The Guardian (USA)

England’s cricketers privately query £2.1m bonus for ECB executives

- Ali Martin

England’s leading men’s cricketers are privately querying the bonuses set to be handed to the sport’s top administra­tors after agreeing to pay cuts and reduced prize money last year.

As revealed on Monday by the Guardian, Tom Harrison and Sanjay Patel are among a group of leading executives at the England and Wales Cricket Board due to share a £2.1m payout when a five-year Long Term Incentive Plan matures in 2022.

It comes despite the ECB announcing 62 job cuts last September and following a financial year in which the governing body had a £16.5m loss because of the pandemic. The sport as a whole lost £100m in revenue, with counties also laying off staff.

The news has not been lost on the Profession­al Cricketers’ Associatio­n after domestic players relinquish­ed £1m in prize money last year and minimum salaries in the county game were lowered; so, too, the centrally contracted men’s players who made a collective £500,000 wage donation at the start of the pandemic, before accepting a 15% pay cut last October that included win bonuses being slashed in half.

One England player told the Guardian it felt as if senior administra­tors at the ECB have “looked after themselves” while reducing the incentives for a team that has powered through 18 months of living in biosecure bubbles away from their families. There is also understood to be a degree of disquiet among ECB employees lower down the organisati­on, having worked tirelessly to deliver cricket over the past two seasons in the face of pandemicre­lated issues while colleagues have either been furloughed or made redundant.

The ECB, however, has insisted the bonus scheme set up in 2017 is not uncommon in sporting federation­s as a way of retaining people in senior leadership roles and has been based on the successful delivery of the Inspiring Generation­s strategy designed to broaden the sport’s audience in the UK.

The governing body has also pointed to the fact that senior administra­tors, including Harrison, the chief executive, were among those to take voluntary pay cuts in 2020.

 ??  ?? The ECB chief executive, Tom Harrison, will receive a share of the £2.1m bonus payout. Photograph: Philip Brown/Getty Images
The ECB chief executive, Tom Harrison, will receive a share of the £2.1m bonus payout. Photograph: Philip Brown/Getty Images

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