A new rebel cricket league?
Clarke, Warner offered $50 million:
Michael Clarke and David Warner would be offered $50 million
contracts as part of a plan hatched by an Indian conglomerate to take on
the cricket establishment in a plot that has been likened to Kerry
Packer's creation of World Series Cricket nearly 40 years ago.

World Cup winning Australian captain Clarke, high prize
target |

David Warner |
The Essel Group's owner, Indian billionaire Subhash Chandra, has
confirmed ambitions to launch a cricket venture since Fairfax Media
revealed last week the business giant had registered company names in
Australia and other nations in an apparent bid to launch a rival world
governing body and a rich, new global Twenty20 league..
They would need to flex their financial muscle in an extraordinary
way to coax the world's leading and best-paid players away from their
national boards but it has since emerged their plans included targeting
Australian captain Clarke and opener Warner, among other stars. Sources
say the plan devised was to lure Clarke and Warner into the rebel
structure as priority acquisitions with 10-year contracts worth a
staggering $50 million.
Essel's potential raid on cricketers has left the International
Cricket Council and aligned bodies such as Cricket Australia on high
alert about a pending split in the game, and Fairfax Media can reveal
the Indian company is not the only entity which has entertained a
challenge to the game's structure.
Former world players' union chief Tim May said on Thursday he had
been sounded out by several other organisations about the feasibility of
them entering the cricket market in a similar fashion, and pointed to
disillusion with the recently restructured ICC financial model that
heavily favoured India, Australia and England as a factor.
"There is a general dissatisfaction with the game's governance, how
it's run and the inequity of the game's finances and there are other
bodies around that would believe they can globalise the game of cricket
in a more equitable fashion than the current administration," May
said.Cricket Australia's board will assemble in Melbourne on Friday.
The meeting was scheduled before news of Essel's potential power play
emerged but directors are expected to be briefed on an ICC investigation
into the Essel project and discuss the matter at length.What exactly
Essel has in mind has not been confirmed by Chandra but sources say a
global, franchise-based T20 tournament, encompassing established cricket
countries as well as new territories such as the United States and
China, has been the centrepiece of their plans.
The London Telegraph reported this week that a website domain,
globalt20.com, was registered by Essel in April and among 249 domains
registered around countries that could be tied to a new governing body.
One source said Essel, which owns the broadcaster Zee TV and its
subsidiary Ten Sports, also planned to maintain longer-form cricket
between major countries if the project got off the ground, as well as a
Rest of the World team made up of players from other nations. Several
billion dollars are said to have been made available to pull it off.
It's yet to be seen how tempting potential offers for the likes of
Clarke and Warner would be. Clarke earned $4 million, including
endorsements last year according to the Business Review Weekly Top 50
Sports Earners list and while at the age of 34 and on the finishing
stretch in his international career a 10-year contract would appear
nonsensical his signing would be a coup in itself.
Warner, 28, pocketed $3.8 million last year, according to BRW.
Essel's track record in cricket is poor, having still failed to pay out
$2m in wages to players including Australians from the shortlived Indian
Cricket League it ran from 2007 to 2009. The ICL was also the subject of
corruption admissions made by former New Zealand batsman Lou
Vincent.Whether CA will have to look at fortifying its player base in
the face of potential approaches is a subject that may need addressing.
Australia generally contracts its leading players on an annual basis -
there are 19 including Clarke and Warner on the 2015/2016 list. However,
as of Thursday they had not been sent their contracts and while they
remain unsigned they are technically free agents when their existing
contracts expire on June 30.
The founder of the Indian Premier League, Lalit Modi, and his
associate Dean Kino, the ex-CA lawyer and formerly a key player in
establishing the T20 Champions League, have been strongly linked to the
Essel project. Modi admits he was approached about it but denies
involvement, as does Kino..US-based May, the former Australian spinner,
is not surprised at the emergence of potential rivals to the ICC on the
scene."
If the current administration really wants to protect the game they
should look within to see how they can improve their own administration
rather than blaming others who merely want to be competitive," he said."
Any organisation that doesn't meet the highest standards, whether it's
in corporate world or sporting world, if there are doubts about the
integrity of thier leaders, if they're doubts about how they distribute
finances, they're always going to be up for some sort of battle against
someone who wants to do the right thing and that is probably what's
happening in cricket at the moment." Who is Subhash Chandra?
Subhash Chandra, 64, is a billionaire media mogul who owns the Essel
Group, which controls the TV network Zee Entertainment. The network
reaches 730 million viewers in 169 countries.Chandra is best known for
setting up the Indian Cricket League in 2007, mainly because he was
annoyed that Zee Entertainment was unable to secure the lucrative
television rights to international and domestic cricket in India.
The league gained rebel status because it was not recognised by the
International Cricket Council. It targeted older players, including
Australians Jason Gillespie, Michael Kasprowicz and Damien Martyn, but
instead of being a viable alternative to the Indian Premier League, the
ICL crashed into a defunct tournament poisoned by match-fixing and
reports of players being underpaid. Chandra is based in Mumbai and,
according to Forbes, has a net worth of $3.9 billion, which puts him at
number 21 on India's rich list. Among other investments he also owns a
newspaper chain and theme parks. Tom Decent.
Chris Barrett (SMH)
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