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Canada’s men’s soccer team resumes training amid contract dispute

Canada’s men’s soccer team is back to training, but the players say there’s still work to be done on reaching a new deal with the sport’s national governing body.

A friendly game versus Panama was cancelled Sunday after the Canadian athletes refused to play, citing “unnecessarily prolonged” negotiations over a new contract. Training sessions on Friday and Saturday were also scrapped due to the contract dispute.

The players met with senior leaders of Canada Soccer on Sunday night, and the team resumed training at the Vancouver Whitecaps’ facility Monday. The group will also train Tuesday before kicking off CONCACAF Nations League play versus Curacao in Vancouver on Thursday. Canada Soccer said Tuesday on Twitter that the game will go ahead.

“Canada Soccer and the men’s national team players, who returned to training on Monday, confirmed that they look forward to facing Curacao in CONCACAF Nations League,” Canada Soccer said, adding the organization and players “are excited to see our fans [Thursday] at BC Place.”

The players said in a statement Monday that they “will continue the negotiation process, but questions have yet to be answered and actions have yet to be taken. We move forward in hopes that Canada Soccer will work with us to resolve the situation.”

Compensation appears to be a sticking point in the negotiations.

In a statement released Sunday, the players said they’re asking for World Cup compensation that includes 40 per cent of prize money and a “comprehensive friends and family package” for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

Canada, ranked 38th in the world, clinched a spot in the tournament in March. It’s the first time the country will play in the World Cup since 1986.

FIFA revealed on April 1 that the total World Cup prize pool will be US$440 million, with the winner taking $42 million. Teams eliminated in the group stage will take home $9 million.

Canada Soccer president Nick Bontis told reporters on Sunday that the organization was offering players 30 per cent of the World Cup winnings.

He said the proposal players have put forward is not financially viable.

“My job as president is a responsibility to the fiduciary and stable health of this organization, not just for the last 120 years that we’ve been alive, but for the next 100 years we’re going to be alive,” Bontis said at a press conference. “And I can’t accept an offer that will put our organization in a financial position that is untenable.”

The players are also asking for equitable compensation between the men’s and women’s teams, sharing player match fees and percentage of World Cup prize money. They’re also asking for the development of a women’s domestic league.

Last month, the U.S. Soccer federation signed historic collective bargaining agreements that contained equal pay for its men’s and women’s national teams.

Under the agreement, World Cup prize money will be pooled and then divided among the players, with U.S. Soccer taking 10 per cent of the pool from the 2022-23 tournaments and 20 per cent in 2026-27.

The U.S. received $4 million for winning the 2019 Women’s World Cup, where the total purse was $30 million.

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