:The Six Nations fixture between Wales and England in Cardiff on Saturday will go ahead after an agreement was reached between Welsh players and the country’s Professional Rugby Board (PRG) over various contentious contract issues.Welsh Rugby Union (WRU) acting CEO Nigel Walker confirmed a potential strike had been averted that would have seen the match against England cancelled, potentially costing the union up to 10 million pounds ($12 million)."I'm pleased to announce that after extensive conversations and discussions over the last week that the Wales-England game will go ahead as scheduled," Walker said in a statement.He told reporters the freeze on new contracts imposed by the PRG, which runs the professional game in the country, would be lifted next week.
There are around 70 players at regional clubs who are out of contract at the end of the 2022-23 season.The 60-cap rule that said only players who have reached that threshold can feature for the national team if they move to a club outside of Wales has been reduced to 25 appearances.
Players will now also have the option of taking a fixed salary contract or one for a lower set wage, but which could climb higher based on performance bonuses.
The PRG had previously stated that all contracts would have 80 per cent set wages and a variable amount of 20 per cent based on performance.