As I understand it, Gordon Taylor, Chairman of the PFA, the players' trade union, will not sanction cuts in salaries - which as advised, are liable to be paid under contract rules.
The issue is, the public perception of footballers, certainly in the Premier League, is that they are vastly overpaid for what they do, and as a result, should be willing to forgo sections of the salaries to pay non-playing staff.
Whereas I understand the moral point being made, as has been advised, footballers are a branch of entertainment, and seem to have been singled out in a manner which is not applied to any athletes in other sports, or tv or film stars who may also be being paid as their contracts demand, while not producing the entertainment for which they are being paid in the first place.
I believe it should be a matter for the conscience of each person, in whatever field they are employed, to decide if they wish to forgo a portion of their income to assist other people.
This situation is not of anyone's making, it seems unfair to simply single out a section of the population on the basis that public opinion deems them to be overpaid, and therefore commensurately liable to fund others who are not perceived as overpaid.
That is making a decision on the basis of public opinion, which is rarely a good basis for a decision on anything.