Tennis stars are guaranteed £1.15million just for turning up in Riyadh, with the winner set to rake in double the amount that is awarded to the winner of Wimbledon – with Andy Murray mocking the tournament online
Tennis stars are guaranteed £1.15million just for turning up in Riyadh, with the winner set to rake in double the amount that is awarded to the winner of Wimbledon – with Andy Murray mocking the tournament online Tennis stars are guaranteed £1.15million just for turning up in Riyadh, with the winner set to rake in double the amount that is awarded to the winner of Wimbledon – with Andy Murray mocking the tournament online
Andy Murray called the controversial Six Kings Slam “an exhibition nobody cares about” last month, after the lucrative Saudi Arabian event got underway this week.
The tournament started on Wednesday, offering the biggest prize purse in tennis history with Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic, Jannik Sinner, Daniil Medvedev and Carlos Alcaraz among the names taking part.
Players are guaranteed £1.15million just for turning up in Riyadh, with the winner set to rake £4.6million – double the amount that is awarded to the winner of Wimbledon – with the retiring Nadal possibly needing to win only two matches to claim the prize after being given a bye to the semi-finals.
The opening matches of the Six Kings Slam saw Sinner defeat Medvedev in straight sets before Carlos Alcaraz also secured a 6-4, 6-2 victory over Holger Rune.
Murray made his feelings clear on the tournament a few weeks ago after teasing his former British rival Liam Broady – who had talked up the tournament following an epic trailer promoting it.
Broady wrote in a post on Twitter: “Speechless as to how damn cool this promo is. Probably best I’ve ever seen in tennis. Would watch this movie. 10/10.”
Murray then responded: “Except it’s not a movie and you won’t watch it because it’s an exhibition tennis event that nobody cares about.”
Carlos Alcaraz is among the top stars involved, with a prize of £4.6m up for grabs
Murray and Broady have been involved in humorous back and forths in the past – including one over social media in July when the latter complained over treatment of players at the Atlanta Open.
Broady wrote: “‘First match at 10am today so have to warm up at 8:30,” he wrote. “Breakfast doesn’t open till 9am? Walked into player area and we’ve got… bagels. Really good for a high standard of tennis and tennis tournament in Atlanta.”
Murray replied: “Hope you are ok, mate. That sounds terrible. Surprised you hadn’t checked the breakfast situation ahead of time like most professionals would have done.”
The legendary British player – who won two Grand Slams in his career – announced his decision to retire from tennis after competing in the Paris Olympics in August.
Mirror – Sport