Doubles players angry at proposed ATP cuts for prize money and draw sizes
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Portugal’s Francisco Cabral serving the ball over his Austrian partner Lucas Miedler during their 6-3, 3-6, 10-8 win over British pair Julian Cash and Lloyd Glasspool, in the Brisbane International men’s doubles final on Jan 11, 2026.
PHOTO: REUTERS
LONDON – Doubles players have reacted angrily to suggestions that the ATP Tour plans to reduce the size of draws and prize money at tournaments, with British player Julian Cash accusing the organisation of trying to kill off part of the sport.
Under plans discussed last week, doubles draws at ATP 1000 events would be halved to 16 pairs, with only eight pairs competing at the smaller competitions on the men’s tour.
Prize money could also fall from 20 per cent to 10 per cent of the total pot with singles players likely to benefit.
“We’re all members of the ATP, we all pay membership and the reason it was set up was to protect players,” said 29-year-old Cash, who won the 2025 Wimbledon doubles title with Lloyd Glasspool.
“It’s not to try and kill parts of the sport.”
Glasspool, 32, told the BBC it was “annoying” that the doubles players were having to deal with the situation during Wimbledon, adding that the ATP should do more to promote doubles.
“I’m not sure what they're hoping to achieve out of it,” he said. “They say it is a product issue but when singles players – who are known and have been marketed – step on the doubles court, it is a packed crowd.
“So it’s not a product issue, is it? If you know the players, then you will watch them in singles or doubles.”
Apart from at the Grand Slams and the Olympic Games, doubles events receive far less attention than singles. Few top singles players these days commit to playing doubles, although there are exceptions such as American greats Serena and Venus Williams who have won 14 Grand Slam doubles titles together, including six at Wimbledon.
A statement issued on behalf of the doubles players last week accused the ATP of trying to end doubles as a “viable profession, dressed up as a cost-saving measure”.
Responding to the concerns of the players, the ATP issued a statement on July 3.
“We are assessing the doubles product, draw sizes and player compensation distribution with the aim of creating a more sustainable long-term model while maintaining doubles’ important role on the tour,” it said.
The men and women’s doubles winners at Wimbledon in 2026 will receive £760,000 (S$1.3 million) per pair, compared to the £3.6 million for the singles champions.
“We understand where we are in the sport but I don't think we should be devalued,” Briton Neal Skupski, who with Dutchman Wesley Koolhof became the world No. 1 men’s pair in 2022, told the BBC. “It’s not like we just turn up to tournaments, have a giggle and go on to the next tournament.”
Asked whether he had sympathy for doubles players, Australian Alex de Minaur said it was “all about the numbers” after he reached the singles fourth round at Wimbledon on July 4.
“I know a lot of these players, they train, they put in the hours, they do all the training that any other player does,” he told reporters.
“It’s obviously not nice to see, but it all comes down to probably numbers. I’m assuming that if these decisions have been made, it’s for a reason.”
In singles action on July 5, fourth seed Jessica Pegula’s greater experience proved telling as she beat rising fellow American Iva Jovic 4-6, 6-3, 6-1 to equal her best Wimbledon run in 2023 by reaching the singles quarter-finals for the second time in her career.
Pegula, 32, dropped her first set of the tournament in a scrappy opener featuring seven service breaks but she raised her level after that against the 18-year-old. She will next face either Switzerland’s 11th seed Belinda Bencic or seventh-seeded compatriot Coco Gauff. REUTERS

