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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

  • Dismayed says:

    An interesting thing about this fiasco perpetrated by the old guys on the CA board is that the younger generation are at this stage sticking together to help future generations of cricketers. Something that is no doubt “sticking in the craw” of the old boys because these younger generations apparently have no staying power. I think the cricketers will relent somewhat for the good of the game but CA are damaged and will be viewed poorly. Chappelli came out last week and said CA was over staffed. When you consider there is more support staff than players on a tour something is wrong.

  • Eccles says:

    Jack, you write about how you would fare when facing the English attack. What you write is exactly what I saw at Carisbrook in 1985, when aging Lance Cairns faced the 17 year old Wasim Akram. Without a helmet. And consequently, it took the impact from only one delivery for Cairns to be removed from the field, heavily concussed and washed up. Admittedly, the youngster was on debut and his aim was initially a little off. The first four deliveries missed the target, but Cairns simply never saw them …

    • Jack The Insider says:

      And Wasim would have had them moving about a lot in the air. No place for old men.

      • BASSMAN says:

        What about when they sent old man Colin Cowdrey out to face Thommo at his peak in the 70’s and he was over 40 years of age? Bloody brave man. The rest of the Pom batsmen were all swollen up after being pummelled by Thommo and Co. In one of the bravest knocks ever, I can still recall the Old Man getting 40 odd. I remember because I was in charge of a one teacher school teaching 7 classes of 35kids K-6 in far western NSW. Bloody ot and no air con in a pokey little room!They were great times though and such supportive parents.

        • Trivalve says:

          I remember because I was there. Cringeworthy watching him just let the ball hit him. I got a couple on the upper leg at practice a couple of weeks back. The speed of delivery was probably a tenth of Thommo’s but in the low temperature you knew you’d missed it and were reminded for several days afterward.

          • Jack The Insider says:

            He had that manyu jumpes on he looked like the Michelin man. Courageous stuff from old MCC but man, he would have some decent doughnuts on his guts.

          • Lou oTOD says:

            Jack, the heavy twill outer jumper would have protected old Colin, it would have taken the wool of two sheep to make it.

            No chance of a deflection off the bat to body to keeper, he was wrapped in a blanket. It was like bowling in the nets for Thommo though I must admit.

      • Eccles says:

        That’s why Cairns didn’t see the first four …

  • Dismayed says:

    Apologies off topic but far out. 0.82% tax paid on revenues. Receiving subsidisation through the PBS to.
    https://www.michaelwest.com.au/gilead-top-brass-still-missing-despite-desperate-search-efforts/

  • Dismayed says:

    I missed this article but I am with Bella. This is the ex Rio guys way of doing what he did previously, force down remuneration with individual contracts. While he collects over $4 million a year?

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    Fibre to the Node, Mr Insider, another short sighted cock up by PM Turnbull. A short term fix but a long term failure imho.

    • Boadicea says:

      It was always going to be a disaster, HB. Right from the uncosted, shoot from the hip, back of the envelope idea of Rudd and Conroy.

      • Dismayed says:

        Polly want a cracker? do you have any other setting. Parroting your “teams” view without evidence says a LOT about you.

      • Jean Baptiste says:

        It was going great guns till Turnbull fixed it.

        • Boadicea says:

          It was going, JB. Very slowly (implementation not speed) and way, way, way over budget. Have you forgotten all the dramas trying to live up to what was promised. Undercut contractors simply not pitching up if the installation was anything above simple I could go on, but just cast your mind back.

          • Dismayed says:

            More ridiculous falsehoods from Yvonne. The current mixed technologies initial cost was supposedly $29 billion that has blown out past $60 billion looking at ending up somewhere north of $90 billion. All the research shows the full FTTP and the expected advances would have been around the same sum. Stop parroting rubbish. Just how is the government responsible for contractors failing to turn up? Ridiculous?

          • JackSprat says:

            Dismal,
            That is the biggest load of BS that I have ever heard.
            You are quoting estimates of a full network to the house.
            So typical! Never let the facts get in the way of the stuff coming out pf propaganda central.

          • Jean Baptiste says:

            That’s the way we roll in Oz. What are ya? A communist or something?

          • Boadicea says:

            God you really are dumb Dismayed. What a load of crap

      • Trivalve says:

        Yes, Rudd and Conroy designed the whole thing, mapped it out and dictated the networking protocols that were to be used. Not a consulting engineer in sight. Shameful!

    • JackSprat says:

      Henry, they cannot even keep the speed up with the current setup.
      If you had fibre to the house, it would be not much different at the moment because of the downstream equipment.
      One can always run fibre to the house over time once the basic backbone network is in and it will eventually happen as copper deteriorates .
      Most people do not need the really high speeds.

      • Boadicea says:

        Agree JS. I have fibre to the house but I only pay for the 25mbs download and 5 upload. That’s good enough for me. – and for the average user.

  • Jean Baptiste says:

    Mr Henry Blofeld Esq.

