Maria Sharapova opts not to legally change her last name to Sugarpova
Tennis star Maria Sharapova has decided not to change her last name to Sugarpova for the upcoming two-week U.S. Open after all.
And it was such a good idea, too.
The planned name change, first reported by The Times of London, was intended to help promote her Sugarpova line of premium gummy candies and gum. But according to her agent, Max Eisenbud, “We ultimately decided against it.”
“Maria has pushed her team to do fun, out-of-the-box-type things to get the word out about Sugarpova,” Eisenbud told ESPN.
“In Miami, we’re going to fill a glass truck full of candy and drive it around town. This was an idea that fell along those lines. But, at the end of the day, we would have to change all her identification, she has to travel to Japan and China right after the tournament, and it was going to be very difficult.”
Of course it’s difficult. Otherwise, celebrities everywhere would be legally changing their surnames for just a week or two as part of marketing campaigns.
ALSO:
Russian athlete: Reaction to kiss photograph a ‘sick fantasy’
After one match, Maria Sharapova drops Jimmy Connors as coach
LeBron James’ Instagram video of police escort prompts investigation
More to Read
Go beyond the scoreboard
Get the latest on L.A.'s teams in the daily Sports Report newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.