The sight of empty seats in the French Open’s main stadium, particularly for the singles semifinals, was disappointing, tournament director Amélie Mauresmo said Sunday.
“We’re not satisfied,” Mauresmo said, adding that she has “a
number of ideas” to help avoid it in the future but did not want to share them
yet.
Asked why she thinks people who have tickets are not always
using them, Mauresmo replied: “Who knows? I’m not in their heads.”
Added French tennis federation president Gilles Moretton:
“We can’t force people to go to the stands.”
Mauresmo and Moretton said at the annual end-of-tournament
news conference that more than 650,000 spectators came to Roland Garros over
the past three weeks, including the qualifying rounds before main-draw action
began on May 26.
Moretton said a review of the whole event will start in a
couple of weeks.
“Not everything was perfect. We want to improve,” he said.
One topic that arose last year, too, but did not see any
change this time is the way scheduling is handled, particularly with regard to
the imbalance between women’s and men’s matches in the one-match night
sessions, which have been used for the first 1 ½ weeks of the singles brackets
each of the past three years.
There were zero women’s matches and 11 men’s matches at
night during European prime time this year. There was only one women’s night
match apiece in 2022 and 2023.
“The generation and depth of talent we are currently
witnessing in the sport is incredible. Fans want to see the excitement and
thrill of women’s tennis on the biggest stages and in the premium time slots,”
the women’s professional tennis tour, the WTA, said in a statement issued by a
spokesperson. “To continue building the value of our combined product, a
balanced match schedule that features both the best in men’s and women’s tennis
is critical.”
Mauresmo, a former No. 1-ranked player who won two Grand
Slam singles titles, said someone from the WTA is among those “in the room,”
when each day’s program is determined, and, “I did not see any push also to
have (a) women’s match in the evening.”
Mauresmo said her biggest concern about having women’s
matches at night is that, in part because they use a best-of-three-set format —
as opposed to the best-of-five used for men’s Grand Slam contests — they might
be too short to be considered worth the price of admission.
She said she does not want to schedule two matches at night
— one women’s and one men’s — because then play will continue too late. Moving
up the start of the night session from its current 8:15 p.m. local time is not
an option because fans wouldn’t get there at, say, 7 p.m., “given the culture
we have in Paris,” Mauresmo said.
French tennis federation director general Stephane Morel
added that the time required to clear the stadium after the day session ends,
then allow those with tickets for the night session in, takes too long for an
earlier start.
“Nothing’s engraved in stone. Things can change,” Mauresmo
said. “It’s one single match that we play at night, and therefore we have to
make choices. That’s why this year we wanted to have only men playing at
night.” AP
.webp)