Re: [情報] 官網關於柏林退賽的聲明
羅馬拍照事件的後續。
http://www.mariasharapova.com
MARIA HAMMERS WTA OVER SHOOT
Maria Sharapova has long been considered one of the tour's
most cooperative players when it comes to fulfilling media,
sponsorship and fan requests, but the Sony Ericsson WTA
Tour is now seriously butting heads with its most prized
asset over an upcoming commercial shoot in Rome in a move
that already caused damage to their relationship.
The tour has asked Sharapova and the other top players to
take part in a WTA publicity shoot around the start of the
Tier I Italian Open (May 12-19), which she claims could
take up to five hours and they claim might only take
two-and-a-half hours.
Regardless of how long the potential shoot might take,
Sharapova has taken her case public, as the tour is
threatening her with a $700,000 fine if she doesn't
participate. This isn't a phantom fine, the kind where the
tour dips into a player's year-end bonus pool; it's a real
fine, which would be deducted from her upcoming prize money.
"The tour does not care what any of the players think, not
just top players," Sharapova told TennisReporters.net from
her home in LA. "The tour will say we have done all these
amazing things that the players wanted, but trust me these
things they wanted as well and financially benefited from,
including this shoot. I want people to understand that I
took this action because this is one in a long list of
things that the tour has ignored the players. This is not
about just one shoot. I just could not just sit back
anymore."
The shoot is not just any shoot, it's part of the WTA's new
massive global marketing campaign, which will include
broadcast and print elements. The WTA, which signed three
year, $42 million deal with Doha to host Sony Ericsson
Championships November 4-9, is making a big push into the
Middle East as well as in China, where they recently opened
a new office. Top players Justine Henin, Serena Williams,
Ana Ivanovic and Jelena Jankovic are also scheduled to
participate in the shoot. Serena has been less than
thrilled in the past when asked to participate in lengthy
promotions prior to big events such as Rome.
Sharapova said she was given less than two weeks notice
about the shoot
"To ask me or any of the other players to do a long shoot
like this is not right," Sharapova said. "Do you think the
NBA would ask their top players to do a five-hour shoot the
day before a playoff game? I understand the importance of
supporting the tour and I want to do this, but the timing
of the shoot and then for them to threaten me with a
$700,000 fine is just not right. The tour is not thinking
about the players."
Because she doesn't wear a WTA patch on her clothing,
Sharapova's fine for not doing a tour promotional gig goes
up $400,000 from the normal $300,000. Sharapova is also
considering taking legal action against the WTA and may
attempt to recruit other top players to boycott the shoot.
"We are trying to raise the notoriety of the players and
the tour, and the players and their agents have complained
in the past that we have not done enough to do so," said
WTA spokesman Andrew Walker. "This is an opportunity to do
it aas we are putting millions of dollars into this
worldwide campaign. It's important for women's tennis and,
while we are sensitive to the demands of the tournament on
our players, they've known about it for some time. It's in
the rules."
Sharapova said that the WTA needs to be more realistic
about his aims and when it decided what type of campaign it
would launch, should have taken into account the fact that
the players are athletes, not entertainers or models who
perform such lengthy shoots for a living and don't have to
go out on court the next day.
"The tour needed to challenge their agency to come up with
creative that only needs 45-60 minutes of the players time,
like the USTA does with their US Open Series ads,"
Sharapova said. "Or they could of been better prepared and
did it at a tournament like Indian Wells where players
arrive five to seven days early."
THE MORE RECOGNIZED TENNIS PLAYER
Sharapova's participation in the campaign is no doubt
critical to the tour, as the No. 3 player is widely
recognized as one of the popular women's athletes on the
planet. She is said to earn about $25 million annually in
off-court sponsorships and, with Serena and Ivanovic - who
just finished ranked No. 23 in the FHM poll of the World's
Sexiest Women - she's one of the tour's few internationally
recognized faces. The tour wants to package its
better-known players with its lesser-known up-and-comers in
marketing campaigns in order to spread women's tennis' good
word. The campaign is said to be ready to spend $5 million
in 2008. Plus, the tour will have to spend massive funds in
order to support selling the championships to Doha, which
owns a regular tournament that has a poor attendance record
and is a country that is consistently condemned by
international organizations for trampling on women's
rights. None of the top players are said to be enamored
with the choice of Doha as the new locale of the
championships, and the tour will face a treacherous task in
trying to promote the event to the rest of the world, as
Qatar is thousands of miles and many time zones away from
places where tennis is popular.
"We are trying to build a cohesive message to help fans
identify the players, explain what the Race to the Sony
Ericsson Championships means and also to make fans aware
that we will be playing the championships in Doha this
year," Walker said.
The WTA is still hoping to convince Sharapova to do the
shoot, and she may do so in order to avoid a fine, but if
she's able to bring any other major players into her realm
of opinion and with them threaten a serous boycott, the
tour might have to ask its ad agencies to adjust their
campaign on the fly.
"Hopefully she'll see the value of the campaign," Walker
said. "We will be as flexible as possible to accommodate
all the player schedules, but we are not making exceptions."
Sharapova was also was fined $125,000 for pulling out of
next week Tier I tournament in Berlin and says that the
tour is forcing her to send an injury excuse to avoid a
larger fine, even though she said she told the tour that
when she entered Tier I Charleston three weeks ago as a
wildcard, that she would therefore not be able to play
Berlin.
"One has nothing to do with the other," Walker said. "She
set her schedule before this year and Maria entering
Charleston doesn't help Berlin. It's an automatic fine."
Sharapova will likely be fined an additional $10,000 for
the pullout. As a Gold Exempt player, Sharapova must commit
to four Tier I appearances on top of Miami. Each appearance
is worth $125,000 in her total bonus pool of $500,00, from
where the Berlin money will be deducted from.
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