ECB and players settle their World Cup financial games (23 April 1999)
The unfortunate and unnecessarily protracted saga over England's World Cup contracts ended yesterday when Alec Stewart rang Tim Lamb, chief executive of the England and Wales Cricket Board, to confirm that the players were happy with the altered
23-Apr-1999
23 April 1999
ECB and players settle their World Cup financial games
Christopher Martin-Jenkins
The unfortunate and unnecessarily protracted saga over England's
World Cup contracts ended yesterday when Alec Stewart rang Tim Lamb,
chief executive of the England and Wales Cricket Board, to confirm
that the players were happy with the altered terms.
Various final options had been offered by the board to Stewart, Angus
Fraser and Neil Fairbrother, the three senior players who have been
acting as representatives for the selected team of 15.
The one accepted yesterday - although each player still has to sign
his own contract and they are apparently determined as a group to
delay the process until the board's deadline next Monday - differs
financially and in matters of administrative detail from the
original. This was shown to Stewart before the team left for Lahore
and Sharjah three weeks ago.
The captain and Simon Pack, the international teams director, had
discussed the matter before Christmas during the tour of Australia
but Stewart requested adjustments when the contract was shown to him
in the last week of March.
Pack believed, reasonably enough, that there should be a large
measure of incentive in the payments - the better the team did the
more they would be paid - but the players, prepared to accept the
principle, nevertheless asked for a larger basic fee than was first
proposed and were later annoyed that it was not until the last week
of the Sharjah trip that Lamb, attending an International Cricket
Council meeting, brought the contracts out.
Lengthy discussions followed and only now have terms been mutually
agreed. Should England win the World Cup it is estimated each player
would earn about £60,000, more than the two favourites, Australia and
South Africa. The altered basic fee is understood to be £12,000 but
the players will continue to receive their county salaries, their
employers being compensated by the board.
The England team will now meet in Canterbury on Sunday week to start
preparations for the first match against Sri Lanka at Lord's on May
14. They are still debating whether to accompany their signatures
with a public statement expressing dissatisfaction with the way that
the matter has been handled by the board.
That would be ill-advised. They need to concentrate on the business
of trying to make the most of home advantage to win the World Cup for
the first time, despite defeats in seven of their last eight matches.
The Sri Lankans have been in ever greater disarray in the last few
days and it has taken government intervention to settle the disputed
re-election of their board of control and their president, Thilanga
Sumathipala.
A claim that his re-election was undemocratic is being examined by a
senior judge in Colombo but the minister for sport has set up an ad
hoc committee to keep the game's administration going and finance for
the players' visas and their allowances in England has now been made
available. The World Cup organising committee said yesterday that the
Sri Lankan team will arrive in England on Saturday.
Pakistan, due in England on May 3, still have to confirm who will
take over as coach from Javed Miandad after his sudden resignation on
Wednesday. No country produces so many talented cricketers, often
despite rather than because of their system, but no country has an
equal capacity for internecine strife.
After a run of success in Test and one-day cricket, Pakistan's
chances of carrying their form into the World Cup can only have been
disrupted by the disaffection of the little maestro.
Australia and the West Indies, currently approaching the climax of
one of the best-fought series of one-day internationals for some
time, have problems, too. The two most important individuals on
either side, Glenn McGrath and Brian Lara, are still injured, McGrath
with an ankle sprain and Lara with an aggravated hairline fracture of
his right wrist. He will not play in the last two matches against
Australia, but the fact that injured players will be allowed to be
replaced in the tournament (although they cannot then be reinstated)
means Lara is sure to come to England.
Australia have a second indisposed bowler in Adam Dale, who went home
from the Caribbean with pneumonia. His unfailingly accurate swing
bowling had established him as a key member of their attack,
especially if typical early-season conditions prevail. The advantages
of playing a highly competitive series so close to the tournament
will be offset if injuries recur.
At least there will be nothing wrong with team spirit in the
Australian and West Indian camps, something which might not be said
of several of the other teams. There has been dissension in the
Bangladesh camp over the original omission of their former captain,
Akram Khan, and the senior Kenya batsman, Maurice Odumbe, has been
fined for criticising coach Alvin Kallicharran. It is not just the
organisers at Lord's who are hoping things will be all right on the
night.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)