Canada Soccer president predicts labour talks will produce 'epic, historical' deal with players
Canada Soccer president Nick Bontis predicts the ongoing labour talks with the Canadian men's and women's teams will produce "an epic, historical deal for pay equity."
The association's collective bargaining agreement with the women's team expired last December. The World Cup-bound men recently formed their own players' association and are in talks for a first CBA.
Bontis said he connected with captain Christine Sinclair, Sophie Schmidt and other senior women's players as well as their legal counsel in late January, telling them "something very very different was going to come to the [bargaining] table."
Bontis was speaking Wednesday on "Behind the Bench," a weekly coaching webcast presented by the National Soccer Coaches Association of Canada (NSCAC).
Bontis said historically most national teams have negotiated a percentage of World Cup prize money, usually ranging between 20 and 30 percent.
The Canadian men — returning to the soccer showcase for the first time in 36 years — wanted a higher percentage, which Bontis said "as a fan" he thought they deserved.
"They had done something for the first time in 36 years ... But I knew that we had to do it under the context of pay equity. So anything that was about 50 percent would have been untenable."
"Because it also meant that we would have to pay the women dollar-for-dollar that same amount and you can't pay more than 100 percent of the money available," he added.
WATCH l Caught up with how Canada's soccer best did around globe this week:
FIFA paid out $400 million in prize money at the 2018 World Cup in Russia. Champion France collected $38 million while teams that finished 17th through 32nd each got $8 million.
Bontis said an agreement with the women is "95 percent of the