Cronulla stars Nicho Hynes and Dale Finucane have a response for anybody labelling gamers “greedy” within the ongoing CBA conflict — “it’s got nothing to do with the salary cap”.
The NRL introduced its wage cap for the subsequent 5 years in December, a transfer which angered the taking part in group who had not but signed off on the brand new collective bargaining settlement.
The RLPA additionally reportedly had been solely knowledgeable of the main points of the brand new cap hours earlier than the shock announcement got here.
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The NRL’s wage cap is $12.1 million in 2023, a file determine and a major improve from $9.6 million in 2022, with an increase within the minimal wage for prime 30 gamers to $120,000.
NRLW sides have additionally been given a wage cap improve to $884,000 in 2023, though no season begin date or size has but been confirmed.
Clubs have since pulled out of NRL media shoots, and Broncos gun Kurt Capewell refused to rule out a participant strike if the brand new CBA phrases can’t be met.
Players then took their protests on-line in a co-ordinated transfer, standing as a “united” entrance in opposition to the NRL earlier than the RLPA’s Instagram web page defined what the taking part in group was combating for.
A brand new medical help fund, the NRLW’s first ever CBA, elevated wages and minimal salaries for susceptible gamers, a refreshed previous gamers program, settlement rights and an improved harm hardship fund are among the many unsolved points within the present CBA being negotiated.
How a lot gamers are incomes although will not be one among them in accordance with the present Dally M Medallist.
“The fans didn’t get a whole lot of understanding straight away of what we were talking about, then we as a group have combined and tried to start educating more,” Hynes mentioned to Foxsports.com.au.
“The RLPA are doing an outstanding job and the whole playing group now, we are so connected like never before, it is just unreal to see.
“What I would say to fans, it has got nothing to do with the salary cap, it’s more the injury hardships for players like Aaron Booth, who was about to negotiate a top 30 contract and he gets injured and can’t play and he’s left with nothing.
“Luckily, the Titans have sorted a really good deal for him and kept him there, but players like that who could easily be out of the game forever, and not have any injury hardship fund.
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“Someone in the workforce, who gets injured on a worksite they get workers compensation and then they are sorted.
“Someone does their back on a job site, they are sorted, they get paid for the next however long, we don’t get that.”
Finucane additionally bristled on the thought gamers are being “greedy” after former Manly enforcer Noel ‘Crusher’ Cleal spoke out about his opinions of the continuing debate.
“I completely disagree and it is to do with the fact that people are uninformed about what the players are actually after,” Finucane mentioned to Foxsports.com.au.
“I think if they had the full picture of things, they would see the side of the players, and the NRL have obviously put forward a salary cap.
“Being a CBA, it is a collective bargaining agreement where all parties agree to it together and done in good faith, and it is obviously disappointing that the NRL have just put forward what the salary cap is going to be without consultation with all the stakeholders of the game.
“Where the misconception of the public comes from is that they see that there is a percentage increase for us as players.
“When you look at the CBA side-by-side, from the 2018 agreement, to our new CBA starting in the 2023 season, you’ll actually see we are going backwards in a number of areas.
“If you actually see what the players are asking for, you’ll see it is quite reasonable considering the NRL has increased as well.”
Under the present CBA settlement, gamers have solely 12 months post-retirement to have any surgical procedures and rehabilitation paid.
The RLPA is pushing laborious for a brand new medical help fund to take care of ex-players, and a number of former stars have been vocal about their very own harm hardships after a profession within the NRL.
Joe Galuvao, Eric Grothe Jr and Jason Stevens all revealed their very own struggled final week, whereas Beau Ryan, who retired at 29 on account of a neck harm, additionally defined the taking part in group are “trying to protect themselves and future generations”.
Hynes revealed that his former teammate Andrew Fifita, who retired from the NRL final season, has solely 12 months to have 4 main surgical procedures below the present CBA.
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“Players like Andrew Fifita who has just finished and he has got to get four surgeries, and he has to do it in the first 12 months otherwise the NRL don’t support or pay for it,” Hynes mentioned.
“Imagine trying to get four big surgeries in the one year and then you won’t be able to walk down the street with his kids, he can’t pick his kids up because he has been through four surgeries.
“They need their Dad around to do day to day things, just things like that.”
“Don’t get me wrong, you understand the risks of playing the game, you know there’s potential risk for injury later on in your career,” Finucane added.
“If we can help those guys in any way it is going to be massive, so they aren’t lost to the game.
“There are some past players that have come out recently talking about how, 15 years retired and there isn’t a day that goes by without something that niggles or pains them as a result of playing rugby league.
“If we can honour those that played before us and help them out so they aren’t lost to the game after they have left, that’s something we’d love to do as a playing group.
“There’s a number of other things that the NRL aren’t coming to the table with.
“Shining the increased salary cap, but taking away in a number of other areas, but that is not even before we go into the women’s game, they are obviously trying to sign contracts and work out how long their season is.”
The taking part in group additionally need to have a say in choices relating to adjustments to the sport’s guidelines, and Hynes defined that if the boss of a commerce firm made choices behind the work’s backs they’d even be pissed off.
“We want to be able to be a part of making decisions, they can’t just keep changing the rules on us, we are the ones out there playing it, it is our bodies,” Hynes mentioned.
“The game is already fast enough and they just want to keep changing rules and we don’t have a say on that.
“These are just little things that the fans don’t understand, we aren’t being greedy at all, we just want what’s fair for the playing group.
“Because we are the ones going out there putting our bodies on the line each week and obviously the fans are loving what we are doing, it’s just not all about the money.
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“People need to have a long hard think, we are doing it to make this great game greater.
“We want to look after the players who have been through hell with their bodies and to make sure they are looked after, once their career is done too.
“So many people are saying to us so many wrong things like ‘you are lucky to be doing what you’re doing’, yeah we are lucky, but we worked extremely hard to get here.
“We didn’t chose your workforce, if something was unfair there you’d speak up and if you got offered more money you’d take it too.
“If your CEO was doing things behind your back you’d be kicking up a stink too, we are just sticking up for what we believe in and we respect the fans decision, but we aren’t going to budge on this.”
Source: www.foxsports.com.au