
World's second-richest tennis star at Wimbledon speaks out about billionaire dad
Emma Navarro is determined to shake off the 'billionaire heiress' tag that has followed her throughout her tennis career. And she has set her sights on a maiden Grand Slam at Wimbledon triumph to cement her status through talent alone.
The 24-year-old has once again advanced to the second round at SW19 following her victory over Petra Kvitova in her farewell Wimbledon appearance. Navarro is now gearing up to take on Veronika Kudermetova in the second round on Thursday.
Huge attention has been drawn to the fact that Navarro's dad, Ben, boasts a £3.5billion fortune, per Forbes. But the American is desperate to ensure her parents' legacy doesn't define her as she continues to establish herself as one the best players on the WTA Tour.
Navarro is focused on demonstrating her worth on the court and already has huge wins, having dumped Coco Gauff from Wimbledon last year. She reached her first Grand Slam semi-final at the US Open in 2024, but she is still chasing that maiden major title.
The New York-born athlete has a firm belief in her own abilities and a desire to be recognised for sporting prowess above her family wealth. And Navarro knows her tennis is good enough to do the talking.
"I don't read anything. I don't read the comments, the articles, any of that stuff," she told Tatler magazine (via Daily Express). "There will be headlines and they kind of mention that [her father's billionaire status] which is fine, but I didn't grow up being handed things. We grew up in a sort of traditional way.
"We'd get up at 6am on a Saturday morning and go play tennis...growing up it was a priority that we learnt toughness and we learnt work ethic and how to be intentional and purposeful and live productive lives so I don't love being referred to as whoever with however-much-money's daughter. It's a label I don't really like."
Navarro is second only to Jessica Pegula in terms of the wealthiest active players in the game. Pegula's father, Terry, has an estimated fortune of £5.5bn, a significant portion of which will inevitably be passed down to his daughter.
And like Navarro, Pegula will have several siblings she'll likely have to split that sum with. However, even a fraction of the figure would still represent a sizeable nest egg.
In that sense, it's impressive that one should pursue a career as gruelling as that of an elite tennis player. Most people born into the kind of privileged upbringing Navarro has enjoyed would prefer to sit back and enjoy their inheritance, but the South Carolina resident has bigger goals in mind.
Despite her father's immense wealth, Navarro has made a name for herself on the WTA Tour. And the prospect has already earned herself a respectable £3.4million on the WTA Tour to date.
That includes two tournament victories in the last 18 months. She broke her WTA duck by winning the Hobart International in January 2024, then added the Merida Open to her collection in March 2025.
She also reached the quarter-finals of this year's Australian Open before being knocked out by Iga Swiatek. And the building blocks are in place for her to join the ranks of major winners and prove she truly belongs.
Navarro is so committed to her career that she has even put romance on the back burner to focus solely on her tennis. However, she's not opposed to the idea of leaving her single status behind as she added: "Tennis is it, for now. We'll see. My heart's open, let's put it that way."

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


Scottish Sun
28 minutes ago
- Scottish Sun
Emma Raducanu OUT of Wimbledon despite brave effort against world No1 Aryna Sabalenka
Raducanu had a set point in the tie-break and a point for 5-1 in the second END OF ROAD FOR RAD Emma Raducanu OUT of Wimbledon despite brave effort against world No1 Aryna Sabalenka Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) HOW do you follow up a miracle? What next, after pulling off mission impossible? Well, you attempt to do something more miraculous, more fantastical still. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 9 Emma Raducanu was knocked out of Wimbledon by the world No1 Aryna Sabalenka Credit: Shutterstock Editorial 9 Sabalenka proved just too strong Credit: Getty And here at a volcanic Centre Court - under the roof, after dark and close to Friday-night drinking-up time - Emma Raducanu tried just that. How she tried. There have been plenty of failures for Raducanu since her extraordinary US Open triumph of 2021 - but none as glorious as this one. Against world No1 Aryna Sabalenka - the grunting Belarusian wallop merchant who has been the dominant force in the women's game for the past 18 months - Raducanu bowed out of Wimbledon in the third round. But for a player who has never beaten anyone in the world's top three, this was the feistiest of defeats. That Sabalenka prevailed 7-6 6-4 doesn't even scratch the surface. Raducanu was a break up in both sets, she saved seven set points and had one of her own in the epic 74-minute opener and was a point away from a 5-1 lead in the second. But it was Sabalenka who clinched a last-16 clash with Belgium's Elise Mertens. This three-time Major champion has reached at least the quarter-finals in her last ten Major appearances and it will be a shock if she doesn't win her first Wimbledon title next weekend. CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS Sabalenka hits a tennis ball with extraordinary power and she roars at every point like Godzilla with a flesh wound. She is a phenomenal opponent for any woman. Yet Raducanu went toe-to-toe for two hours, only wilting at the very last. Emma Raducanu jokes 'I wouldn't know about heartbreak' after Olivia Rodrigo watches her