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Forbes’ list of the 100 highest-paid athletes is in—and women are missing

Meanwhile, the man at the top of the list is a convicted domestic abuser.

Photo of Ana Valens

Ana Valens

Serena Williams dropped off 2018's Forbes' highest-paid athletes list.
Yann Caradec/Flickr (CC-BY-SA)

If it wasn’t already clear there is a gender wage gap in sports, Forbes‘ latest report on the world’s highest-paid athletes shouts it from the newsstands. In the first time in the publication’s history, only men have made the list.

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In total, $3.8 billion was paid out to 100 male athletes, with 23 percent of payments coming from endorsements and appearances alone. Professional boxer Floyd Mayweather was paid the most, followed by soccer players Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo. Mayweather’s particularly high pay comes from his fight against Conor McGregor, which landed him a $275 million payout after he won. The rest of Mayweather’s payments over the past year came from professional endorsements, in which he cashed in $10 million. It seems Mayweather’s long history of violence against women—accounts he has pleaded guilty and has been convicted over—has not hurt his career one bit.

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Last year, Serena Williams was the only woman among Forbes‘ highest-paid athletes, ranking at 51 in 2017 after earning $27 million. But after she took time off to recover from her pregnancy and care for her newborn daughter, Alexis, she did not qualify for Forbes‘ 2018 list. That sends a particularly disturbing message to female athletes everywhere, suggesting that women are financially punished for going on maternity leave.

Williams is a bit of an exception in the world of professional athletics, too. During Forbes‘ 2017 report on the world’s highest-paid female athletes, fellow tennis star Angelique Kerber ranked second with $12.6 million in total payments, followed by NASCAR race car driver Danica Patrick at $12.2 million. Tennis player Simona Halep rounded out 2017’s top 10 list with a mere $6.2 million.

In comparison, Charlotte Hornets basketball player Nicolas Batum tails 2018’s top 100 list with $22.9 million in total income, meaning that there’s at least a $10 million gap between him and Patrick, 2017’s second-highest-paid woman in sports. When it comes to professional athletics, the messaging is clear: Men are worth more than women for their hard work. Men, like Mayweather, can harm women and remain at the top of their careers and pay scales.

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The double standard between men and women in professional sports is as old as America itself. Traditional, established sports leagues and associations are run by men, dominated by men, and largely created for men, and thus, male athletes are treated as the sports world’s default standard for performance and skill. Women’s sports are largely disparaged or downplayed, and as a result, female athletes’ accomplishments are too.

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When there’s a gender wage gap—or in this case, an abyss—in any profession, there’s always a larger cultural problem that’s to blame. It’s time for sports to start taking its female athletes seriously. If more attention and money was paid to women in sports, then perhaps audiences would grow beyond your average upper-income male fan.

H/T Twitter

 
The Daily Dot