As a professional tennis player, Scott reached a career-high singles ranking of No. 210 and doubles ranking of No. 69 in the world.[1][2][5] He also won one doubles title.[1][2]
While at the WTA, Scott oversaw a fivefold increase in sponsorship money and a 250% increase in total revenue.[5][6] This included the largest sponsorship in the history of women's athletics, a six-year, $88-million deal with Sony Ericsson.[3][4][7] Scott also successfully formed sponsorships with Whirlpool, Gatorade, and Bed Bath & Beyond.[3]
Prize money increased 40% during Scott's time with the WTA.[6] Scott was an advocate for equal pay. Before Scott's tenure, two of the four Grand Slam tournaments, Wimbledon and the French Open, awarded less prize money to women than to men. Scott successfully lobbied for the increase of women's prize money at Wimbledon and the French Open to be equal to that of men's prize money, so that men's and women's prize money are now equal at all Grand Slam events.[6]
Among Scott's other achievements was the securing of a contract with Eurosport to broadcast WTA tennis in 54 countries.[3] Scott also oversaw new investments of $710 million in tennis stadiums.[5][6]
On January 20, 2021, the Pac-12 Conference announced that Larry Scott's tenure as commissioner would end on June 30.[9] Scott received criticism during his tenure for overspending, including his controversial decision to shift the Pac-12 offices into a multi-story building in San Francisco that cost conference members a total of $92 million in rent over 11 years - a rate significantly higher than that of other Power 5 conference headquarters.[10][11][12]
Commentators assess Scott's tenure as a failure that led to the effective dissolution of the conference under successor George Kliavkoff two years later. A major issue was the decision to launch the Pac-12 Network without a broadcast partner, and then fail to negotiate carriage rights with DirecTV. Access issues bedeviled the network throughout Scott's tenure, reducing the visibility of the conference.[13][14]