Coronavirus: EFL clubs agree to defer 25 per cent wages in April

Players earning less than £2,500 per month will be paid in full and the 25 per cent reduction must also not take any player below the £2,500 a month.

Published : Apr 14, 2020 22:12 IST

Many clubs in the three divisions of English football below the Premier League have already reached individual agreements with their squads to defer or cut wages due to the economic crisis caused by coronavirus.
Many clubs in the three divisions of English football below the Premier League have already reached individual agreements with their squads to defer or cut wages due to the economic crisis caused by coronavirus.
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Many clubs in the three divisions of English football below the Premier League have already reached individual agreements with their squads to defer or cut wages due to the economic crisis caused by coronavirus.

Clubs in the English Football League (EFL) agreed a deal with players' union the Professional Footballers' Association (PFA) on Tuesday for 25 per cent of wages to be deferred in April.

Many clubs in the three divisions of English football below the Premier League have already reached individual agreements with their squads to defer or cut wages due to the economic crisis caused by coronavirus.

“A compromise proposal has been agreed between the EFL and the PFA for those clubs engaged in deferral negotiations with their players, meaning that, up to a maximum of 25 per cent of players' wages for April may be conditionally deferred,” the EFL and PFA said in a joint statement.

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As part of the agreement, players earning less than £2,500 ($3,153) per month will be paid in full and the 25 per cent reduction must also not take any player below the £2,500 a month threshold.

No such agreement has been reached between the PFA and Premier League clubs, who have requested players take a 30 per cent hit between cuts and deferrals.

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Southampton became the first Premier League club to agree wage deferrals last week.

Premier League players have also announced a collaborative charitable fund to raise money for Britain's National Health Service (NHS) on top of any cuts or deferrals agreed.

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