Wimbledon win It is easy to forget that when Raducanu became the first qualifier to win a Grand Slam singles title at Flushing Meadows, she did not drop a set but did not face any top-ten player. This was an entirely different test to anything she faced in the Big Apple and she had a very good go at passing it. Raducanu said Wednesday's defeat of 2023 champion Marketa Vondrousova had been her best performance "in a long time" - and it was probably her most significant result since her 2021 fairytale of New York. This, however, was a major step up in class - Sabalenka has been the dominant force in the women's game for the past 18 months, a powerful, aggressive shotmaker who can intimidate the best of them. Still, Raducanu forced a break point in the opening game with a belting forehand return winner - only for Sabalenka to save it with three mighty serves. The Centre Court roof had been closed before the 8pm start after Raducanu's friend and mixed doubles partner Carlos Alcaraz had made heavy weather of winning his third-round match immediately before it. Raducanu's serve was firing early on, she was thumping aces of her own and relishing some high-quality exchanges. In the fifth game, Raducanu crowbarred out another opportunity - with a stinging winner down the line - again, Sabalenka thwarted her with another huge ace. But the Brit stuck at her task, forced two more break points - and then repelled another fierce serve before Sabalenka netted. 9 Wimbledon 2025 LIVE - follow all the latest scores and updates from a thrilling fortnight at SW19 The crowd, subdued at first, erupted as Raducanu edged in front. Soon, they would be roaring every point she won. There was zero evidence of any stage fright. We knew full well that this is a young woman capable of seizing the biggest moments, of conjuring impossibilities from the heavens. Her serves had been like guided missiles in the opening three games - locating chalkdust at high velocity. Then that service spluttered, her forehand went wonky and Sabalenka, in predatory fashion, broke her to love. Soon, Raducanu was serving to stay in the opening set, the anxiety in the crowd palpable, and the Brit's forehand continually clearing the baseline. But at set point down she found another ace - then she survived six more, fingernails on the cliff-edge, before a wonderful cross-court winner earned her one of her own. Finally, on the eighth deuce of the game, Raducanu held. Sabalenka's vain cries became bloodcurdling as the momentum shifted towards the Brit. Raducanu cracked successive winners down the line, then slipped at the net and paused to ice her right thigh, before she forced two break-points of her own - taking the second to an ear-splitting din. As the Brit served for the set, Sabalenka roared back, seized three break points and took the third to earn a tie-break. The breaker was tight - and loud - Raducanu forced the first set point but Sabalenka rescued it with a drop shot before she clinched an extraordinary set with a deft volley. The feeling was that having fallen so agonisingly short in the opener, Raducanu might crumble. She did not, breaking Sabalenka for 3-1, when the current US Open champion netted. Then Sabalenka had to save two more break points to avoid a 5-1 deficit. But once she held, the final, decisive momentum shift arrived and the Belarusian reeled off five successive games to reach round four. 9 Raducanu played arguably her best tennis since the 2021 US Open Credit: Getty 9 Raducanu took a fall in the first set but thankfully was fine to continue Credit: Shutterstock Editorial 9 Raducanu had plenty to roar about at times in the match, especially in the second set Credit: Shutterstock Editorial 9 Raducanu put on a superb performance under the Centre Court roof Credit: AFP 9 There was a warm embrace between the pair at the net Credit: Getty


Metro
33 minutes ago
- Metro
Emma Raducanu knocked out - but Britain can still have a Wimbledon champion
It was obvious from watching Sonay Kartal's showdown with Coco Gauff at Wimbledon last year that she was set for a massive future in tennis. That's exactly why I tipped the British No.3 as my One to Watch at the start of the 2025 Championships, along with her unstoppable surge up the WTA rankings, rather than the likes of Emma Raducanu or Katie Boulter. Kartal was No.298 in the world when she took on American world No.2 superstar Gauff last year, pushing her extremely hard in the first set. Her power and precision makes her a true force on grass and I can remember myself – and a number of other journalists – being blown away by Kartal's aggressive baseline play on that sunny afternoon on Court 1. It was from that moment that I knew we were looking at a future British No.1. Gauff eventually showed her quality but it proved to be a valuable lesson for Kartal, who has got better and better since that third-round defeat, and is now the last British woman left in the Wimbledon singles after Raducanu and Boulter lost to Aryna Sabalenka and Solana Sierra respectively. Kartal landed her first WTA Tour title at the Jasmin Open after her battle with Gauff and 2025 has seen the 23-year-old break into the world top 50. Having reached the last 16 at Wimbledon this year, with a brilliant 6-4 6-2 victory over Diane Parry, here's everything you need to know about Britain's next big thing, who could genuinely become our next Grand Slam winner… Kartal, known for her love of fitness, first picked up a tennis racket at the age of six and idolised Roger Federer and Kim Clijsters in her youth. Her early years in tennis weren't easy as a number of injury problems halted her progress but she never stopped believing she was on the right path. 