Brothers Union players met BCB chief executive Nizamuddin Chowdhury on Tuesday to inform the board they were not yet paid their dues for playing in the 2016 Dhaka Premier League.Brothers Union are the second club after Victoria Sporting Club to meet the CEO for not being paid in time. The Victoria players still remain unpaid despite their complaint on June 23. Six days later, the BCB paid the players from Kalabagan Cricket Academy and Cricket Coaching School a partial amount after the teams received little from their respective clubs.The DPL players were supposed to be paid 30% of the full amount before the tournament started on April 22, the next 30% by the end of the first phase and the last 40% by August 3, six weeks following the end of the Super League. However, according to the Brothers Union players, most of them werent paid after the first instalment. Nafees Iqbal, Shahriar Nafees, Nabil Samad were among the players who met Chowdhury.Most of the players have been paid 30%, Nafees said. While we should have received our full amount by now, we havent even been paid our second instalment till now. We have informed the BCBs chief executive about this. The board have been strict in this matter, and have paid two clubs before Eid.The Premier League is the source of income for most of the professional players in the country. So if we are not paid properly, it would make our livelihood difficult.Chowdhury said the board will tackle the discrepancy this week, and would strive to settle the issue amicably.Players from Brothers Union club met me today. We contacted the club recently. We had given the players an assurance when they came under the players-by-choice process of transfer. We are trying to amicably settle the situation with the club, which means that we want them to pay the players. We are hoping this will be settled soon otherwise the board will take its own action.We told the players that we will speak to the club this week. If we dont get anything satisfactory out of it, we will take the action as per the BCB presidents earlier statement, he said.Nafees said the Brothers Union officials havent lived up to their assurance of clearing some payment before Eid last month. We havent really heard from them at this moment. They had told us that we will get some payment before Eid but that was a long time ago. We havent had any discussions with the club since then, he said.Nafees, though, said the clubs were limited by irregular earnings and having to rely on donations.The clubs said that they wanted player-by-choice to reduce the high player payment in the DPL, because it was becoming hard for them to pay players. We have usually sacrificed 10-15 per cent of our payment almost every year. We know that clubs dont have a permanent source of income, and they have made a lot of sacrifices for the players. They run on donations.But if they still cant pay the players after going by the new system, it becomes very hard for the players. We became hopeful after the board president said that they will take responsibility if the clubs are lazy in payment, and this is why we came to the board, Nafees said. Marvin Harrison Jersey .C. -- After a listless first half, the Washington Wizards used a big third quarter run to beat the Charlotte Bobcats Bradley Beal scored 21 points and the Wizards used a 17-0 run in the third quarter to take control of what had been a close game and beat the Bobcats 97-83 on Tuesday night. Cheap Colts Jerseys . Brett Kulak and Jackson Houck of the Vancouver Giants were each charged with assault causing bodily harm on Aug. 18, according to the B.C. court services. http://www.cheapcoltsjerseysauthentic.com/ . LeBron James and Chris Bosh didnt need any more. Williams scored 11 points in 10 minutes, Alan Anderson scored 17 points, and the Brooklyn Nets finished the exhibition season with a 108-87 win over the Miami Heat on Friday night. Pat McAfee Jersey . Roman Josi had a goal and an assist to lead the Predators to a 4-1 victory over the Dallas Stars on Monday night. Marshall Faulk Jersey . The Vancouver coach and an announced sellout crowd of 18,910 watched in dismay as the Canucks lost 7-4 to the New York Islanders on Monday night by squandering a 3-0 lead in the third period. On Oct. 4, New York Knicks guard Derrick Rose will face a California jury on claims that he and two friends gang-raped a woman. That day, the womans full name will be revealed for the first time in open court.The 30-year-old college student has been known only as Jane Doe since August 2015, when she filed the civil lawsuit against Rose and his two friends. But last week, the federal court overseeing the case decided that Doe must disclose her identity at trial. On Sept. 25, the woman asked the court to reconsider its ruling.The alleged victim has spoken to media outlets, including the Associated Press and ThinkProgress, about what she claims Rose and his associates did to her. In court filings, Doe alleges that Rose, whom shed been dating for two years, and his friends broke into her Los Angeles apartment on Aug. 27, 2013, and took turns raping her while she went in and out of consciousness, too intoxicated to give consent.But Does recent public interviews likely didnt impact the courts decision requiring she use her true name at trial.In criminal rape cases, the alleged victims identity is concealed for many reasons -- to encourage victims to come forward, to insulate them from the stigma of rape and the like. But this is a civil trial, where the stakes are different.Civil rape cases can be just as traumatic for victims as criminal rape cases, and the consequences can be meaningful for the accused. But civil cases are not about guilt or innocence; theyre about liability. Generally, that means money is on the line. In this case, Doe wants to hold Rose and his two friends liable to the tune of $21.5 million.After the alleged events in August 2013, she initially didnt file a police report. But she reported the matter to police in August 2015, the same month she filed the civil case. The Los Angeles Police Department confirmed Monday?it has been investigating a complaint against Rose, but charges havent been filed.The court had to decide, and has been asked to reconsider, whether Does need for anonymity outweighed the potential prejudice to Rose and his friends. On the one hand, Doe could be exposed to harassment or humiliation if her name is ddisclosed, particularly given that Rose is a high-profile athlete and that this case is attracting media attention.dddddddddddd?Also, Doe said she fears for her safety and that of her family if forced to disclose her name.Alternatively, if Doe were allowed to conceal her identity at trial, the jury could interpret that as a suggestion that Rose caused her harm. Plus, the public and press would be denied their First Amendment right to fully access the court proceedings. On balance, the court concluded that the prejudice to Rose and the right to access the court outweighed Does desire for anonymity.The court made no mention of her press interviews in his ruling, nor did Doe disclose her identity during any of those interviews, although Rose insisted that her speaking to the media undermined her need for anonymity.But according to Doe, she felt compelled to speak out to combat Roses victim-blaming campaign and his attempt to portray her as a fraud in the public eye. The point guard has gone to lengths to disparage Doe and sexual assault victims, so much so that the court has admonished Rose for repeatedly using language that shames and blames the victims of rape.Now the court must decide whether to change its mind, whether Does need for anonymity outweighs any prejudice to Rose and any knock on the right to access the courts. Doe believes the ongoing police investigation heightens her need to conceal her identity, because once her identity is out, theres no way of hiding it in any potential criminal case in the future.But unless the court changes its mind, when the trial starts on the first Tuesday in October, Rose will be allowed to use language he hasnt been permitted to use before: Jane Does name.Adrienne Lawrence has a B.S. and an M.A. in criminal justice, as well as a J.D. from The George Washington University Law School. She completed the M.A. specialized journalism program at USC Annenberg in 2015 focusing on multimedia sports journalism. She practiced law from 2008 to 2015 before joining ESPN in August 2015. ' ' '