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Ellis surprised by salary-cap calls

ByPA Sport

Published 20/12/2014 at 04:39 GMT

Harlequins chief executive David Ellis has expressed surprise over calls led by Saracens to scrap the Aviva Premiership salary cap.

Harlequins chief executive David Ellis has expressed surprise over calls led by Saracens to scrap the Premiership salary cap

Image credit: PA Sport

Saracens have claimed that seven Premiership clubs have indicated they want the existing system abolished, and say the matter will be discussed at a Premiership Rugby shareholders meeting on February 4.
In a press release issued by the club, Saracens said they are "creating a consensus among Premiership clubs to remove the salary cap, releasing the 'handbrake' on English club rugby."
But Ellis said: "The comments regarding an abolition of the salary cap were somewhat surprising given we have recently had discussions on this very topic as a league.
"The fundamentals of this regulation were approved recently at a shareholder meeting, and so I can't understand why the issue is being raised again so quickly.
"If there is a genuine desire to have a fresh discussion on the salary cap, then we are more than happy to have a debate as a league, but in the right way, in the right forum.
"As a club, Harlequins fully supports the salary cap - it is one of the elements which makes ours one of the most competitive leagues in the world.
"Every game counts in the Aviva Premiership, and that has been more than evident this season. Most of the great leagues globally have salary caps or systems in place to monitor spending."
Premiership Rugby introduced a salary cap in 1999.
It is currently £5million per club, and will rise by £500,000 for next season, when clubs will also be able to nominate two marquee "excluded players". That decision was a unanimous one made by Premiership Rugby shareholders earlier this year.
Premiership Rugby described the salary cap as "a progressive system whereby the maximum spend is linked to revenue increases from TV and other centralised commercial rights."
In a statement, Premiership Rugby said: "The salary cap ensures the financial viability of the member clubs and underpins the sustainable growth of the competition for all stakeholders."
Any changes to the Premiership salary cap would require a 75 per cent majority of shareholders.
"The salary cap has served its purpose," Saracens chief executive Edward Griffiths said.
"It's time to seize a golden opportunity to grow the game, to ensure a level playing field in Europe, to build the strongest league in world rugby and to let players earn market-related salaries.
"The combination of England hosting the Rugby World Cup in 2015 and sevens featuring in the 2016 Olympic Games creates a historic, but fleeting, platform for rugby union to grow dramatically. We must release the handbrake and step on the accelerator.
"It would be a pity if the world's top players light up the World Cup on English soil, and then leave to play club rugby in France. If the salary cap is left to forbid the required investment, it will kill any hope of growth.
"Time moves on. Situations change. The game needs to evolve. In the interests of English rugby, in the interests of building the best league in the world, in the interests of the sponsors and broadcasters, in the interests of the players... it is time to #scrapthecap."
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