News24.com | Woakes says England players may face pay cuts as cricket feels pinch

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Woakes says England players may face pay cuts as cricket feels pinch

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Chris Woakes of England walks off after their victory in the first Test against Pakistan at Old Trafford in Manchester on 8 August 2020.
Chris Woakes of England walks off after their victory in the first Test against Pakistan at Old Trafford in Manchester on 8 August 2020.
Gareth Copley/Getty Images for ECB

World Cup winner Chris Woakes admits players may be next to feel the pinch as England cricket chiefs on Tuesday announced 62 job cuts due to the impact of the coronavirus pandemic.

England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) chief executive Tom Harrison said such measures would have been "unthinkable" seven months ago but the global crisis had had a huge impact.

Harrison said English cricket had already lost more than £100 million, a figure that could rise to £200 million next year if Covid-19 interrupts next season.

Proposals to reduce costs include a 20 percent cut to the workforce budget -- a move that equates to the loss of 62 positions.

England all-rounder Woakes expressed sympathy with those affected.

"It does resonate with the players," said Woakes, who added that losses would have been even greater had scheduled tours by the West Indies, Pakistan, Australia and Ireland not taken place.

In April, England's centrally contracted players made a donation of 500,000 to the ECB and selected good causes, the equivalent of a 20 percent reduction in their retainers for three months.

Woakes, with a new round of central contracts due this month, said players may have to take a pay cut.

"In the current climate, and with contracts round the corner, I think you just have to expect anything at the minute," he said.

"As players you're not going to sit here and say 'we're exempt from it'."

Although the programme of 18 men's international matches scheduled for this season is set to be completed on Wednesday, the ECB has incurred heavy losses, with all games played behind closed doors.

The ECB introduced pay cuts for staff in April but the reductions have not been enough to stave off job losses.

"The Covid-19 pandemic has left cricket facing its most significant challenge of the modern era," said Harrison.

"There is also deep uncertainty about the future, and it is vital we take more steps now to ensure the future financial sustainability of cricket in England and Wales."

Harrison added that the ECB would need to become a "leaner and more agile organisation", saying savings would only be possible "by reducing our headcount".

"These proposals include a 20 percent reduction in our workforce budget, which will equate to the removal of 62 roles from our structure."

ECB chiefs had hoped to capitalise on the boost to the game provided by England's World Cup win on home soil last year as well as a dramatic Ashes series.

"Seven months ago, sharing a message of this nature was unthinkable," said Harrison.

"Our ambition and energy are unchanged but how we get there now needs to look significantly different to what we originally planned for."

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News24.com | Woakes says England players may face pay cuts as cricket feels pinch

Biden targets military members, Latino voters in first Florida campaign visit

Biden targets military members, Latino voters in first Florida campaign visit

Biden held a roundtable with voters about military issues in Tampa and was scheduled to hold a Hispanic Heritage month event later near Orlando.
Image: Joe Biden
Joe Biden delivers remarks during a roundtable discussion with veterans at Hillsborough Community College in Tampa, Fla, on Sept. 15, 2020.Leah Millis / Reuters

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By Adam Edelman

Joe Biden on Tuesday used his first 2020 visit to the critical battleground state of Florida to hammer President Donald Trump over his reported criticism of fallen military members, telling a roundtable of servicemen and women that he is the better candidate on veterans' issues.

"Nowhere are his faults more glaring or offensive to me, at least, as when it comes to his denigration of our service members, veterans, wounded warriors, the fallen," Biden said during a speech in Tampa. "Quite frankly, it makes me very upset the way he gets in front of a camera and crows about how much he doe for our vets and then calls them 'suckers' and 'losers,'" he added, nodding to a story published in The Atlantic earlier this month on Trump's reported remarks.

Biden's speech was followed by a roundtable with voters about military issues — a lengthy discussion that saw the Democratic presidential nominee touch on various policy issues like mental health services for veterans and protecting social security.

Biden's trip to Florida was his first to the critical battleground this year. He last set foot in the state exactly one year ago, when he held an event in the Little Havana neighborhood of Miami.

His stop in Tampa was one of two scheduled for the trip; later Tuesday, Biden will deliver remarks at a Hispanic Heritage Month event near Orlando — a stop that could help attract Puerto Rican voters who could be key to offsetting Trump's advantage among Cuban voters. As many as 50,000 Puerto Ricans moved to the state after Hurricane Maria, according to the University of Florida. Those transplants are eligible to vote in Florida, and Democrats could motivate them to vote for Biden because of Trump's widely criticized response to the hurricane. In another sign of its increased targeting of the Puerto Rican community in the Orlando area, the Biden campaign on Tuesday afternoon released a new plan focused specifically on uplifting Puerto Rico.

The Biden campaign in recent weeks has upped its attention in Florida, where polls show the candidates in a dead heat. Last week, Biden's running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., traveled to Miami, where she ripped the president over his remarks to journalist Bob Woodward about the COVID-19 pandemic. Her husband Douglas Emhoff, who is Jewish, held a community conversation last week with rabbis eight miles away in Aventura.

An NBC News/Marist survey released last week found the race in Florida tied overall, but with Biden underperforming among Latino voters. Seeking to counteract that, Latino voters across Florida are being reintroduced to Biden — and reminded of Trump — in different ways in different regions.

In ads, the Biden campaign is reminding Hispanic voters how Trump's handling of the pandemic and economy has affected them, while Black voters are hearing stories from their own community about the need to turn out or risk another four years of no progress toward racial equality.

The Biden campaign has also targeted seniors in recent weeks with testimonial-style advertising featuring residents of the Trump-leaning retirement community The Villages discussing how the president’s inability to control the virus has forced them to stay inside and away from their families.

Meanwhile, former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg's political operation has announced a commitment to spend $100 million in Florida with a special focus on the Latino vote.