WTA increases ranking protection for mothers and injured players returning on tour

To optimise for archiving, the original image and related documents associated with this article have been removed.

Mothers and injured players returning to Tennis have been given increased protection from next season by the WTA.

The women's governing body of tennis have tweaked the ruling and expanded the scope of the “special ranking” policy that helps players coming back after injury or motherhood. From 2019, players will be able to use their previous ranking order to enter 12 tournaments over a three-year period.

As things stand, players must begin their comeback within two years, and then have a further year in which they can enter eight events under their protected ranking - the ranking held at the start of their absence.

Serena Williams highlighted the issue last year when she returned to Tennis 6 months after giving birth to her daughter.  However, players will not be seeded in line with that ranking, despite Serena Williams' wishes, with the WTA instead guaranteeing they will not face a seeded player in a tournament's opening round.

You may also like

View All

Pinned Article

Sport Resolutions Annual Conference 2026: Early Bird Tickets Now on Sale

Early Bird tickets for the Sport Resolutions 11th Annual Conference are now available. Join leading sport and legal professionals in London on 7 May 2026 for a full day of discussion, insight, and networking

Read More

ITIA v Marinko Matosevic

A decision in the case of International Tennis Integrity Agency against Marinko Matosevic has been issued by the Independent Panel

Read More

The Cricket Regulator is recruiting for a Safeguarding Panel Chair

The Cricket Regulator is recruiting for a Safeguarding Panel Chair who will effectively manage the running of the Cricket Safeguarding Panel hearing and use safeguarding experience to support appropriate risk assessment and clear, defensible decision making in relation to those subject to safeguarding investigation

Read More