The plan was first revealed by Novak Djokovic, the ATP player council president and World No. 1. It has been backed by Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal, with leading players urged to pay more into the pot than those lower down the rankings, with the aim of building a multi-million dollar fund. The professional tennis tours, including those at a low level, are on hold until mid-July at the earliest, with Wimbledon cancelled and the French Open postponed until a late-September start. But Austrian Thiem does not like the idea of giving up his own money, telling the Kronen Zeitung newspaper: “I know the Futures Tour and played there for two years. There are a lot of people who don’t give everything to sport.
“I don’t see why I should give money to such people. I would prefer to donate to people or institutions that really need it.” Thiem, 26, who has career on-court earnings approaching $24 million, added: “None of us top people got it as a gift. We had to fight our way up. I’m not guaranteed in any profession to make a lot of money at some point. No tennis players are fighting for survival, not even the ones down below. Nobody has to starve.”
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