Humble servant of the Nation

Cricket fans treated like mugs

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Take a knee, readers.

The world watches and waits while North Korea’s psychotic-in-chief, Kim Jong-un, draws radiations symbols on a map of the Pacific. The abiding image we have is of Jong-un, a genuine Bond villain from central casting, laughing maniacally with a fluffy cat sitting on his lap. But of course Jong-un wouldn’t be stroking it. He’d be eating it.

That is not the biggest of our problems.

Nor should we be overly concerned about the death of pluralism in this country as the Liberal Party dithers over whether to sell the office furniture on eBay and walk away with some dignity intact or muddles on for a couple more years.

There is a bigger crisis facing the nation at the moment and that is the threat of no cricket this summer, no Ashes series at least or if there is one it will not be played at a serious competitive level.

Sure, if the selectors called me up, I guess I could put the pads on and stride purposefully across the picket line before striding purposefully to the crease, face up to Anderson, Broad and Co. and take the shine off the new ball. With my head.

But no one is going to pay good money to watch that. All right, maybe one or two of you might obtain some obscene pleasure from watching a man clearly out of his depth being repeatedly and heavily concussed. It’s what keeps the turnstiles spinning in boxing after all.

Cricket Australia and the players, represented by Australian Cricketers’ Association have been at loggerheads for months. The Australia A tour of South Africa was abandoned yesterday. A tour of Bangladesh is the next cab off the rank and if no agreement can be reached, the Ashes series, beginning in November will be the next to have a red line ruled through it.

The big problem is, like many seemingly intractable industrial disputes, both sides hold perfectly valid positions.

For those of us who played cricket at some reasonable level, player payments where they were offered, were uncomplicated. A dollar a run, five dollars a catch and twenty bucks a wicket. Something of that order.

At the elite level it’s a bit more abstruse. The Memorandum of Understanding first established in 1997 between Cricket Australia and the Australian Cricketers’ Association now runs to a Tolkenian 600 pages. I strongly suspect no one has read it from go to woah.

Broadly speaking the players’ position is the revenue arrangements that have been in place must remain in place. Cricket Australia wants to do away with revenue sharing and place cricketers on individual contracts.

The MOU has now expired, leaving players without any contractual arrangement. As it stood, players earned 24.5 cents in every dollar of Cricket Australia revenue with further spoils to be enjoyed where a surplus exists between projected and actual revenues over the period of the MOU.

The AFL has agreed to provide the players in its competition with earnings based on a 28 per cent share of revenue. Despite this, Cricket Australia believes its revenue sharing arrangement diminishes its ability to help fund and support the game at grassroots level as well as continuing to support the development of women’s cricket at all levels.

report in The Australian yesterday, indicated the players had rejected an overture from Cricket Australia to carry over a $58.5 million dollar surplus between projected and actual revenues of which $30 million would go to the game’s biggest names, some of whom are now happily ensconced in retirement.

This is a negotiating tactic and a pretty rough one at that — a bald-faced attempt to make players look greedy and self-serving. What Cricket Australia mentioned only in passing is the offer would oblige it to renege on an agreement it signed off on five years ago.

The players’ greatest concerns are that those who come after them will be dudded and obliged to negotiate their salaries on a one-by-one basis.

This dispute has its genesis during the seven Test series against England in Australia in 1970-71 when Ian Chappell looked into the stands at the 60,000 strong crowd at the G and wondered why he, as captain, was making a measly $300 a game.

Chappelli’s moment of quiet reflection ultimately led to the establishment of a rogue competition, World Series Cricket. Now elite players have a wealth of competitions not within CA’s sphere of management to choose from. Those lucky and/or talented enough to have their teeth checked and forearms probed before going up on the block at the Indian Premier League can earn millions in little more than a month or for those slightly less fortunate, any one of a number of T-20 competitions in the West Indies, England, Pakistan, Bangladesh and the United Arab Emirates offer participants spectacular incomes.

This is a grim reminder the current group of players at the elite level can walk away.

The players are the game. It’s not much of a sport without them. If there’s any doubt about that ask yourself if you would like to see Cricket Australia CEO, James Sutherland with new nut in hand come off the long run this summer? Maybe the nine member Cricket Australia board could become flanneled fools, too. Mark Taylor, 52, would field at slip while another board member, Michael Kasprowicz, 45, could hurl a few passable deliveries down back of a length while the other seven members, very talented in their chosen business fields, would not exactly capture the nation’s imagination.

While Cricket Australia worries about the game’s development at park and club levels, they seem to have forgotten the real grassroots of the game are the fans who contribute directly to CA revenues by walking through the turnstiles and indirectly by switching on their TVs to the cricket.

And the fans are being treated like mugs while the two parties haggle over slices of a pie that is estimated to be worth about half a billion dollars over the next five years.

