Australian cricket pay deal, Cricket Australia, Australian Cricketers’ Association
IT’S taken months of mudslinging, cantankerous clashes and revenue-sharing rancour but finally there is cause for optimism in Australian cricket’s protracted pay saga.
Cricket Australia (CA) and the Australian Cricketers’ Association (ACA) are on the cusp of signing a Heads of Agreement.
It could happen as early as Tuesday, according to a report in The Daily Telegraph.
However a spokesman for CA confirmed talks remained ongoing and that no formal announcement had been scheduled.
“Good progress is being made with the ACA but we will not comment on details of the negotiation, nor will we enter into any media speculation on the negotiation,” a CA spokesperson said last night.
An ACA spokesman described resolution reports as “premature”.
The warring parties remained mute on Monday, both knowing they’d come close to a deal in the past fortnight only for talks to be temporarily derailed. They found common ground regarding a raft of key issues after burning the midnight oil on Sunday, fuelling hope this week would bring a resolution. Intensive and productive negotiations continued in person on Monday. The early indication was they would run late into the night again.
It is a pointer they realise the urgency of a crisis that has the potential to affect upcoming tours of Bangladesh and India plus this summer’s Ashes. It is also in sharp contrast to the unedifying tit-for-tat that continued despite the expiration of the previous Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) a month ago, which left 230 players unemployed.
A Heads of Agreement would ensure Australia tour Bangladesh in August and clear the cloud hanging over the sport.
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