
'Crying with the lights off:' Life as a tennis pro – DW – 06/30/2025
Noah Rubin knew the moment he had reached the limits of his exhaustion.
From the highs of winning the Wimbledon junior title in 2014 and a successful first year as a professional tennis player, by 2018, the American felt his career was spiraling downwards. Sat alone in a Spanish hotel room, he had just gone out of a lower-tier Challenger tournament in the qualifying rounds, losing to an opponent he should have beaten.
"I was crying hysterically by myself with all the lights off," Rubin told DW. "I'm just like: 'What am I doing here? Is there any real true happiness and stability in this sport?' And I think we got to the answer of: 'No, there's not.'"
Rubin's story is the rule rather than the exception in tennis, which is perceived to be a glamorous and lucrative sport. The reality, though, is often the opposite.
Every year, hundreds of players plug away on the professional circuit, traveling from tournament to tournament while struggling to make ends meet. Many don't even win enough prize money to offset their costs.
"It ends up with anxiety and depression," Rubin said. "How dark it is to travel to some unknown locations by yourself, trying to find any means of either happiness or comfort, knowing that you're about to hop on this court and not only do you have to win one match, but you have to grind this through."
At Wimbledon, one of tennis' four Grand Slam tournaments, the men's and women's champions will each pocket £3 million (€3.52 million, $4.12 million) in prize money this year. Even a player who loses in the first round will take home £66,000.
However, outside of these major tournaments, the pickings are far slimmer.
"If you don't do well at a Grand Slam, you're not making money," said Rubin, who hit a career high of world No. 125 before finally retiring last year.
Poor player pay is one of the reasons why the Professional Tennis Players Association (PTPA), an independent group, is suing tennis' governing bodies. The organization, which was co-founded by Novak Djokovic, wants to completely change the way the sport operates.
According to the PTPA, 70% of the world's top 1,000 male and female players earn less than $50,000 per year in prize money; 80% of that group earn less than what their season costs them.
The PTPA argues that players should get a bigger slice of tournament revenue, claiming they currently only get around 17% of the pie. In the NBA and NHL in the United States, for example, basketballers and ice hockey players receive half of their league's revenue.
"Tennis compares very poorly to every sport by every metric in terms of player remuneration," Ahmad Nassar, the PTPA's executive director, told DW, emphasizing that athletes' pay in other major sports "dwarfs what we see in tennis."
Unlike their counterparts in the top US sports leagues, whose salaries are negotiated through collective bargaining, professional tennis players are effectively freelancers, earning based on their performance and having to cover their own expenses. These include flights, and the accommodation and salaries of their support team.
Rubin estimates the cost of hiring a coach and physio to be as much as $5,000 per week. But a poor run of form can exacerbate the feeling of hopelessness. Sometimes, to save money, the temptation is to go without.
"When you have a few bad weeks, you're like: 'What am I paying for?'" the 29-year-old said. "It's not a personal attack on the coach that you're with. I'm losing and I'm losing money to him on top of it.
"You continually fight this uphill battle of the ranking system. It's exhausting. And dealing with the injuries on top, dealing with the finances and the travel that you have to do. There's just so much that goes into it."
The PTPA's lawsuit, which it filed in March 2025, accused tennis' governing bodies of working like a "cartel" to keep player earnings low, among other things.
"We're taking this bitter medicine right now that we had all hoped to avoid, but things weren't changing," Nassar said. "We think that this will be a catalyst for real and lasting change, not just over the next few years, but for the long haul."
The ATP and WTA Tours, which run men's and women's tennis, respectively, have sought to have the lawsuit thrown out, complaining it is "entirely without merit" (ATP) and "regrettable and misguided" (WTA). Defending themselves, both tours pointed out various financial benefits for players that have been introduced in recent years.
For example, the ATP's "Baseline" program provides a tiered, guaranteed income for male players ranked up to 250 in the world. Those in the lowest category receive a minimum annual income of $100,000.
Nassar questioned how many players would actually be able to make a living from such programs. "The players are sick and tired of hearing platitudes that sound good, but in the real world have no effect," he said.
Rubin says he is grateful for the opportunities and experiences tennis afforded him, but believes the sport needs to come clean about the costs and sacrifices involved.
"Tell us that we're not going to make money," he said. "Tell us that it's going to be a tremendous uphill battle.
"My whole new thing is redefining success as a tennis player. Nobody makes it, right? There are very few people who do. The percentages are so small."
