Jamaica Gleaner

Doing it the Australian way

- Tony Becca Contributo­r

AUSTRALIA’S SPORT minister, Greg Hunt, seems to be a man after my own heart.

Australian cricket appears to be heading for a collision over a pay dispute in which Cricket Australia (CA) is proposing a pay structure in which there will now be a salary cap for senior players so that there will be more money for grass-roots programmes, for infrastruc­ture, and for women players.

The Australian Cricketers Associatio­n (ACA), however, is bitterly against it; they want what has been going on for the past 20 years to continue. Australian players are supporting the associatio­n, the CA has refused a request from the ACA for an independen­t mediator, and everything points to a stand-off.

PLAYERS FACE UNEMPLOYME­NT

Cricket Australia, the game’s governing body, has set June 30 as the deadline for an agreement to be reached otherwise the players will be unemployed. It has been trying to talk to the players individual­ly, and the players have said, “Talk to the ACA.”

The end result is that Australian­s are now worried about the effects on the Ashes series scheduled later this year, and because of that, Hunt has said that the government may step in to provide “good officers”.

After saying that the government was hesitant about being too interventi­onal about contract disputes in profession­al sport, Hunt said that there was, however, scope to act as a mediator if the dispute looked likely to threaten the Ashes series.

“If it got to a last-minute situation, I suggest that we would offer to provide good officers brokering between the parties. It would be unthinkabl­e that in the end we wouldn’t have a full team.”

Hunt went on to say, “The players love playing for Australia Cricket Australia knows that this is not just fundamenta­l to sports, it is part of our national identity.”

He also went on to say: “What I don’t want to do across the board is to try and step in and be a mediator in a contract dispute. If there was a fundamenta­l threat, at an appropriat­e time we would offer to work with them. All the advice I have is that with six months to travel, the Ashes Test will be proceeding with a full Australian team and on Boxing Day you’ll have Steve Smith, David Warner, and the rest of the team out there.”

The dispute is raging on, and guess what: the Cricket Australia is right; Australian cricketers are well paid, are highly paid, and on top of that, Cricket Australia has responsibi­lity for other cricketers, for women cricketers, and also for the continued developmen­t of Australian cricket.

The Australia Cricketers Associatio­n is also right, in that every man has a right to as much compensati­on, to ask for as much compensati­on, as he can get for his skills.

Cricket, today, is a business, it is big business, and business is business.

When one remembers that money is needed to build the sport and to provide for the continued developmen­t of the sport and its players, and that money should come from the sport, good sense, however, should prevail.

NAT’L INTEREST

The question is why is the Australian government concerned about it, and why is it planning to get involved if things are not resolved in time for the Ashes series.

The answer, or so it appears to me, is that cricket is important in Australia, cricket is part of the fabric of the country, cricket is part of the national identity, the Australian­s believe that their best players must represent Australia, and whenever this is threatened, in whatever way and by whom, it must be dealt with.

And the best way to deal with it is by the interventi­on of the government, which speaks and acts on behalf of the people, and who is there to protect the people’s interest.

The government cannot, and should not, try to dip its fingers into everything, but when it comes to things of national interest, to something as important to the people as cricket, it should at least have the authority to intervene and mediate if necessary.

The West Indies have been going through all kinds of strife for over 20 years now, resulting in the West Indies team playing without most of its best players on a number of occasions, the West Indies team pulling out of a tour, players being omitted for all kinds of reasons, and the team has been losing match after match.

The people have been disgruntle­d, and the politician­s have talked a lot about what is going on but nothing has happened, except for the resignatio­n of one prime minister from a CARICOM cricket committee.

Everything remains the same. Almost every day, another cricketer is missing from West Indies duty. The West Indies keep losing. No one seems answerable to anyone, despite the so-called importance of cricket to the region.

Is it because the West Indies is not really one nation, but rather a group of separate nations with different government­s, flags, and constituti­ons trying, unsuccessf­ully, to live someone’s, or some people’s, impossible dream to live like one nation?

The more I think about it, the more it comes home to me that that is so: getting a consensus in the West Indies is almost impossible, and that, maybe, is why one team to represent the West Indies in sports such as tennis, table tennis, track and field, and football years ago failed, and failed badly.

The Indian government stepped in recently to save Indian cricket, and the Australian government is about to step in to save Australian cricket. When will the West Indies government­s step in, or if because of circumstan­ces they cannot do so, when will CARICOM step in, not to chastise the board, not to chastise the players, but to mediate between the two sides in the interest of West Indies cricket and the satisfacti­on of the West Indian people?

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