BCCI’s Committee of Administrators asked to hike players’ central contracts

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COA gets proposal for five-fold hike in players’ Central Contracts. Image Source: scoopnest.com

Internet Desk: The Committee of Administrators (COA) received a proposal to consider a five-fold hike in the Central Contracts of Indian players with an aim to reaffirm Test cricket’s top status among the Gen-Next who are certainly enamoured by the IPL riches.

A prominent personality, who has closely worked with the Lodha Committee on the constitutional and structural reforms in the BCCI, has sent a note to the COA with suggestions that the top grade of the Central Contracts be revised from the current Rs 1 crore to Rs 5 crore.

As of now, the Grade A players get Rs 1 crore while Grade B and C players get a yearly remuneration of Rs 60 and 35 lakh respectively excluding their match fees which is Rs 15 lakh for the first XI men in the five-day games.

Some of the players like Cheteshwar Pujara or Ishant Sharma — big stars in their own rights — have gone unsold at the IPL auctions while uncapped players like Thangarasu Natarajan or Mohammed Shiraz got whopping contracts of Rs 3 crore and Rs 2.6 crore respectively purely based on T20 skills.

For the record, Pujara has more than 3000 Test runs with 10 hundreds while Ishant has more than 200 Test wickets.

“It is a novel proposal as it will mean that youngsters who are getting such massive salaries from IPL franchises realise that the real cricket is beyond the Rs 2 crore that they earn for 45 days. Not every cricketer has multi-million endorsement deals. The real incentive should be playing Test cricket,” a top BCCI source told the media on Wednesday.

Another aspect that has been taken into consideration while preparing the proposal is that not every top Indian player is earning a lot from the endorsement market.

“As a brand, it is Virat Kohli and Mahendra Singh Dhoni, who are marketable stars among the current players as far as TV Commercials are concerned. It is very difficult to find brands consistently for a Pujara or say an Umesh Yadav. But they are performers in their own rights. Not everyone will remain marketable once their 10-15 year career is over. If BCCI is able to provide that cushion, there is no harm,” the source added.

The IPL auction at times has caused a lot of heartburn for established names. The cricketing fraternity was in a state of shock that ICC’s World No.1 ranked T20 spinner Imran Tahir went unsold.

While franchises have their business interest in mind when they reject a Pujara, dubbed as Test specialist or Ishant for a high base price, but some are baffled as to how a few of the lesser known players in the Rs 10 lakh bracket get teams.

“There is a Delhi player, who has been picked by Gujarat Lions for Rs 10 lakh. It’s the lowest base price. But this boy has failed to make it to the Delhi T20 playing XI post 2014. So where did he perform and make a case for himself? And what exactly is the message that you are sending to a Priyank Panchal, who has close to 1500 runs this first-class season. You are just bracketing him as a first-class player,” a former support staff of an IPL franchise said.

If the COA seriously considers the proposals, some of the longer format specialists will not feel hard done by the big bad world of auction where private entities decide the worth of sportspersons.

With inputs from PTI.