Edited by: Chuck Penfold.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


DW
8 hours ago
- DW
How Slovenia helped Tadej Pogacar become Tour de France star – DW – 07/24/2025
The 26-year-old from Slovenia is already one of the greatest cyclists ever, but how did the country help him grow? For a country with just over two million people, Slovenia's success in sport is astounding. They won seven medals at the last Winter Olympics, they have one of the biggest names in the NBA today in Luka Doncic, and the world's best cyclist, Tadej Pogacar, also comes from the small European nation. Are Slovenia just enjoying a rare generation of gifted athletes or is something else happening? Professor Gregor Jurak of the University of Ljubljana specializes in physical fitness and activity. He believes there are a number of reasons why Slovenia is a great place for young athletes to grow. "All the population is quite fit and have also high physical literacy, so they have a lot of knowledge and they are quite motivated," Jurak told DW. This is all starts in schools. The competency of staff is very high. Physical education (PE) teachers are required to undergo five years of specialist training before teaching, a much higher standard than many other European nations. Slovenia also has more PE classes, and those classes are relatively small with a maximum of 20 kids. Sports facilities are quite well developed. Girls are separated from boys from the sixth grade, which according to Jurak's research, improves the girls chances of of developing strong physical fitness. The school system also works in tandem with sports clubs. All of this creates a great foundation for young people to be in good physical health. "We also found out in our studies that mothers define the lifestyle of kids in the family. And since our mothers are quite physically active – they are among the best in Europe – they are actually passing these habits on to their kids," Jurak said. The reason why mothers have a greater impact than fathers? "They are the managers of free time. They are holding all the legs of the table in the family," Jurak said. On top of all of that, is the SLOfit program, a national monitoring system for the physical and motor development of children that has been used annually in every elementary and high school in Slovenia since 1987. Jurak is the lead researcher on SLOfit and explains how the data gives parents the chance to observe their child's physical development, while teachers can use it to help children who are struggling physically. While primarily a health tool, it can also help parents find opportunities in the local community that are suited to their child's fitness as well as help identify which kids are showing extraordinary ability. After the split from Yugoslavia in 1991, sports became a large part of Slovenia's national identity, particularly winter sports. Slovenia's geographical diversity – the country has ample green spaces, mountains, hills and flatlands – has also played a role in the growth of sports. Jurak believes one of the biggest factors is that soccer doesn't take up all the oxygen in the room. "Soccer is not so dominant," Jurak said. "I think this is also one of the bad sides of soccer because it's so much commercialized that they can run all over the other sports. In Slovenia this is not true," he added. "Maybe this is one of the advantages for our young athletes, because they are not exposed to such high commercialization in early periods, because this could also affect them in a really negative way, also when it comes to personal traits." Jurak said the country is trying to stimulate other activities, including Slovenia's most popular sport, mountaineering. Cycling is also popular, but mostly recreationally rather than for competition. Beyond the structure and landscape of Slovenia is also the question of natural ability. According to British cycling magazine "Rouleur," Pogacar's VO2 max (the rigorous exercise test that determines the maximum amount of oxygen a person can consume during physical activity) is an astounding 89.4. The range for a Tour de France peloton rider is between 70 and 85. This leaves many wondering whether Pogacar had the gifts already, or if it was growing up in Slovenia that made it possible. For Jurak, the answer is clear. "He's a super talent but would he [Pogacar] be such a kind of super talent without this environment? Probably not." Pogacar is on the verge of winning his fourth Tour de France. Only four riders have won five and at 26, there is a real chance that the Slovenian might win more than anyone ever before. Perhaps the greatest part of his legacy though, will be what his success on the bike tells us about talent development and what it has done for the people of Slovenia. "In the past, we didn't have high self-esteem I would say, as Slovenians," Jurak said. "But in past two decades, especially through the sport success now we found, we can compare to the big nations. So I think this is the major advantage of this sport success. "We are a small nation, we are just two million but our sports success is really coming from identifying and nurturing these few athletes within a small pool of kids," he concluded, pointing to the examples of both Primoz Roglic and Tadej Pogacar.


