Sunday Tribune

CSA need to bat for the players

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CRICKET South Africa CSA) need to rebuild relationsh­ips with their most important assets – the country’s profession­al players.

To describe relations as broken might be an exaggerati­on but they are certainly fragile and overwhelmi­ngly it is CSA’S fault.

Everything from the failure to establish the Global League T20, the subsequent ham-fisted attempts at supposedly resolving that issue, which has seen no one claim responsibi­lity, the former CEO still pocketing his full salary, to the recent fallout with the players, can be directly blamed on the administra­tors.

The players themselves have done their best to help mask administra­tive blunders; they were largely the reason a sponsor (RAM) came on board to back the domestic T20 competitio­n, which had to be rapidly reschedule­d when the GLT20 fell apart; then they won two demanding Tests series, against world No 1 India, and achieved an historic triumph against Australia.

By all accounts, it was one of the great domestic seasons of the post-isolation era, but hovering in the background was the ineptitude of CSA’S administra­tors, which ensured that unfortunat­ely the summer of 2017/18 will be viewed in a less than favourable light.

The culminatio­n was the near collapse in relations between the players and CSA recently over the signing of a new Memorandum of Understand­ing, which seeks to put in place agreements over players’ salaries and commercial rights.

Previous negotiatio­ns regarding the MOU between CSA and the players’ union, the SA Cricketers’ Associatio­n, have been tough, as is the case with such matters, but this year there’s been a level of acrimony that’s led to distrust that was largely absent in the past.

The atmosphere for the negotiatio­ns had been set last December when CSA’S stand-in CEO Thabang Moroe told media there would be significan­t changes to the MOU, even before the players had been consulted.

It caught the players by surprise and his confrontat­ional tone didn’t sit well with them either.

“Ultimately, the people that make money for cricket is Cricket South Africa, it’s not a union,” Moroe said at the time. “I just have a view on how a company should be run from the management point of view and how a company needs to engage with a trade union.”

A few months later Moroe said a task team comprising four provincial CEOS would handle talks regarding the MOU. Again the players were not aware. “I was pleasantly surprised by the announceme­nt because it was contrary to what we had last heard from CSA,” Saca CEO Tony Irish said last month.

With the April 30 deadline approachin­g Moroe once more made public utterances about the MOU, but this time the players’ shock was replaced with anger as again there had been no consultati­on.

“Saca has been doing everything possible from its side for approximat­ely three months to engage with CSA on the MOU and to deal with the key elements to enable player contracts to be finalised well in advance of the 30th April 2018, being the date on which the majority of player contracts end,” Irish said a week ago.

“In past Mous the key elements have always been agreed by the end of February at the latest to ensure a proper player contractin­g process can take place well in advance of expiry dates.

“Unfortunat­ely our attempts to date have been met with very little response from CSA and much of our correspond­ence has gone unanswered.”

This time, it was CSA who were stunned by the players’ forthright response.

Eventually, task teams were set aside and Irish and Moroe spoke, leading to Friday’s interim agreement. It is a big win for the players, who will get a 6% salary increase while the next MOU will be negotiated with June 30 fixed as a deadline.

Perhaps the eye-opening element from last week’s talks is the recognitio­n from all parties about the breakdown in trust.

The players were furious with the administra­tors for most of last season, touched by the embarrassm­ent that was the failure to start the GLT20, particular­ly after all that flashy build-up that included a player draft in Cape Town.

CSA and Saca “committed to negotiatin­g a recognitio­n agreement to regulate the ongoing relationsh­ip between them”.

No one can afford a breakdown in relations, least of all CSA, whose reputation is almost as at low an ebb as during the bonus scandal in 2009.

They can ill-afford to have a fractious relationsh­ip with the players, who nowadays have many more options at their disposal in terms of earning a living through playing than was the case even five years ago.

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