug tests without proper legal protection, which stress them even more.

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Australian Open 2025© Stream screenshot

 

In PTPA opinion, the governing bodies also exploit players’ image rights, preventing them from securing independent sponsorship deals. Backed by over 250 top male and female players, the PTPA’s legal fight is not just about change and revolution.

It’s about saving professional tennis from an unjust and outdated system that has failed its most essential figures: the players.

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Indian Wells 2025© Stream screenshot

 

“This is not just about money but fairness, safety and basic human dignity! I’m one of the more fortunate players and I have still had to sleep in my car when traveling to matches early on in my career. No other major sport treats its athletes this way.

The governing bodies force us into unfair contracts, impose inhumane schedules, and punish us for speaking out. The legal actions taken today are about fixing tennis for today’s players and future generations. It’s time for accountability, real reform, and a system that protects and empowers players.

All stakeholders deserve a sport that operates with fairness and integrity,” Vasek Pospisil said.

​Tennis World USA


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