That leaves Pakistan’s top players worse off. As many as 17 of this year’s 19 centrally contracted players were with department sides. They have not only potentially lost out on those salaries but will also not be paid the provincial monthly retainers because they have national contracts.Indeed, as many as 81 of the total 114 players who are part of the provincial squads, played for a department side last year. Very few would have been on less than the PKR 50,000 monthly retainer they will receive now, but almost all of them would have been used to a range of additional perks and benefits. Most departments had healthcare coverage that employees — and their families — could avail. PIA gave employees benefits with their air travel. Power and gas companies waived off their bills. Most departments didn’t pay match fees but most had good travel allowances and built-in bonuses and incentives for wins.A cut on the wealthiest earners, you could argue, is not the worst thing in unequal ecosystems, especially if that wealth is being redistributed to those in need. That is not the case here. Department salaries had nothing to do with the PCB — if anything, they picked up the slack in ensuring players earned enough to become professionals. That money is out of the system and it doesn’t seem like it is going to be replaced anytime soon.A cut would also ignore a global context where Pakistan’s top earners are already historically among the lowest earners.Who better off? Potentially those cricketers who played only for regions last year and are now in one of the six squads. Last year, they would have been paid only match fees, whereas this season they will be paid monthly retainers and their match fees have been increased. But even a number of those would play for a regional side in the QeA trophy and be contracted to a department team — and paid a salary — in the Grade Two (non-first class) division.The Habib Bank team played in the Pakistan domestic circuit for 43 years•Getty ImagesQuality, but what of quantity?
The other way cricketers have been hit, of course, is that there are going to be less of them playing first-class cricket. Just six provincial sides with 19-man squads means that if no players are added, there will be 114 first-class cricketers in Pakistan this season. By comparison, last season there were 16 teams and as many as 353 players who played a first-class game.The trade-off between quality and quantity has been at the forefront of domestic cricket discussions in recent years. In 2013-14, for instance, there were 25 teams playing first-class cricket, albeit across two tournaments. And, as players for one didn’t play in the other, that’s near enough 500 first-class cricketers.That, clearly, was a bloated system and needed rationalising. And, to be fair to the PCB, two of the scene’s biggest departments — UBL and HBL — have shut down their teams in the last two years. There’s no guarantee others would not eventually have gone that way — in fact, over the years, a number of departments, such as Allied Bank (ABL) and PNSC (Pakistan National Shipping) have also pulled out.But are six teams too few for an essentially single-sport country of over 200 million people? Australia, a country of just 25 million people and multiple sports vying for attention, has six teams. England and Wales, with a population of just under 60 million, has 18 counties. New Zealand has less than five million people but six first-class sides.

The good…
There’s plenty to look forward to this season. Because of a thin international season, the QeA will showcase the cream of Pakistan’s talent against each other, playing for identifiable teams in a schedule that isn’t designed to break cricketers physically. There are three-day gaps between games and sides play ten games in 92 days, a far cry from recent seasons where teams played as many as seven four-day games in just 41 days.Bringing in a no-toss rule, as well as Kookaburra balls, should help alleviate two of the biggest concerns of recent seasons, of conditions geared to ruin batting and reward mediocre medium-pace bowling on under-prepared wickets. Average first-innings scores in the QeA have been the lowest anywhere in the world though, so until direct action is taken to improve the nature of pitches, that statistic won’t change readily.… but
The success of this will depend on the buy-in from its players, and right now, there isn’t much. This season, those players are significantly fewer in number and a lot of them will make less money than before. In fact, by not guaranteeing extra money to underpin this model, by not finding commercial partners — by not ensuring that players are better off — the restructure, the PCB seems to be working against the very sustainability of that system. In this light, it isn’t surprising that most departments seem to think this system might undergo change again next season — as the PCB hasn’t stipulated as such that departments should release players, one has opted to extend player contracts by another year on the thinking that departments will be back next season.If not, the PCB may find itself hearing more stories like that of a department player who has been selected for one of the provinces but is driving a Careem cab in the off-season to offset the loss in earnings.

Об авторе

+300
+500
+1200
+1500
+750
$
ПРИСОЕДИНЯЙТЕСЬ СЕЙЧАС
Бонус для друзей
Бесплатные ставки на спорт
Бонус