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Cricket: Pay dispute ended as Aussie players’ union sign new deal

Players had been unemployed since old deal expired on June 30

Cricke t Australia and the players’ union yesterday reached an agreement to end a bitter, long-running pay dispute that had threatened to derail upcoming tours to Bangladesh and India and the home Ashes series against England.

About 230 of Australia’s elite professional cricketers have effectively been unemployed since the previous pay deal expired on June 30.

But after 10 months of negotiations between the sport’s national administration and the union, the players are set to get a pay raise, to maintain a revenue-sharing model — the subject of most discord in the dispute — and to get back pay for the period between the deals.

Cricket Australia chief executive James Sutherland and Australian Cricketers’ Association leader Alistair Nicholson held a joint news conference to outline an “in-principle” five-year agreement that gives players up to a 30 per cent share of agreed revenue, estimated to be up to 500 million Australian dollars (£299m).

Nicholson said he expected the players, who are set to receive full back pay, to endorse the deal.

“It will restore much-needed certainty to cricket ... it will allow all players — state and international — to be contracted immediately,” Sutherland said.

“It’s the result of a sensible compromise from both parties. Neither side has got everything we wanted.”

Players boycotted a developmental “Australia A” tour to South Africa last month and as the dispute became increasingly acrimonious there were serious concerns among Australian cricket supporters — from the prime minister down — about the potential fallout if it wasn’t resolved this week.

Steve Smith’s test squad was scheduled to assemble in Darwin next week to finalise preparations for a scheduled two-test tour to Bangladesh which starts with a warm-up match on August 22.

A limited-overs series in India was scheduled after that, and before the Ashes series starts in Brisbane in November.

Both players said they were ready to tour, but vowed to stay at home unless the pay dispute was settled.

The most divisive issue in the dispute involved revenue sharing, with Cricket Australia wanting to scrap it after 20 years.

“To have retained the revenue sharing model and increased the level we have and ensure that men, women, domestic and international players receive a fair share is great news for the players and for the game,” Nicholson said.

“It’s right that all players, men and women, will be partners in the game because that’s a fair outcome. It ensures a game with all parties pulling in the same direction.”

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