CSA board resignations: too few, too late

“CSA understands and appreciates the board members’ reasoning behind their resignations, based on their love for cricket and their respect of CSA.” – CSA’s twitter account is in deep denial.

TELFORD VICE | Cape Town

SIX Cricket South Africa (CSA) board members down. Four to go. And they may yet go quietly into that good night when the game no longer has to suffer some of the most reckless, thoughtless, damaging administrators in all of sport.

Beresford Williams resigned as CSA’s acting president on Sunday, along with five other board members: non-independents Angelo Carolissen, Donovan May, Tebogo Siko and John Mogodi, and Dheven Dharmalingham, an independent. That leaves Zola Thamae, a non-independent, and Marius Schoeman, Eugenia Kula-Ameyaw and Vuyokazi Memani-Sedile, independents all. But already there are whispers that they, too, are looking to make like Donald. As in Duck, not Allan.

No doubt sports minister Nathi Mthethwa, who is waiting until after Tuesday to tell CSA what he plans to do to them for running cricket into the ground, has noted the exits with satisfaction. The rest of us will wonder what the hell took them so long.

CSA have been in trouble more or less since September 2017, when Thabang Moroe was named acting chief executive. Despite him not meeting the minimum requirements for the job, the board appointed him permanently in July 2018. He was suspended in December last year and fired in August this year.

And that’s only one of the myriad self-harming catastrophes into which the board have shambled. Most of the board members who made the Moroe mess had left the organisation before Sunday and been replaced, but the staggering level of denial needed to allow this to be posted on CSA’s official twitter account even as the blood gleamed wet on the floor — “CSA understands and appreciates the board members’ reasoning behind their resignations, based on their love for cricket and their respect of CSA” — proves the problems remain rudely alive and shockingly well. A public apology is the least of what is required, but don’t hold your breath: you’re dealing with something like that other Donald. As in Trump.

Since December, sponsors, the South African Cricketers’ Association, the South African Sports Confederation and Olympic Committee (Sascoc), Mthethwa, the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Sport, Arts and Culture, and too many ordinary, ticket-buying, TV-watching, hero-worshipping cricketminded South Africans to count have all raged at CSA’s board.

But, as recently as September 18, Williams was going nowhere slowly. “I believe I’m still committed‚ I’m passionate‚ and can still contribute and serve the game; I choose not to go,” he replied when asked, during a press conference, why he had not resigned.

“We as a board and as collective leadership have dealt with matters head-on and I do believe we’re moving forward as a collective. I’ll continue to serve until such time as the members council decides otherwise.

“I took a decision that I either move on or I continue to serve. I decided on the latter to serve the game that I’m passionate about. I’ve been a servant of the game at various levels.

“If there was anything in which I believe I acted irresponsibly or not in the interests of the game as a director‚ I would have moved on.”

Presumably Williams felt the same way on Thursday when he and the rest of his board went into a meeting with the Members Council, CSA’s highest authority, but which includes six members of the board itself. Resignations were called for, and not given — not least because, Daily Maverick understands, board members were advised by powerful figures within CSA that there was no legal basis to demand that they remove themselves. You heard the man: “I choose not to go.”

What changed between Thursday and Sunday, when the members council met with the board again? That is not yet known. Neither do we know what will happen next.

But we can be fairly sure Mthethwa will tell Sascoc to appoint an interim committee to administer cricket at least until CSA’s annual meeting on December 5. That is likely to happen after close of business on Tuesday, when CSA run out of road to avoid the minister stepping in. And so he should.

For one thing, four board members are hanging on. For another, four of those who have quit are still on the Members Council. For still another, CSA have invented the position of “acting president of the Members Council” and given it to Northern Cape Cricket’s Rihan Richards — a former board member.

If it looks like a duck, swims like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it probably is a duck. Please, Mr Mthethwa, do your worst.

First published by Daily Maverick.

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Author: Telford Vice

I have been writing, gainfully, since 1991. No-one has yet paid me enough to stop. @TelfordVice

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