    Regarding North Korea, I think the following quote might be edifying, if such a thing is within the realms of possibility, for you.
    https://www.someecards.com/usercards/viewcard/MjAxNC1lYjU4YWY3MWVlNThkMjdi/

    • Henry Blofeld says:

      Goodness me, Mr Baptiste, maybe you should send that to Kimmie Jong-un as he is the man threatening us all. He keeps dropping dark “hints” that he is almost ready to obliterate the free world. Thank goodness we have POTUS Trump’s “nuclear umbrella” to stand under my dear chap. A mosquito its certainly not! Cheers. P.S. well done POTUS Trump at the G20/19 for not partaking in any vote on this Climate Change rubbish. He is “not for turning” dear friend

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    Another “Barry Crocker” of a Newspoll for PM Turnbull and his hopeless Liberals, Mr Insider. That makes 16 Negative ones in a row, a combination of Turnbull hopelessly out of touch with voters and ex ousted PM Abbott’s continuous sniping from the “bleachers”, something he said he wouldn’t do. Can only assume that Abbott now works for Bill Shorten who has a grin as wide as Sydney Heads!
    http://tinyurl.com/y8ttzyhp

  • Milton says:

    Tracy – exciting stuff, as I type, downhill in the slippery downhill in the tour du frog.
    And now back on the flat!

    • Tracy says:

      Bloody awful crash wasn’t it.

    • Boadicea says:

      Richie’s crash at 70km/hr + was horrible to watch, Milton. He really is lucky not to have been far more seriously injured than he is. Thrown through the air like a rag doll. Why send these guys down wet steep descents on bikes that can reach these speeds these days?.
      It’s like driving a racing car without all the safety precautions a car would have. Crazy stuff.

  • JackSprat says:

    I wonder what would have happened if the findings were the opposite?

    This was a study implemented by Turnbull to look at bias in Public Service Recruitment.

    “What we found is that de-identifying applications at the shortlisting stage of recruitment does not appear to assist
    in promoting diversity in hiring. In fact, in the trial we found that overall, APS officers generally discriminated in
    favour of female and minority candidates. ”

    https://pmc.gov.au/sites/default/files/publications/BETA-report-going-blind-to-see-more%20clearly.pdf

  • BASSMAN says:

    This cricket fracas goes as far back as when Chappelli walked out for a dig at the MCG in front of nearly 100,000 people and said “Why I am only getting $300 for this?’ The Don? He told him to go away when Chappelli fronted him for a pay for all the players.
    The din between the players and the Board is over the revenue sharing model which Cricket Australia (C.A.) wishes to change after 20 odd years. Presently players get about 23% of the revenue they generate. Under a new system this would be reduced to less than 8% (stated in The Terror). They are not asking for anymore….just the same. CA wants to stop this and offer individual contracts-a classic power play. Why? Because individuals are more easy to deal with than a cricketer’s union AND…more easily to exploit and hold power over their workforce. This is John Howard’s cricket ‘WorkNOchoices’ without a doubt. Maybe they should call in the ‘cricket tragic’ to mediate.

    The bloke heavily involved in the ‘negotiations’ is an ex-union basher from Rio Tinto mines so we can all see where he is coming from. Wouldn’t know a rubber from a rubber. The players want the present system maintained which with improved contacts to shield players, big bashers and the women, the breeding grounds for our top players. It will be a case of who can hold out the longest. Keep in mind, the Board does NOT bring in the crowds. It is the top 20odd players in the land that do that. Cricket Australia? Nobody knows why it takes just on 300 administrative staff to oversee cricket when not so long ago it worked out of a cupboard in George St Sydney.What the hell do all of these highly paid people do? Just on that, there is extreme secrecy as to how CA spends the half a billion cricket revenue. Nobody sees anything! There is bugger all transparency.

    The top players can earn squillions in sponsorships on the continent and in the short game. If all negotiations fail CA would not be able to use the top players images in their advertising campaigns anymore. Is it the greed of the players? Don’t think so when they pull 60-70,000 to a game. If the players maintain their share of the revenue the administrators of the game will still get 77% of the gate and nobody ever questions that or how and where they spend it. In the USA, players receive 50% of the revenue they generate, European Soccer (England, France, Spain, Italy) players receive 70% of the revenue. Our players get 23%. I am aware only the top players earn big bread…for example shield players are on $200k, a rookie on about $40k which is piss poor but a new deal it is hoped would see this improve.

    Jack as usual over the wall is brilliant and his closing note ‘do it once, do it with fiber’ (fix it or else) is pressing. One side is going to have to engage in an unbelievable backdown for the good of the game. Maybe the (retired and active) cricketers themselves should run the game once again? I dunno. The public want to see the best players representing Australia or they just won’t front at the turnstiles. There may not be much money around anyway what with Ch 10 stuffed and 9 not prepared to fork out big bread for transmission rights anymore.

    Hey I think T.Bull is up to something. It is well know some Lib backbenchers are putting up a private members bill for SSM. Day in and day out T.Bull says it is not on and the plebiscite remains Lib Policy.
    Personally though, I believe T.Bull is behind the whole thing. A cagey way of screwing the Hard Right in his party
    via the back door!
    1. He firmly believes in SSM being decided in the parliament
    2. When Abbott was leader he spoke in cabinet for a free vote
    3. If it gets up via someone else he cannot get any blame from his enemies
    4. He wants it off the agenda before the next election so Electricity Bill cannot claim it.
    Could I be right?

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