The Asian Age

Latinos want all the money

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Sao Paulo, April 2: Stars in some big Europe leagues are taking deep pay cuts amid the coronaviru­s pandemic but in South America, where most clubs and players aren’t nearly as wealthy, local footballer­s want to be shown the money. All of it.

In Brazil and Argentina, players aren’t budging, despite cuts to staffing and wage bills in other domestic leagues while the season is suspended.

In Brazil, negotiatio­ns between an associatio­n of clubs and the players’ union failed to reach any deal on pay and early vacations. Now team captains and executives are trying to reach individual decisions that legal analysts expect to end in the courts.

South America’s biggest

country has registered more than 240 deaths related to Covid-19, and the Pacaembu stadium in Sao Paulo has been transforme­d into a hospital to handle mild cases expected

for the next few weeks. There have been no profession­al matches in Brazil for two weeks.

The first pitch by Brazil’s top clubs was for a 25 per cent pay cut for players until the end of the pandemic. Executives of the even the richest clubs fear the season shutdown will spook sponsors and debt levels will soar.

But players, including those who have been paid late in the past, haven’t given way and have asked for the oversight of the national soccer confederat­ion. The union did give some ground in terms of early vacations. So far, the the Brazilian soccer confederat­ion has not intervened.

“I don’t think there is a reason (to cut). We are stopping because we need to,” Atltico Mineiro’s Guilherme Arana told Fox Sports.

He spent the first months of the year at Italy’s Atalanta, near the European coronaviru­s hotspot.

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