The day before England fly out to Australia for the Ashes tour, the ECB
have confirmed the recipients of central contracts for the next 12
months after protracted talks which began during the summer. There is
one change among the 11 from the previous batch with Eoin Morgan losing his deal and Joe Root, who plays all three formats for England, included in his place.
The make-up of the current deals will run until 2019 - although
individual contracts still last 12 months - and they are understood to
be considerably enhanced terms which the Professional Cricketers'
Association (PCA) were pushing hard for throughout the process. They had
claimed in February that England players were "substantially underpaid" compared to their counterparts in Australia.
The initial timescale had been to announce the new contracts when the
Ashes squad was named last month, but the final negotiations took extra
time although there was no suggestion of talks breaking down at any
stage. As part of the raft of alterations made to enable players to
increase their chances of maximising their earning opportunities, England's home Tests will be pushed back to June from May to allow a longer period for lucrative IPL appearances.
Angus Porter, the PCA chief executive, said: "I am pleased that we have
secured a fair and appropriate long term agreement, and have done so via
amicable and constructive dialogue."
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Morgan's absence is of no surprise. Although he remains integral to both
limited-overs formats - and captained England against Australia last
month in Alastair Cook's absence - he has drifted well down the pecking
order for a Test berth after opting for a full stint at the IPL and has
not made a first-class 50 in more than a year.
His potential route back onto the Test side would be at No. 6, a
position that no-one has cemented since Paul Collingwood's retirement
after the 2010-11 Ashes. That the contracts list only includes five
batsman confirms that the final berth in the middle-order remains up for
grabs. There are three potential candidates in the Ashes squad with Gary Ballance, Jonny Bairstow and Ben Stokes vying for a place in the Brisbane Test.
Root's elevation to a full central contract is a natural progression
after a year in which he has rapidly become a fixture in all three
formats. This time 12 months ago he had not made his debut for England,
but since his first appearance against India in Nagpur
- where he scored a vital, composed 73 - he has produced key
contributions in 20-over, 50-over and Test cricket even though his
elevation to opener in the summer's Ashes proved a challenge for him.
England have resisted contracting extra fast-bowling resources, such as Boyd Rankin or Chris Tremlett, but despite his inconsistent year Steven Finn remains on the list.
Geoff Miller,
the national selector who was presiding over his final selection of
contracts before stepping down, said: "Contracts are on-going
recognition for those players who have regularly been selected for
England and have performed consistently, as well as those players we
feel are likely to play an important role for England over the next
year.
"Congratulations to Joe Root who is the one addition to the list of
players awarded a central contract and this reflects the important role
Joe has played for England since making his international debut last
year and will I'm sure continue to play across all formats."
The outgoing managing director England Cricket, Hugh Morris,
said: "We are delighted to have concluded a six-year deal and to have
all contractual issues resolved in advance of what we all hope to be
another successful Ashes tour. We thank the PCA, Team England Player
Partnership and the ECB Board for reaching this agreement which now
allows the players to focus solely on cricket, not just during this
tour, but for a considerable period beyond."
Central contracts James Anderson, Ian Bell, Tim Bresnan, Stuart
Broad, Alastair Cook, Steven Finn, Kevin Pietersen, Matt Prior, Joe
Root, Graeme Swann, Jonathan Trott

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