What Larry Scott Is Leaving Behind In The World Tennis Legacy
Larry Scott, WTA CEO, announced his resignation today, and will soon become the commissioner of the NCAA Pac-10 Conference.
Tennis journalist Charles Bricker offers a clear-eyed summation of Scottโs accomplishments, failures, and the state of the tour that heโs leaving behind (including a schedule that likely wonโt include a Dubai tournament after 2010.)
He also says that Larry Scottโsย current No. 2, Stacey Allaster, is a strong candidate to replace him - good news for those whoโd like to see a woman at the head of womenโs tennis. (What, Billie Jeanโs busy?)
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Itโs interesting stuff, especially when you consider Brickerโs observation that three of the sportโs top positions have been vacated recently: Arlen Kantarian at the USTA, Etienne de Villiers at the ATP and now Scott.
Hereโs a long excerpt, (click here ro read more):
"On balance, however, youโd have to say Scottโs tenure was strong, and certainly good enough to land him one of the plum jobs in college athletics as commissioner of the Pac-10 Conference. His salary is well over $1 million at the WTA and no doubt heโs going to be closer to $2 million when he moves into a much bigger office at the Pac-10. Heโll remain on at the WTA to ease the transition to a replacement.
He leaves behind a womenโs tour that is worldโs better than it was when he took over for former Nike executive Kevin Wolff, who richly earned a reputation as the invisible CEO. He leaves the WTA with a couple years left on an $88 million sponsorship contract with Sony Ericsson. He leaves behind a tour which now has equal prize money with men at the four Slams. He leaves behind a tour being governed by Road Map 2009, which has streamlined the tournament schedule, given the women a longer off-season and gone a long way toward getting the tourโs best players to the biggest tournaments.
But there are problems. Justine Heninโs retirement in 2008 left a void at No. 1 that hasnโt been filled and Maria Sharapova, probably the No. 1 drawing card, hasnโt played a singles match in months. Weโve seen Jelena Jankovic and Dinara Safina flirt with the No. 1 ranking. Serena Williams has been there, but sheโll have a hard time holding onto it because she plays fewer tournaments than her competitors. No one seems to be able to put a hammerlock on the No. 1 ranking, and the tour needs that one ultra-strong player to shoot at.
In addition, there are those two nettlesome problems lingering on โ Dubai and the sisters animosity toward Indian Wells.
You probably know most of the details. A few weeks ago, as a result of the month-long Israeli incursion into the Gaza, the Dubai tournament refused to issue Israelโs Shahar Peer a visa to play. Despite calls by some for Scott to cancel the tournament, he chose to let the event go on and then hit the tournament with a huge fine, even after the tournament vowed that no player would again be denied the right to compete because of politics. Women players spoke out against the decision to go on with Dubai, but none of them boycotted in support of Peer. In fact, the only player to refuse to play was Andy Roddick, in the menโs tournament that runs consecutively with the womenโs.
I thought Scott made the right decision. There was sponsor money at stake and the tournament was a day away from starting. He let the world chastise Dubai and then he hit the tournament with massive penalties โ so bad that reliable sources say the tournament will be off the calendar in 2010.
Then there was the Williams problem with Indian Wells. When Scott unveiled his Road Map at Wimbledon last year, it proclaimed that all top 10 players would have to play the four major WTA tournaments (not the Grand Slams, which are run by the ITF), and that includes Indian Wells. If a player didnโt have a health excuse, she would be suspended for the next two events. Strong punishment and justifiable. But the Williamses refused to budge and father Richard Williams threatened to sue the WTA if his daughters were suspended and barred from playing their hometown tournament at Key Biscayne. That put Scott in a very difficult spot. Two black players sue the WTA. Not a good look. And even though, no doubt, most people would applaud the WTA for taking a tough stand against the Williamses, the publicity would have been extremely harmful.
So Scott came up with the alternative of allowing any player to miss one of the big four without cause as long as she did publicity for the tournament at some later date. Scott justified that by saying it would apply to all players. Which is true, but it was obviously put in to accommodate the Williamses. It was the best of a series of bad alternatives he could have come up with.
What the WTA is going to miss is Scottโs people skills. He was tough in the boardroom, extremely convivial in public. He cajoled, never demanded. He negotiated, never ordered. He also surrounded himself with some superb people and it wouldnโt be surprising if his successor is his No. 2, Stacey Allaster, who might be the most powerful woman executive in womenโs sports.
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