‘You’ve got two jobs’: The priorities for Tiley’s successor at Tennis Australia

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Outgoing Australian Open boss Craig Tiley is adamant his successor should continue to run the grand slam event and oversee the sport nationally as head of Tennis Australia.

The long-time tournament supremo ended months of speculation on Wednesday, announcing that he will leave Australia for a new job at the United States Tennis Association, and saying that family reasons and a desire for a fresh challenge played a part in his decision.

Craig Tiley announced on Wednesday that he will leave Tennis Australia.Credit: Eddie Jim

Tiley was unsure if he will be included on the interview panel to choose his replacement for one of the biggest jobs in Australian sport, but will advise the TA board on the right candidate.

“My voice will certainly be loud,” he said on Wednesday. “Unfortunately, there were two names in my title. It was one role.

“There are great people that could do an even better job than I’ve done, so I don’t think the board will have any problem finding a great person to lead the organisation.

“The board have stated unequivocally it will be one role. You wouldn’t want a separation of the roles because the event is one of the key elements of what we do here in Australia. But the most important one is getting people to play the game.

“I was always told that you’ve got two jobs. [But] I woke up every morning and never knew that I had two jobs.”

Tiley, who transformed the grand slam during his two decades at the helm, told this masthead he did not make his decision to leave until after this year’s Open ended in February.

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The final call was based on a combination of reasons, including a new challenge in a significant market with room to grow.

His wife Ali’s family lives in Chicago, and Tiley said he wanted their children – Marlowe, 13, and twins Archer and Weston, 12 – to experience living close to family, given they did not have any relatives in Australia.

“It’s been a great ride here – 20 years, including 13 years as the CEO. That’s a long journey, although COVID was a big disruption,” Tiley, who previously lived in the US and had major success coaching the University of Illinois in college tennis, said.

Tiley said laying the foundations for performance and participation, transforming the Australian Open into a sporting and entertainment leviathan, and surviving the COVID era were his greatest achievements in the dual role.

He credited building a high-performing team around him as a key plank to his success.

“We were the only event globally that continued to go each year under the circumstances we did [including hotel quarantine and strict conditions], and do what we did in an environment that was the most difficult globally,” Tiley said.

“I was very proud of what we achieved there. We came out of that, and our annual growth rate is 15 per cent year-on-year in the last 10 years. There are very few companies in Australia that can match that.”

The USTA announced Tiley’s appointment on Wednesday morning (AEDT), with board chair and interim co-CEO Brian Vahaly saying the organisation had prioritised finding a new leader who could accelerate participation growth and help achieve its goal of reaching 35 million players by 2035.

“Craig brings a rare combination of global credibility at the highest level of the sport and a proven commitment to growing the game at the grassroots,” Vahaly said.

“That balance is exactly what this moment requires. As we look to fully leverage the power of the US Open as a platform for inspiration and growth, Craig’s leadership and understanding of the entire tennis ecosystem will be invaluable.”

Australian Open boss Craig Tiley will head to America as head of the USTA.

Australian Open boss Craig Tiley will head to America as head of the USTA.Credit: Fiona Hamilton, Tennis Australia

There had been significant speculation about Tiley’s future since Sportico reported in December that USTA officials were in advanced talks with the South African-born powerbroker to be the organisation’s new CEO, replacing Lew Sherr, who accepted a job at the New York Mets.

Tiley’s defection to the USTA, which runs the US Open, ends his more than two-decade association with Australian tennis, beginning as TA’s director of player development in 2005.

He became the Australian Open’s tournament director the next year before taking over as TA’s CEO in 2013. The Melbourne-based grand slam has become an enormous event, including a record 1,368,043 fans attending this year’s Open across three weeks.

The USTA contacted Tiley about its vacancy after last year’s US Open.

Among the top candidates to replace him as Australian Open tournament director is Brit Stephen Farrow, who is the organisation’s chief events officer.

Farrow is tournament director of the United Cup and was previously director of international events at Great Britain’s governing body, the Lawn Tennis Association, during which he served as tournament director of the Queen’s Club Championships.

Another option is Peter Johnston, who was involved in running the Australian Open alongside Tiley and his predecessor Paul McNamee, and still oversees a number of ATP and WTA events, as well as the Kooyong Classic.

Cameron Pearson has impressed with his work at the Brisbane International, and could also be in the mix.

The Australian Open has become a summer juggernaut.

The Australian Open has become a summer juggernaut.Credit: Eddie Jim

Tennis Australia’s chief tennis officer Tom Larner is also widely viewed as a favourite to earn a promotion.

Another contender is Craig Morris, an Australian who has worked at the USTA for the past decade, currently as CEO of coaching after being involved in community tennis initially.

Tiley had no doubt that the right choice could come from within. “I think there’s great choices within the team,” he said. “But I’m going to leave that to the board. It’s their ultimate decision.

“We’re very lucky. If you look at our board, the diversity of our board, the expertise of our board … I think most sports globally would look at that board on a skill and expertise [level] and say, ‘Wow, how do we get to that point’.”

Tiley summed up the top priorities for the person who succeeds him as Australian Open boss as the “four S’s”: more seats, more shade, more space and more screens.

There are already discussions between TA, the Victorian government and Collingwood Football Club officials about the Open expanding across the road from Melbourne Park into Olympic Park.

However, TA’s development performance remains a polarising topic among its community.

Tiley, who started in performance and played a major role in participation, including the introduction of Hot Shots, said the organisation had come a long way since he first arrived, when there were only a handful of Australian men and women in the top 200.

There is a group of emerging women starting to break through after a barren period outside former world No.1 Ash Barty’s grand slam success, but there is concern about the men’s stocks behind top-10 star Alex de Minaur.

“The [player pathway] structure is solid. It ebbs and flows,” Tiley said.

“Every country, every nation, goes in cycles. I ran performance for a long time, and I know fairly well that you don’t respond too quickly to a bad cycle, where you’ve got to change everything. The most important thing is to have consistency.”

Asked if he held any regrets, Tiley said: “You know … if I want to get something done I don’t stop going for it, and I don’t accept no as an answer, so that can be difficult for people at times. But I hope I’ve done it respectfully.

“You’ll have to ask other people if I’ve rubbed them up the wrong way. I’ve put the [Melbourne Park] precinct under the pump on things that we need. I’ve always done it personally, never publicly.”

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