Geelong Advertiser

Lawyers buy into rift

AFLW players urged to reject new wages deal

- JASON PHELAN

LAWYERS representi­ng disgruntle­d AFLW players are urging their clients to reject a new collective bargaining agreement to be put forward by the AFL Players’ Associatio­n and the AFL.

The protracted and at times acrimoniou­s negotiatio­ns on a new deal were further muddied this week when a group of players concerned at a lack of consultati­on by the AFLPA engaged workers’ rights firm Maurice Blackburn Lawyers.

It follows women’s football trailblaze­r Susan Alberti’s call for AFLW players to break away from the AFLPA and form their own union.

A vote on a new CBA covering player conditions and the length of seasons during the next three years is expected to be voted on as soon as today.

“If I were a player I’d be voting no because I wouldn’t want to vote for something I hadn’t seen,” senior associate at Maurice Blackburn Jacinta Lewin said.

“I wouldn’t be voting for anything where there hadn’t been really clear and transparen­t outlines of what I’m actually getting.

“What am I getting in my pocket? What does the season look like going forward? Where is the certainty around the game?

“This is really a classic example of inadequate consultati­on and not listening to the players’ representa­tives.”

This year’s expanded 10team AFLW season was run over seven home-and-away round with a preliminar­y final weekend followed by the grand final, won by Adelaide.

With Gold Coast, St Kilda, West Coast and Richmond to join the competitio­n in 2020, one of the main sticking points has been the length of the season and player contracts.

Lewin declined to reveal how many players she is representi­ng or what legal recourse is open to them should the CBA be passed.

“There are a number of options available to them but at this stage they’re really committed to trying to work with the AFLPA,” she said. “But it’s just gotten to a stage where they really don’t feel like their voices are being heard.

“Their concerns aren’t being heard and really there’s just been inadequate consultati­on in regard to the vote that’s been put forward.

“But if it’s a no vote then that’s a very clear message that the AFLPA needs to listen to their players and they will really need to do some soul searching about they are going to better represent the AFLW players going forward.”

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