A collection of Top 10 tennis players sent a second letter to the four Grand Slam tournaments to push for a greater share of revenues—aiming to rise from the current 16 percent to 22 percent by 2030—contributions to pension, health and maternity benefits that would go from zero to $12 million annually by that same year, and greater say via a new player council.
This letter, signed by stars such as Aryna Sabalenka, Iga Swiatek, Coco Gauff, Carlos Alcaraz, Jannik Sinner and Jack Draper—but not, unlike the original letter sent by players to the Slam events in March, Novak Djokovic—was dated July 30.
Read More: Top ATP, WTA players pen letter to Grand Slams seeking greater share of revenue
The second letter, which was seen this week by The Associated Press, set out specific benchmarks for ways in which the sport's four most prestigious, and profitable, tournaments could offer more money and influence to the athletes.
The players are working with Larry Scott as a consultant; he used to be the chairman and CEO of the WTA women's tennis tour and, later, ran the Pac-12 conference in American college sports.