Get it fixed and get it fixed now.

This article was originally published at The Australian 7 July 2017

333 Comments

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    The late great Richie Benaud would be aghast, Mr Insider, right now he’s probably rolling over in his grave, may he RIP.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U_sklEdyVzA

  • Nightclub Owner says:

    What about the poor WAGs?

  • Penny. says:

    I have been following this closely JTI and I have to say I am on the players’ side. CA will not come out of this well. The ex Rio Tinto guy’s agenda seems to be all about power (to him)……having a legacy as the guy who tried to stuff Australian cricket won’t look good on his CV when he moves in to his next power play

    • Jack The Insider says:

      What CA has failed to do is ckearly enunciate their position and why. Are they really saying that the existing revenue share agreement does not allow CA to adequately fund cricket at grassroots level, with a projected income of over two billion over the next five years?, like you I get the feeling some ideological argument is at play.

      • jack says:

        that’s the problem in a nutshell, at least as far as I know they have utterly failed to make their case.

        in fact their actions have aroused suspicions that they want more money to fritter away on High Performance Managers and KPIs and Wellness Forms and more of that bollocks.

        read somewhere there are now 600 paid employees on the cricket gravy train.

      • smoke says:

        problems with that argument, eh??

        seems to be the odd home grown jet turns up each big bash…

  • smoke says:

    the game can’t afford this shit….cricket ranked 6th behind soccer .wrt participants iirc.

    CA needs to wake up…cede this battle for now but press on for future reform..softly softly..

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    I agree with those who may opine that whilst the groundsmen (and women) should be roundly applauded for maintaining the game at the grassroots level, this cannot be said of the apparent toxic standoff being presented as civil discourse between Cricket Australia and the Australian Cricketer’s Association.

    The failure to accept the primacy of the players reflects the cruel reality gnawing at the heart of sport. It may well lead to a widespread destruction of sporting culture as the protagonists are drawn to a darker spectre of power and distance until we fall into the final singularity.

    It makes our present human condition, no matter how grand or pathetic, seem trivial.

  • Jean Baptiste says:

    457 Visas. Easy.

    • Boadicea says:

      I should imagine all our players will piss off to lucrative contracts overseas somewhere JB. 457’s irrelevant.

  • Tracy says:

    Warner isn’t the right one to be fronting for the players especially as he’s just prurchased his fourth property over the million buck mark. Yes, that should be neither here no there but it’s awfully hard to feel sympathetic when kids sport is costing you a bomb (or did, past that now) and it’s a bank loan to buy a ticket to sit your bum on a seat to watch anything in first class sport.
    Two tickets for the Bledisloe were a $175 a piece for me and the husband last year and it wasn’t a pretty sight, bad enough we were surrounded by those from across the ditch enjoying themselves immensely, not going this year even though the ARU has been battering me with emails and luckily we haven’t bought Ashes tickets either.

    • JackSprat says:

      Tracy – on the NBN.
      Did you have an optus email address and did you have any option of keeping it?.

      • Tracy says:

        We have our own personal email account so we can transfer it at anytime.
        Suffice to say, I’m running on NBN with my iPad as is husband on his, offspring are still on Optus until we get the cable and switch sorted out, I’m impressed despite myself download 92.65, upload 37.64.
        It’s coming in via the FOXTEL connection and the gateway is sitting next to the tv, with the NBN modem just behind it, I’m sure as people sign up in our street speeds will slow but if Amaysim (who we chose) has bought the bandwidth we should be ok.
        We used to think a download of 30 on the Optus was good.

        • Jack The Insider says:

          Reckon that’s the issue, Tracy. As more people sign up, it seems more problems arise and not just with speed issues. We were the first in our street to sign up and for five months it was perfect. Good speeds no drop outs. Last six weeks, five to ten drop outs a day. That tells me some NBN techs don’t possess the skills to program and maintain a relatively small network at the node. That’s our experience anyway. Telstra have been very good at isolating and identifying the problem but NBN not so good at fixing it.

  • Milton says:

    Further re the Ashes series, having had to book accommodation in Adelaide at a time that coincides with the big game, I can be sure that if it doesn’t go ahead, with all the top players, or at all, there will be a lot of seriously pissed off and out of pocket fans. LouOTD being just one of them!

    • Lou oTOD says:

      Mate I ‘m pissed off already, and we are months away. If the Test turns to shit, I’m thinking of sub letting the accommodation now that prostitution has finally become legal in SA.

      No, I’m not involved. Not so sure about CA though.

  • Milton says:

    On cricket, Jack can you get your contacts to organise a re-score of the old tied test at the Gabba, early 60’s?

  • Bella says:

    Not a fan of cricket but it’s hard to understand how CA has let it come down to this.

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