Int'l Business Times
19 hours ago
- Int'l Business Times
Atletico Cash In On Real Madrid's Bernabeu Concert Woes
Mired in legal setbacks, Real Madrid are losing the lucrative star-studded concerts for which their costly Bernabeu stadium revamp was designed -- and cross-town rivals Atletico are cashing in. The megaproject involved three loans totalling more than one billion euros ($1.174 billion) with the goal of transforming the historic ground into a year-round entertainment hub. But the Spanish giants had not reckoned with the determination of angry locals, whose complaints about excessive noise succeeded in stopping the concerts in 2024. With the complaints bogged down in the courts, Atletico Madrid's Metropolitano stadium snapped up the shows of three Spanish stars who were due to perform at the Bernabeu this summer. A bigger coup followed: the announcement of the hosting of 10 gigs next year by reggaeton superstar Bad Bunny, a multiple Grammy Awards winner who sold a Spanish record 600,000 tickets for 12 dates in Madrid and Barcelona. The Puerto Rican's arrival appears to contradict the belief of Madrid's Atletico-supporting mayor Jose Luis Martinez-Almeida, who insisted only the Bernabeu could attract the most prestigious performers like US icon Taylor Swift. For Placido Rodriguez Guerrero, emeritus professor at the University of Oviedo's economics department, "the reputational damage has been big" for Real. "It is a way of showing that not everything Real Madrid do is done well, and more so if the concerts go to the Metropolitano", he told AFP. Lola Indigo, one of the singers whose cancelled Bernabeu show went to the Metropolitano, told El Mundo daily she felt "disappointment, a little betrayed". Club president Florentino Perez has reassured supporters that concerts only represent one percent of Real's budget, with revenues topping 1.1 billion euros in the 2024/25 season. But David Dunn, managing director of the Edinburgh-based consultancy 442 Design, which has worked on commercial projects with clubs including Arsenal and AC Milan, described the situation as "a major blow" for Real. Although the matchday, tour and retail business revenue is "excellent", the club "will have banked on being able to hold multiple large-scale events and concerts", he told AFP. Business Insider Spain has reported Real's plan was to generate around 100 million euros per year from musical events -- enough to sign a couple of stars. Professor Rodriguez Guerrero said Real were losing "tens of millions of euros" this summer to their less storied local rivals, who have previously hosted stars including Bruce Springsteen, the Rolling Stones and Bruno Mars. If Real wish to pursue their concert ambitions, the investment "will cost quite a lot", he said. For Francesc Daumal, an architecture expert at Barcelona's Polytechnic University of Catalonia, the Bernabeu's main weakness is its new retractable roof and the acoustic issues it engenders. The stadium "is like a tent, because it's shut with a light closure. There are openings, exterior sheets that let air in", he explained. "Solving the insulation for those deep frequencies and with those very high acoustic pressures isn't simple," warned Daumal. Atletico's stadium "was born from the start with the intention of soundproofing it", whereas adapting the older Bernabeu is more difficult, he added. Daumal also identified the Bernabeu's proximity to residential buildings as a challenge to contain noise, compared with the esplanade that separates the Metropolitano from its closest neighbours. Atletico are meanwhile cashing in on a packed summer concert schedule with the Bernabeu out of action. Fans flocked to the Metropolitano in May for two sold-out nights by British star Ed Sheeran, with 140,000 tickets going at an average price of 100 euros ($115). Sara, who attended last year's Taylor Swift concert at the Bernabeu, told AFP the Metropolitano was "better as a place... it's a club with more ties to music". "Acoustically, the Bernabeu is the worst place we've seen," added the 34-year-old communications sector employee, who declined to give her surname. Ariel Jackson, a 30-year-old lawyer from the Caribbean nation of Trinidad and Tobago, said the Metropolitano had "extra space" and was "more comfortable" than the Bernabeu thanks to its distance from the crowded city centre. "We love to say concerts are held" at the Metropolitano amid the Bernabeu's troubles, enthused Atletico fan David Guerrero, 27, sporting a club shirt with Sheeran's name on the back. The Santiago Bernabeu's operable roof has led to acoustic issues at the stadium during concerts AFP


DW
a day ago
- DW
Euro 2025: Germany lose to Spain in semifinal – DW – 07/23/2025
After 115 minutes, Aitana Bonmati scored the winner to knock Germany out and put Spain in the final. Germany lost 1-0 after extra time to Spain in the UEFA Euro 2025 semifinal, as Christian Wück's side paid the price for missing a hatful of chances. Aiming to make their second straight Euro final, Germany pushed world champions Spain right to the limit but had their hearts broken by Spanish superstar Aitana Bonmati with five minutes left in extra time. After a poor clearance, Spain worked the ball quickly and Bonmati, spotting the near post open, squeezed the ball past Berger who had been expecting a cross. Christian Wück's side, who started the game with a depleted squad after injuries and suspensions, handled the expected Spanish ball control well for most of the game, and had a handful of chances to score. Giovanna Hoffmann missed in the first half, Klara Bühl missed a chance in both halves and Carlotta Wamser also couldn't find a way past Spain's goalkeeper Cata Coll in stoppage time at the end of the 90 minutes. The longer the game went on and the more chances Germany missed, the more it felt like defending world champions Spain would find a goal. In extra time, both sides began to tire and just when penalties looked on the cards, Bonmati struck as Spain finally found a way past the otherwise excellent Ann-Katrin Berger. Spain will play England in the final on Sunday, July 27. The game is a rematch of the 2023 World Cup Final, which Spain won 1-0.