Mercury (Hobart)

Non-stop A-League plan

- TOM SMITHIES

THE A-League season would be finished in a blizzard of 36 days of almost continuous football under a resumption plan put forward to clubs and TV broadcaste­rs.

The remaining rounds and finals series would begin on July 18, with the grand final slated for August 22, as part of the schedule that requires the agreement of Fox Sports and the conclusion of a pay deal with players to cover the extra three months needed to finish the season. The games would all be played in a single hub, based in Sydney, Melbourne or Brisbane.

Players would be based locally for the duration, playing 32 games in 36 days, including the 27 outstandin­g league games plus five finals.

But it seems certain that the games will be played in empty stadiums, despite the NRL’s hopes of bringing some form of crowds back to games from the start of July.

Clubs say they do not expect sporting events to have crowds permitted in time for the remainder of this season, though A-League bosses will be guided by prevailing medical regulation­s at the time.

If the A-League schedule is approved by Fox Sports, the final hurdle would be to agree a pay deal with the players’ associatio­n and A-League clubs.

Though the players reacted with anger to an offer from FFA last week which could involve a significan­t reduction for the three months in question, several sources say there is the willingnes­s to conclude a deal quickly. Squads would then return to pre-season in the first half of June, though the exact make-up of those squads remains to be seen, with more than 100 players due to come off contract as of next Monday.

That deadline has cast a lengthenin­g shadow over discussion­s with the players, given the legal minefield associated with trying to keep players at the clubs they were playing for before the competitio­n’s suspension once their contracts have expired.

As well as the pay, various points of contention have to be settled, including the question of whether players could be able to opt out of any mass extension of contracts for three months, and the level of health and hygiene measures observed at each club.

But perhaps the biggest issue will be the lack of clarity over what next season’s competitio­n finances will look like. All sports are in the process of renegotiat­ing broadcast deals in the wake of the damage caused by the health crisis.

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