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Why French Open’s Prize Money Is the Lowest Amongst All Grand Slams?

The Grand Slams award the most prize money and ranking points to tennis players. They are the top tier tournaments and hence earn a lot as well. However, among the Grand Slams, French Open lags behind in prize money. While some of the Grand Slams have prize money over $50 million dollars, the French Open prize money remains well below the mark.

Four areas of income for Grand Slams

A Grand Slam has four revenue streams. Broadcast revenue, ticket sales, sponsors, and merchandise sales are the principal locations from which a Grand Slam earns money. The US Open is the richest Grand Slam tournament whereas French Open is last.

Tennis US Open
A general view of Arthur Ashe Stadium used at US Open. (Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images)

French Open is only behind US Open in sponsorship money

Looking at the revenue streams, Roland Garros is second behind US Open in sponsorship money. In a report from 2019, US Open earns around 29 percent of the total sponsorship money among Grand Slam tournaments, whereas Roland Garros is just behind with 28 percent. Australian Open isn’t far behind with 27 percent and Wimbledon lags behind at 16 percent. Yet despite the advantage, the prize money difference is immense for Roland Garros.

During the pre-COVID times, US Open 2019 had the largest prize money in any tennis tournament, amounting to $57 million. That was way ahead of the French Open 2019 total of $42 million. The last Grand Slam before the coronavirus, Australian Open 2020 had staggering prize money of$54 million, whereas Wimbledon 2019’s prize money was just shy of $50 million.

French Open
A general view inside Court Philippe Chatrier used at French Open. (Photo by Clive Brunskill/Getty Images)

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French Open behind in spectator counts

Overall US Open 2019 had generated close to $350 million in revenue. Whereas French Open 2019’s number stood at $255 million. Similarly, Australian Open registered similar numbers to US Open and Wimbledon stood closer to $300 million. This huge deficit of Roland Garros is because of ticket sales.

The spectator counts over the full two weeks were as follows- US Open 2019 had 737,872, Australian Open 2020 had 812,174, Wimbledon had 500,397, and French Open had the lowest, 480,575.

Because of a lower spectator count, Roland Garros misses out on a considerable amount of ticket sales as well as merchandise sales. Australian Open and US Open have the largest prize money pool because they earn considerably from sponsors as well as tickets, merchandise, and broadcast. Wimbledon earns a lot from broadcast fees. Some reports from 2017 suggest Wimbledon had earned close to $160 million from broadcast alone in that year.

No changes post-pandemic

Roland Garros stays neck and neck with other slams in sponsorship but is far behind in tickets and broadcast revenue. Hence it has the lowest prize money pool. The pandemic hasn’t shifted any rankings either. As US Open and Australian Open had huge cash reserves they were able to retain a good percent of prize money, but the French Open saw another 10 percent decrease in 2021.

Read more: Who Was the Last Player to Defeat Rafael Nadal at French Open?

The post Why French Open’s Prize Money Is the Lowest Amongst All Grand Slams? appeared first on EssentiallySports.