Umpires on sliding scale (14 Aug 1998)
THE International Cricket Council have defended their policy of using national pay scales for their umpires panel
14-Aug-1998
14 August 1998
Umpires on sliding scale
By Peter Deeley
THE International Cricket Council have defended their policy of
using national pay scales for their umpires panel.
The ICC yesterday refuted claims that Pakistan umpire Javed
Akhtar received only £158 for officiating in the Headingley Test
as figures were released showing he actually picked up £662.
Akhtar's payment was made up of a fee of 12,000 Pakistani rupees
(£162) from his national board together with a maximum ICC Test
fee of £500. He also received a separate £600 payment to cover
out-of-pocket expenses which works out at £50 a day during his
time in England.
Akhtar, who was involved in several controversial decisions
during the final England-South Africa Test, is "keeping out of
the debate" raging over his fee.
The umpire is on holiday staying with friends before he returns
home. A contact said: "He feels he has been pilloried and does
not want to make any comment."
Umpires are paid approximately the same as Test players,
according to the country they represent. While an England player
gets a basic fee of something over £3,200 for an appearance, the
South Africans earn just over £1,000 a match. A Pakistan
cricketer would get only a fraction of these amounts.
Barrie Leadbeater, chairman of the English Umpires' Association -
who is the third official for the Sri Lanka-South Africa one-day
international at Nottingham today - said: "We know overseas
umpires don't earn as much as our own but it is up to the
respective boards in their own countries to sort it out.
"The ICC must be happy with the situation and so are the overseas
umpires themselves. Otherwise they wouldn't accept the payments
given them.
"You must take into account the big differences in standards of
living. While the money earned by Pakistan umpires may not seem
high to us, it may represent a substantial wage to them."
Zimbabwean match referee Ahmed Ebrahim is not allowed to make
direct comments on umpiring matters but said that in general he
"sympathised" with the intense pressure officials were
experiencing.
"I think we must not forget how important a phrase that old
cliche 'it's not cricket' is for us all and react accordingly,"
he said.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)