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Jannik Sinner and Top Tennis Stars Weigh US Open Mixed Doubles Boycott Over Revenue Row

Posted : 13 June 2026

ATP World Number One Jannik Sinner is leading a prominent group of elite tennis players considering a strategic boycott of the upcoming US Open mixed doubles tournament. The collective of athletes is prepared to skip the event to exert leverage on Grand Slam organizers. The players want a substantial increase in the prize money allocation and significantly improved player welfare standards.

This planned action serves as the latest escalation in an ongoing financial dispute between the professional player field and major tournament boards. Players are heavily critical of the current revenue distribution model, estimating they receive roughly 15 percent of total Grand Slam profits. The player union is aggressively pushing to establish a mandatory 22 percent revenue threshold across all four majors.

Tensions have continued to rise despite a recent financial concession from the All England Club management. Wimbledon officials announced a record 20 percent increase to their total prize fund, raising the pot by 10.7 million pounds. While players recognized the substantial raise as a positive development, the underlying revenue-sharing structure remains a major point of contention.

The mixed doubles format was heavily revamped last year to intentionally attract high-profile singles stars to the draw. Prominent figures like Carlos Alcaraz, Emma Raducanu, and Novak Djokovic featured in the updated exhibition. The eventual championship duo of Sara Errani and Andrea Vavassori secured a massive one million dollar payout for winning the category.

All England Club chair Deborah Jevans pushed back heavily against using gross tournament income to dictate direct player compensation. She argued that calculating prize money from total revenue fails to factor in massive stadium infrastructure investments. Jevans expressed deep frustration that the non-profit model of the major tournaments is not being fully understood by the touring professionals.

The impending standoff follows previous coordinated protests held during the recently concluded French Open tournament. Several prominent stars restricted their mandatory pre-tournament media obligations to just 15 minutes to voice their deep financial dissatisfaction. Tour organizers now face immense pressure to address governance and player support systems before action begins in New York.

 

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