Waikato Times

Aussie contract dispute worsens

- CRICKET

The Australian Cricketers’ Associatio­n is preparing for about 230 players to become unemployed after declaring it highly improbable the sport’s bitter pay conflict will be resolved by Friday.

Days after rejecting Cricket Australia’s re-worked offer, players’ union president Greg Dyer reiterated calls for CA chief executive James Sutherland to enter the stalled negotiatio­ns that have left players ‘‘dismayed’’ and appear set to affect upcoming tours.

The absence of Sutherland, currently in England at Internatio­nal Cricket Council meetings, has become the latest point of contention as both camps wait for the other to budge.

‘‘It’s fair to say we still remain a long way apart,’’ Dyer said yesterday.

‘‘It is extremely likely that as of July 1 we’ll be jumping over the cliff together.

‘‘Over 200 of Australia’s most senior cricketers are unemployed as of July 1.

‘‘We will be assisting in whatever way we possibly can in that, but they’re unemployed.

‘‘We’ll be looking for opportunit­ies for them as we move forward but we see the urgent need to resolve this matter because that’s the reality.’’

Last Friday, CA made the first move in the protracted standoff by offering a greater share of internatio­nal surpluses, included domestic players in its sharing arrangemen­t and opted to increase annual pay rises to state players.

But the governing body refused to relent on its position that the existing revenue-sharing model was untenable, a sticking point for the players’ union. ‘‘The fundamenta­ls of the deal are nowhere near resolved,’’ Dyer said this week.

‘‘We see the retention of the revenue-share model as being fundamenta­l and we have not been able to engage sensibly.

‘‘The players have been very flexible. They’ve said we can look at alternativ­e ways of addressing that revenue-share model, but we’ve not had any response.’’

Long term, the situation has potentiall­y dire consequenc­es that could, at worst, lead to the Ashes being canned.

In the much shorter term, July’s Australia A tour of South Africa is in doubt unless players accept temporary contracts.

Complicati­ng matters is that many in the Australia A squad are on multiyear state contracts, meaning they’ll keep being paid by Cricket Australia after June 30.

But Dyer said those multi-year contracts were ‘‘highly questionab­le’’ given they are based on the revenuesha­re arrangemen­t that remains off the table.

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