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Tuesday, January 23
Kafelnikov says tennis players don't earn enough



MELBOURNE, Australia -- Andre Agassi and Pete Sampras, the two greatest tennis players of the past decade, on Friday slammed Russian Yevgeny Kafelnikov for saying tennis players were not paid enough money.

"He should take his prize money when he's done here and go buy himself some perspective," said Agassi, the defending Australian Open champion.

"I'd be hard-pressed ever to spend time with a person who thinks that making hundreds of thousands of dollars is not enough money," he told reporters.

Kafelnikov, a multimillionaire who uses his own jet to travel to tournaments, raised eyebrows at the Australian Open on Thursday when he said tennis fared poorly in comparison with some other professional sports.

The former French and Australian Open champion and reigning Olympic gold medalist who has won $18 million in prize money said he was voicing an opinion held by many players.

Sampras and Agassi, winners of a staggering $62 million in prize money between them, disagreed.

"I think we're all overpaid," Sampras said.

"We play a sport and we get paid very well. I don't play for the prize money, I play for the titles," he said.

Jeff Tarango, No. 92 in the world, shares Kafelnikov's view. In an article in an Australian newspaper earlier this week, he said grassroots tennis would benefit if early losers got bigger payoffs.

He also said the big sports leagues in North America earmark a much higher percentage of gross revenues to players compared to the tennis world. Tennis officials say they spend a lot of money on facilities and developing young talent.

Tarango lost in the first round in Melbourne, $7,290. He has more than $3.25 million in prize money since turning pro in 1989.

The amount of money in international tennis came into stark focus on Wednesday when Sampras said he had forfeited about $7 million in end-of-year bonuses from the game's governing body, the ATP Tour, for not competing in all nine Masters Series tournaments a season.

Sampras has cut back on the number of tournaments he enters over the past five years to concentrate on the four Grand Slams.

"Yevgeny plays every week, so you know what he likes," Sampras said.

Players often earn many times more than their prize money in endorsements and sponsorship contracts, with the amount of money in the game allowing the best players to live privileged lives.

Women's world No. 3 Venus Williams last year signed a five-year deal with Reebok worth $40 million, the richest deal by any woman in sport.

Agassi suggested Kafelnikov's comments were disrespectful to the game's fans and said he had told the Russian not to speak on his behalf.

"The fans deserve a lot of respect. They pay for the tickets and they come out and they make it possible for us to play tennis for a living," said Agassi, who beat Kafelnikov in last year's Australian Open final.

Kafelnikov had said tennis players fared poorly in comparison with professional golfers.

"If you look at the golfers, we are taking an extreme example now of course, the golfers make $540,000 a week to the winner," he said. "And this is the lowest tournament that they have on the U.S. Tour."

"If you look at the tennis players, to win a tournament, win five matches (at the) absolutely lowest level tournament you make only $42,000. I think it is quite bizarre to see that kind of money in a tennis game," Kafelnikov said.

Kafelnikov, the 1999 Australian Open champion, hoped tennis fans would not judge him harshly for speaking his mind.

"It would be a shame to see the public lose sympathy in me just because I am making such a statement," said Kafelnikov, who guaranteed himself $18,172 in prize money by reaching the third round in Melbourne.

Defending women's champion Lindsay Davenport voiced some support for Kafelnikov's claim.

"I think tennis is one of the few sports where you have to go out and earn your money," said the world No. 2.

"You have got to look at how much money TV is putting in, how many spectators are coming in and paying for things and it is pretty much all because of the players," she said.

Davenport said the U.S. Open organizers make hundreds of millions of dollars, but award only $750,000 to the winners.

"In some cases, the prize money in the Grand Slams could go up," she said. "I don't think that's outrageous, although it sounds like it when a person reads it in the paper."

The men's and women's champions in Melbourne will this year each collect $465,080.

In total the men's ATP Tour carries prize money of $65.5 million, excluding the four Grand Slams.

 




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