Sun. Dec 22nd, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

Forgiven, but not forgotten, as The Corrs once sang.

It’s hard to measure just how much damage last year’s Super Netball CPA negotiations did to the sport so soon after the fact, but the athletes themselves hope the ordeal hasn’t turned fans away from the sport.

Gathering in Sydney for the 2024 Super Netball launch a day after it was announced Netball Australia chair Wendy Archer would be stepping down, each of the eight team captains acknowledged last year had been extremely tough – as domestic players went unpaid for 11 weeks in the lead-up to Christmas and the tense battle over a revenue-share model played out publicly in the media.

There have been a range of controversies in netball over the past three years, but this issue seemed to be the straw that broke the camel’s back. People were fed up.

Liz Ellis smiles while holding a microphone courtside
Former Australian captain now commentator Liz Ellis was horrified when she found out players had been threatened with legal action if they didn’t attend their end of season awards night amidst the CPA dispute.(Getty Images: Mark Kolbe)

Former Australian World Cup winning captain and coach Joyce Brown labelled the CPA stoush as the sport’s “lowest point”, blaming its executive for fracturing “the fabric” of the game and “irreparably damaging” its relationships.

Meanwhile, Australian netball legend Liz Ellis also called out the administration for its “callous disregard” in its treatment of players and questioned if Netball Australia was “capable of providing the leadership the sport so desperately needs”.

Once a deal had finally been struck in December – rewarding players with the very first revenue-share model in history, as Netball Australia waved the white flag – chief executive Kelly Ryan was the first major casualty after a two-and-a-half-year stint at the helm; citing the “time was right” for her to move on and spend more time with her family.

Three days later, it was a quiet departure for director Marina Go, who had been on the board since 2017 and previously held the role as both chair of the Super Netball commission (now defunct) and Netball Australia, before stepping back in late 2022 in the wake of the Hancock Prospecting saga.

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