Better contracts, no discrimination, open transfers: Bangladesh players' demands

A look at some of the most critical demands made by Bangladesh’s male players ahead of their strike that began on Monday

Mohammad Isam21-Oct-2019

Shakib Al Hasan asks for a review•Raton Gomes

At the heart of the Bangladesh players’ discontent that led to the boycott, is their financial situation: Six out of the eleven demands made by the players are for better pay in some form or level of cricket. The BCB, the players feel, has squeezed their income through salary caps, drafts, and other restrictive practices.There are three major sources of income for the professional Bangladeshi cricketer – the Dhaka Premier League, Bangladesh Premier League and the National Cricket League. The fourth source, the BCB’s central contract for the national team, is the most lucrative, but it is only for a handful. Here are the key financial demands made by the players, and their rationale for those demands:Open market transfer in DPLThe DPL is the highest level of the four-tiered Dhaka league structure. Originating in the early 1960s, it provides opportunities to the maximum number of players and is considered the country’s top domestic competition. It had always operated in an open market system for the players’ inter-club transfer, meaning a player was free to choose which club they wanted to play for and to negotiate their pay for the season.Since Nazmul Hassan became BCB president seven years ago, though, apart from one season, the BCB has used a draft system in which clubs have chosen their players, with a salary cap for each category. For the 2018-19 season’s Dhaka Premier League, the board had set a draft with different categories that paid cricketers between BDT 3.5 to 35 lakh (approx. USD 2,700 to 27,000). Seven years ago, the market was – at a conservative estimate – between BDT 5 to 60 lakh (approx. USD 5,900 to 70,000).Hassan’s board agreed with the clubs’ complaints that players were demanding too much money, even though the board already subsidises the clubs’ operations. Most of the BCB’s members and directors are from these Dhaka clubs, which hold a huge say in the board’s matters.Return of the franchised BPL The BPL, which began in 2012, has had its share of difficulties with payment but it was a godsend for domestic players at a time when the DPL clubs were already applying the squeeze through BCB. Even though salaries were delayed in the first couple of seasons, there was a measure of regularity since 2015.The problem here is the difference in salaries between Bangladeshi and foreign players. Most overseas players get a much higher valuation in the draft, even though local cricketers like Shakib Al Hasan, Tamim Iqbal, Mushfiqur Rahim, Mahmudullah and Mashrafe Mortaza have been the BPL’s top performers.