Irish Daily Mail

EVERTON PLAYERS TAKE 50% WAGE CUT TO SAVE £10m

- By DOMINIC KING

EVERTON’S squad have voluntaril­y taken 50 per cent pay deferrals for the next three months to protect the club’s long-term finances.

In an email to supporters sent out last night, Everton chief executive Denise Barrett-Baxendale explained the process behind the decision and revealed that talks with the players have been on-going since the coronaviru­s pandemic shut football down.

Everton manager Carlo Ancelotti, thought to earn around £9million a year, and the rest of his staff agreed in March to take 30 per cent reductions in their salaries, as did other leading figures within the club such as director of football Marcel Brands and Barrett-Baxendale.

Long-serving players such as captain Seamus Coleman and Leighton Baines, among others, have been working with club officials to see what the squad could do to combat the effects of losing so much revenue for such a prolonged period of time.

It is estimated that the wage deferrals from the playing staff alone will save Everton £10million.

Barrett-Baxendale wrote: ‘Although we now have more precise details of the coronaviru­s crisis, we have known for some weeks that the impact would be significan­t and we have taken steps wherever possible to mitigate this impact.

‘As a sign of the spirit and togetherne­ss we have as a club, I can confirm that as soon as we closed our stadium in March, our players, coaching staff, board and executive leadership team, along with other senior personnel, expressed their desire to protect the club.

‘The board of directors, together with the manager and the nine members of his backroom staff, volunteere­d to reductions and deferrals of up to 30 per cent. That willingnes­s was there to protect the club, other staff, our fans and the wider community.

‘The first-team squad have now voluntaril­y agreed to deferrals of up to 50 per cent for the next three months. Everyone who has taken these reductions and deferrals has done so in the spirit of the club.’ Everton have been proactive during the pandemic in supporting the vulnerable members of their support base. The club set up the Blue Family appeal, which has seen Ancelotti and all of his players ringing Everton fans for long chats over the telephone. The initiative has raised £400,000 and major shareholde­r Farhad Moshiri and chairman Bill Kenwright have pledged to match that figure, so the total is in the region of £800,000.

PLAYERS and staff from Dundalk, Shamrock Rovers and Derry City have all received negative results from the third round of tests for COVID-19, as part of the FAI’s programme for a safer return to action.

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