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Post Info TOPIC: Week 43 - Challenger ($50,000) - Melbourne, Australia (Hard)


Tennis legend

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Week 43 - Challenger ($50,000) - Melbourne, Australia (Hard)


James Ward is seeded 8 and Brydan in action down under.

R1:(8) James Ward (GBR) WR 183 v Greg Jones (AUS) WR 250

R1: Brydan Klein (GBR) WR 402 v Michael Venus (NZL) WR 359

 



-- Edited by steven on Saturday 19th of October 2013 12:37:40 PM

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Week 43 - $50,000 challenger, Melbourne (hard)


Jones is a particularly bad draw when you are seeded, I'd say! This tournament is actually played on the AO courts, so the players will undoubtedly benefit from this experience.



Ohh, the best thing about Australian Challengers/Futures is that you don't have to pay a tax on the prize money! I don't think any other major tennis nation does that?





-- Edited by Salmon on Saturday 19th of October 2013 09:32:42 AM

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Given James' recent form I can't say I'm too optimistic about this R1 match - that's a tough draw.

Very winnable match for Klein though.

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I wouldn't have said that either match-up was a great one.

On the other front, presumably, although you don't have to pay tax in Australia, UK players will still have to pay tax on their earnings in Britain. I would assume that most major tennis nations have mutual tax treaties, which mean that if you are a UK player and pay tax on earnings in - say - France, you then don't get taxed on that income in the UK (below a certain level). So there may not be any particular gain or loss on paying in-country. Though equally there might be - the detail is always key. Have long felt that working out tennis players' tax arrangements must be the stuff of a tax lawyer's dreams ... and everyone else's nightmares.

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RE: Week 43 - Challenger ($50,000) - Melbourne, Australia (Hard)


The edit in the first post was just to get the title into the usual Challenger format. This post is to add opponents' career highs & H2H info:

L32: (8) James Ward WR 183 v Greg Jones (AUS) WR 250 (CH 179 in 2010)

H2H 0-1 - Jones was the player who upset Wardy 1 & 6 in Vancouver a few weeks ago, so a tough R1 draw but a chance for revenge ...

L32: Brydan Klein WR 402 v Michael Venus (NZL) WR 359 (CH 274 in 2011)

H2H 1-0 - 4 & 2, Jakarta 2012 - a battle between two ex-Aussies, this one!



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Did Venus play for Australia at any point of time?? I do remember that he played for the USA in his salad days.

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You're right - he never played for Australia. I knew he had switched nationality but I thought it was from AUS not USA - I was probably thrown by the fact that he played a number of Brits a few years ago in Australia.

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GB top 25s (ranks, whereabouts) & stats - http://www.britishtennis.net/stats.html



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Another Davis Cup-motivated switch, I think.

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Really ? I didn't know that Davis Cup was such a motivation, certainly to switch countries.

I can understand the real pride in winning for what is undoubtably your true country ( eg. the Spanish and Serbs ), but otherwise...

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Bogomolov? Levine? Delic? Huey?

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Spectator wrote:

On the other front, presumably, although you don't have to pay tax in Australia, UK players will still have to pay tax on their earnings in Britain. I would assume that most major tennis nations have mutual tax treaties, which mean that if you are a UK player and pay tax on earnings in - say - France, you then don't get taxed on that income in the UK (below a certain level). So there may not be any particular gain or loss on paying in-country. Though equally there might be - the detail is always key. Have long felt that working out tennis players' tax arrangements must be the stuff of a tax lawyer's dreams ... and everyone else's nightmares.


A UK-resident player pays UK income tax on their worldwide earnings, after deduction of business expenses. Tax treaties between non-tax-haven countries usually give the jurisdiction in which the money is earned the primary taxing rights. The country in which the player lives will usually tax it as well, but will give a credit for the foreign tax paid.

Well, that's the theory anyway. It's hideously complicated, and not cost-effective for most tennis players to pay an accountant to sort it all out. (A lawyer would be no good - even they admit they're useless with figures.) 

Ooh, I enjoyed that! smile

 



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OK, no idea about all these motivations, but fair enough if really Davis Cup motivated. I am still surprised.

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Come on Ward

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Come on Klein

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I think it's just as relevant that by plying their trade for NZ, Venus and Sitak are presumably getting a greater amount of funding than what they got earlier. Plus they get wild cards at the Auckland event, so that helps to play the bills. NZ has about five people who do well at Futures level, so playing for them is a much better idea financially than being the 30th best American player at the age of 25.

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