Australia news – BBL’s ‘No. 1 priority’ to make domestic stars ‘feel valued’


Ensuring Australia’s best players don’t forgo the BBL for the potential of higher earnings in other tournaments is the top priority for the league’s boss amid the ongoing move towards a hybrid model of privatisation.

One of the key tensions that has emerged in recent times is the earnings of top overseas players through the men’s draft – up to AU$420,000 – which are considerably more than what the leading domestic white-ball stars can make within the clubs’ salary caps. There also continues to be the broader challenges of competing for overseas talent, especially the overlap with the SA20 which, at the top end, pays more than the BBL.

The future of the draft is uncertain, with an announcement expected next month, and clubs could be allowed to return to direct signings, at least in the short term.

“We’ve got to work day and night to make sure we keep our best players playing in Australia,” Alistair Dobson, head of the Big Bash Leagues, told SEN. “Every year we have Test players coming in and out, and that’s been a part of the life of the BBL for 15 years now, but having our best, particularly our white-ball players, playing in the BBL is what’s made the competition great. It’s almost our number one priority, to focus on that group of players and ensure that they feel valued and are part of our competition and can keep being the backbone of our league. That’s right in front of mind.

“I think one of the key objectives for us is to be able to bring more money into the salary cap in the future so that, importantly, not only do the best overseas players want to come and play in the BBL, but our best local Australian players, and particularly the stars that really underpin our competition, get paid what they’re worth, not just compared to overseas players, but compared to the opportunities that are presenting around the world, which are growing rapidly, and increasingly it’s hard for us to keep pace with that in the current model.”

Being able to increase those salary caps is a key part of the privatisation push. It has become a complex affair with the initial hope for all clubs to seek investment at once now shelved in favour of a mixed model that will allow each state to decide what they wish to do. New South Wales and Queensland have indicated they wouldn’t be selling stakes in their clubs, South Australia initially led the push for the hybrid model, while Victoria, Western Australia and Tasmania are in favour of private equity.

While that process has yet to be rubber-stamped – with a set of criteria needing to be reached including, crucially, agreement over a pay structure with the Australian Cricketers’ Association (ACA) – if it does get the final approval, then Victoria will likely be the first to go to the market to sell 100% of their second license (currently Melbourne Renegades) following the controversial announcement of merging their two BBL clubs, which has since been rolled back for the 2026-27 season.

Earlier this month, the ACA said it would block privatisation under the current proposed model, in part because of concerns over the payment structure. While the issue of player payment is most often linked to the BBL, the increased sums being paid to leading players in the WPL and Hundred – where Beth Mooney earned an AU$400,000 deal earlier this year – has put the WBBL on notice as well.

“Part of the work we’re doing with the ACA now is if we were to move into a privatised model and more capital or an injection was to come into the game, how do we best apportion that to different parts of the playing group,” Dobson said. “From my perspective, clearly putting as much of that into the BBL and WBBL salary caps is going to be important because that underpins the ability for us to put the best teams on the field.”

On the WBBL specifically, Dobson added: “From a quality perspective, the same truth exists for the WBBL that we need to be competitive globally. We need to keep investing in the WBBL. The players are rightly now incredibly well-rewarded around the world to play in the WPL in India and now the Hundred in the UK. So the same challenges on the women’s side exist as they do on the men’s.”

Dobson was speaking publicly for the first time since Victoria’s shock announcement about merging Renegades and Stars, rebranding the latter and operating one team. While that remains the longer-term aim, Victoria confirmed last week that the existing teams would continue for 2026-27, which raised questions about what next season will look like for the clubs – who will need to fill their lists when the contracting embargo lifts, likely late next month – and also the supporters of two sides that won’t exist in the future.

“I think both teams, and both teams from both clubs, men’s and women’s, are set up in good shape from a list perspective,” Dobson said. “We’ve got to do some work now to bring those fans back on that journey for the clubs with Cricket Victoria. I think once they start to see the season come to life and for what’s true for the BBL, which is fun, family entertainment, summer nights of the cricket, those things will hold true.”

Dobson added that he understood the scepticism around privatisation but was adamant that the game in Australia needed to respond to wider changes. “I think, globally, the game’s going through a pretty seismic change,” he said. “That hasn’t necessarily hit Australian shores yet, but it’s going to. The work that we’ve been doing for a long time now, the best part of a year, is to try and set ourselves up and chart a course through that evolution.

“I think, inevitably, that significant level of change comes with some twists and turns and bumps. We’ve got to continue to do the best job we can to take people on that journey because change is coming for the game and we want to control our destiny on that.”

Separately from privatisation, although not without obvious links, Dobson said that a decision on taking the opening game of the BBL season in mid-December to Chennai was “close” and “we’re optimistic about that”. He added that the WBBL season in late October would likely start with a double-header at Junction Oval in Melbourne using the ground’s new floodlights, which may also be used for BBL matches.

Andrew McGlashan is a deputy editor at Cricinfo



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