Paris: Both Rafael Nadal and the coach of Serena Williams Patrick Mouratoglou have announced their plans to stage matches at their tennis academies.
With top-level professional tennis shut down until at least July 13, both academies said they were examining the possibility of staging and broadcasting matches so fans could watch remotely.
While the Rafael Nadal academy, based on the Spanish island of Mallorca, said on its website that it was in talks with the ATP on how to proceed, Mouratoglou released a statement unveiling a planned "league" of 50 matches at his academy near Nice in the south of France and talking of "millions of US dollars in prize money".
The Nadal Academy said it was considering becoming "a campus where elite players can reside, train and compete between themselves in matches that will be televised so that fans around the world can enjoy them."
It said Nadal had originated the idea and that the academy had been in taks with ATP chairman Andrea Gaudenzi.
"Right now tennis takes a back seat and the most important thing is everyone's health, but if in the coming months the Academy can be used to help other professional players, I'd be delighted if they could come to train and also to compete," Nadal said.
"I think that competing among ourselves would help us maintain our game for when the tour restarts."