Moxie
Multiple Major Winner
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- Apr 14, 2013
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I'm honestly not sure how you see them in different "businesses." You say you don't claim they play different sports. OK. They play the same sport. And, as I see it, they are all in the tennis business, unless I'm missing something. They are contracted by mostly the same clothing/equipment/shoe companies, represented by the same agents, therefore their deals are made very similarly. (Top-rated players, men and women, get the big clothing and equipment deals. And this doesn't always mean because they are #1. Look at the deals people like Kei Nishikori and Li Na had, because they were big in the Asian market. Compare Sharapova's deals at her prime to most other men, as another example.) They trade coaches across gender lines. They train at many of the same academies, and practice at the same ones. Tennis surely is a business, and the broadcasting of their events tends to be contracted to the same companies. (Though not completely. But, let's face it, my Tennis Channel shows men's and women's, more or less equally, depending on the package you have.)They are in different businesses. Men’s tennis is an independent and different business to women’s. They occasionally come together at events, which is financially beneficial to the women.
When I mentioned soccer, I didn’t imply different sports, I was referring to false ideas regarding “equality” which we see across different sports. Women’s tennis and men’s are both the same sport but different categories, which I said at the start of the post. By the way, I’m not opposed to equal pay, but they have to earn it, and so far, the women aren’t earning it..
Tennis is certainly a business, and the men and women are both in the Nike business, the IMG business, the Tennis Channel business, the Team 8 business, and on and on.
The thing about tennis is that the men's and women's games have been played concurrently at important events for a hundred years +. Tennis has had female stars basically as long as it has male ones. So it's a bit hard to be a fan of tennis and ignore the other side of the gender line, just because the commentators are going to talk about it, and when you watch, you're going to watch the other gender play, sometimes, unless you turn off the TV or walk away. What other sport is like that? Leaving off the Olympics, which is a bit too esoteric for the purposes of this discussion. But you can watch "soccer," basketball, even golf and not really have to coincide with the other gender's version. But not in tennis. I really can't think of another sport where the men's and women's games are so intertwined.
Former women's players call men's matches, former men's players call women's matches...tell me how they are not in the same business.
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