A US Open debutant lost $81,000 after winning the qualifying round

A dream come true?
Grand Slam debut
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova
North Carolina senior
Up to $10,000
Forgo her prize money
Up to the next Grand Slam?
A dream come true?

To play and progress in an event as prestigious as the US Open is a dream come true for every junior tennis player. To also pick up close to a $100,000 in prize money would be something of a miracle. But for Fiona Crawley it was anything but.

Grand Slam debut

Fiona Crawley got through the qualifying rounds for the first time ever at the US Open 2023, where she made her Grand Slam debut in the first round.

Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova

In that first round, she lost to Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (pictured), but still earned $81,000 in prize money, according to the New York Post.

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North Carolina senior

The prize money created a problem for Crawley, a student-athlete and University of North Carolina senior.

 

Up to $10,000

According to NCAA amateurism rules, student-athletes may earn up to $10,000 in prize money. Moreover, that money has to come from the event sponsor, wrote the New York Post.

"Actual and necessary expenses"

If a student-athlete earns more than $10,000, then that money "may not exceed actual and necessary expenses for each subsequent event in the calendar year," the New York Post quoted NCAA rules as saying.

Forgo her prize money

Crawley took a tough decision and decided to forgo her prize money. If not, she would lose her NCAA eligibility.

"It seems unreal"

"I would never take the money and never risk my eligibility, but I worked my butt off this week and it seems unreal that there are football and basketball players making millions in NIL deals, and I can’t take the money that I worked so hard for," Crawley is quoted by The News & Observer.

"Dreamed about this for so long"

Losing the money is a huge blow for Crawley, who saw a dream come true at Flushing Meadows. "I’ve dreamed about this moment for so long … since I was 5 years old and old enough to know what the U.S. Open was," she is quoted on the official US Open website.

"In shock"

"After the match, when I finished, I definitely was in shock. I've had a day and night to process it, and I'm still definitely in shock. I feel like I won't really digest it until I'm about to serve or return the first point of my first [main-draw] match," she added.

Up to the next Grand Slam?

Unfortunately for Crawley – currently number 371 in the WTA singles ranking – she has not been able to replicate her success of 2023. She has failed to qualify for any of the Grand Slams, including the 2024 edition of the US Open.

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