'I played football and cricket as well as a kid [but] I think once I committed to tennis, I always felt like tennis was the one,' Kartal explained. 'I always felt like I was slightly different as a player to most players at the time that I was growing up with. I had a lot of belief. I had good people around me that really backed me and said that I just needed a good run, I could have a breakout year. So tennis, despite me being sidelined for years on and off, was still always the goal for me.' Usually donning a boxy polo shirt and long shorts with her tattoos – Kartal isn't what you'd expect a stereotypical women's tennis player to look like – and doesn't have the pristine aesthetic widely seen on the WTA Tour. It's refreshing. There's something quite Billie Eilish-esque about the way she dresses and presents herself. She's a little unique and perhaps more relatable for some young girls. After competing on the ITF Circuit in 2021, Kartal made her WTA Tour debut the following year before being handed a Wimbledon wildcard. Her breakthrough came at Wimbledon 2024, becoming Britain's first female qualifier to reach the third round in 27 years at the All England Club. Kartal is notably strong – both physically and mentally – and is able to use deep, penetrating groundstrokes to control rallies during her matches. Due to her strength, her biggest weapon is her forehand, which allows Kartal to dictate points, especially on a grass court where the play is faster. Former Wimbledon finalist and tennis coach Olga Morozova spoke exclusively to Metro about Kartal's best attributes earlier this summer. 'All the British girls know grass much better than anyone else because they started playing on it earlier than others,' Morozova said. 'Kartal is doing very, very good this year. She is strong physically, great legs and she has a good slice which works well on grass.' Kartal stunned 20th-seed and 2017 French Open champion Jelena Ostapenko in her opening match at Wimbledon this year. The British world No.51 then followed that up with straight-set wins over Bulgarian world No.111 Viktoriya Tomova and French world No.118 Parry. Speaking ahead of her next match, a last-16 battle with Russian world No.50 Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, Kartal explained how she had learnt lessons from that Wimbledon clash with Gauff 12 months ago. 'I'm not going to lie, I was pretty nervous walking out there,' Kartal said after her win over Parry, in which she was 4-1 down in the first set at one point. 'It's a big court with a match that has a lot of meaning to me. Obviously last year, that was also in the back of my mind, losing to Coco on the same court in the same round. 'I tried to take everything I learnt from that match and put it into play on the court. Tried to relax as best as I could. Having been 4-1 down, I just tried to get back on the scoreboard one by one. 'I think last year's match helped me a lot. I think I left that court last year feeling like I didn't play my best level [in the second set] because of the nerves I was carrying.' For those of you believing it's too farfetched to think Kartal can genuinely land the Venus Rosewater Dish, I'd like to politely remind you that last year's Wimbledon women's singles champion was very much unseeded. More Trending There are also less top players that Kartal will need to deal with should she continue to progress at the tournament. Second-seed Gauff and world No.3 Jessica Pegula crashed out in the first round, as did fifth-seed Zheng Qinwen and world No.9 Paula Badosa to blow the draw wide open. Jasmine Paolini, seeded fourth and last year's runner-up, lost in the second round while world No.6 Madison Keys was eliminated in the third round. It means Kartal has a massive opportunity – and she's ready for whoever is left standing in her way. 'I'm super determined,' Kartal added. 'When I set my mind to something, I want to achieve it. I want to prove to myself that I can do it, as well.' MORE: How an Andy Murray tactic has helped British tennis star's superb Wimbledon run MORE: 'Not the first time' – Carlos Alcaraz overheard making Wimbledon complaint to umpire MORE: Wimbledon day 6 order of play: What time are Novak Djokovic and Jannik Sinner playing?


Daily Mirror
34 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
Emma Raducanu pays harsh penalty as she's dumped out of Wimbledon by Sabalenka
Emma Raducanu's Wimbledon dream is over for another year after a straight sets loss to world No.1 Aryna Sabalenka. But it really didn't need to be. The British No.1 had chances to win both sets, and broke the top seed on multiple occasions. But she was unable to take the opportunities that came her way - and ultimately paid a harsh price against the three-time Grand Slam winner. In just short of two hours she was defeat 7-6 (8-6) 6-4 by Sabalenka. But what might seem like a straightforward win for the 27-year-old Belarussian was anything but. Raducanu led 4-2 in the first set and saved seven set points before her own set point. And she also had a point to lead 5-1 in the second set with Centre Court right behind her. But she failed to take advantage of the situation on both occasions. And having won the first set in 74 minutes after a tie break, Sabalenka was ruthless in the second, charging from 4-1 down, rattling off five straight games to claim victory and ensure she continues her pursuit of a first Wimbledon title. Sabalenka had to dig deep, but is now odds-on favourite to win a maiden SW19 title, with four of the other top five seeds having all already been beaten. and Mirror Sport will bring you the very latest updates, pictures and video as soon as possible. check back regularly for updates on this developing story. on Google News, Flipboard, Apple News, Twitter, Facebook or visit The Mirror homepage.