Cricket Australia pay dispute: Aussie players set to miss deadline
The current Memorandum of Understanding(MoU) between CA and the Australian Cricketers' Association (ACA) expires at midnight (1400 GMT) with hopes of a late breakthrough fading fast.
The warring parties have failed to come to an agreement over revenue-sharing, and almost 230 players will be out of contract and will not be paid a retainer until a new MoU is agreed.
Players who are on multi-year contracts that go beyond June 30 will continue to be paid, and will be required to play and train as before.
The
The women's team are currently competing in the World Cup in the
Players are due to assemble in
Reports said that CA could hand out-of-contract stars like Glenn Maxwell and Usman Khawaja tour contracts that would ensure their participation in the series, although there is also the possibility of a boycott if no agreement is reached.
The ACA board and executive are set to hold a meeting in
CA wants to modify the current pay model whereby players receive a share (around 25 percent) of agreed cricket-related gross revenue, and replace it with a revised offer to divide a portion of surpluses among all players as well as deliver pay rises for men's and women's international and domestic cricketers.
The updated offer, made last Friday, was rejected by the ACA which remains staunchly opposed to any move away from a revenue-sharing model.
The players' union released its own proposal last March under which the definition of revenue is broadened and players receive a smaller (22.5 percent) share.