whufc wrote:gadj1976 wrote:The Bedge wrote:Unpopular opinion.. but I think payments should be publicised.
Not exact amounts but “tiers” eg if you’re on $0 to $150 you’re say tier 4, $151 to $300 tier 3, $301 to $450 tier 2 and anything above that tier 1.
Don’t need to know exacts but what it does do is give clubs an insight into what clubs are paying for individuals so they can potentially target their needs better but more importantly it keeps players somewhat accountable and can’t bullshit, shop themselves around and try to play potential suitors off against each other so they can profit top dollar.
I also think that there should be incentives for not spending the cap or amounts below.. reward loyalty and positive / astute club administration.
Finally I was always in favour of a scaled salary cap, still whole heartedly agree but the downside is it means higher divs could just pilfer talent at a cheap rate:: but also quality players don’t want to go down unless they’re being paid overs - and scaled salary cap removes that ability to recruit higher grade talent.
Funnily enough, the higher the div the Lower the general base rate of players is.. there is just more of them made
Whilst the concept is sound, who's going to administer this? Clubs? That'd be a complete waste of time.
Plus, if we haven't got visibility at SANFL or AFL level, then this couldn't and shouldn't go ahead.
That's why i wouldn't mind a salary cap tiered system where div 1 clubs can pay XXXX amount which is more than div 6 which can pay XXXX.
Then what you need is both clubs and players being able to 'dob' one another in haha.......... if player A was asking one club for $200 over the allowed salary cap then the club should be allowed to 'report' the player. If one club reports because of sour grapes that they missed out on a player asking for more than the allowed salary .....who cares. Players now will report clubs for sour grape reasons so why not have it both ways. Then it will start to self-regulate. players will be too scared to ask for overs knowing that a club might report them if they dont sign and clubs will be less willing to pay overs knowing that the player maybe asking for overs at other clubs who then might report the player if they miss out on him.
Sadly, if we want salary caps in amateur sport, we need a dog-eat-dog world where both players and clubs are reporting.
Now i know some will say 'they will both find ways around it' and i don't disagree but at that point we might as well not have a salary cap if we aren't even going to try and police it.
How would player A know?
Do we really want this?



