Portia Archer, the former NBA executive who has served as chief executive of the WTA Tour since August 2024, has departed the organization.Valerie Camillo, the chair of the WTA Tour, announced the move in an email to the organization’s staff Wednesday afternoon.“I am writing to share that Portia has informed us of her decision to step down from her role as CEO, effective April 20, ahead of her contract renewal. We are working through a transition plan for the leadership of the WTA Tour and will share an update on this by mid-May.”The WTA Tour did not immediately provide a comment from Archer, who was not elevated to the top job at the organization after Steve Simon, the tour’s longtime chair, announced his retirement last year.Camillo replaced Simon during the final months of last year and has been reviewing many of the major deals that the WTA Tour had in place, or was working toward, before she arrived.

Those include a planned commercial merger with the ATP Tour, and the future of the WTA Tour Finals, the organization’s marquee event, which has a three-year deal with the Ministry of Sport in Saudi Arabia, and the kingdom’s tennis federation, to hold the event in Riyadh.That deal expires after this November’s edition. Last November, Archer said the WTA Tour liked the idea of extending its tenure in the Saudi capital, where players competed for more than $15 million in prize money. By then, the WTA Tour Finals had outlived its usefulness to Saudi Arabia’s wider tennis ambitions, two people briefed on its sports ministry’s operations, speaking on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly, said.In a statement, a spokesperson for WTA Tour described the opportunity to bring the Tour Finals to a new city as “exciting.” One WTA official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to protect relationships in tennis, said cities in the Americas are in contention; another said no decision is likely until this summer.“Portia has made important contributions to our tournaments, our players, and the advancement of women’s tennis,” Camillo wrote in her email.“Among her achievements, she expanded into new markets, championed player-first initiatives, enhanced safeguarding standards, drove technological innovation, and worked tirelessly to strengthen the WTA’s role in the broader tennis community.“Please join me in thanking Portia for her leadership and dedication, and in wishing her continued success in the future.”This article originally appeared in The Athletic.Sports Business, Tennis, Women's Tennis2026 The Athletic Media Company