For the game, the whole game and nothing but the game

“There were too many whites involved in a short period of time. Was it procedurally unfair? Not at all. Did a black board approve it? Yes, they did.” – Jacques Faul

Telford Vice | Cape Town

IT’S not a witch-hunt after all. Nor is it a platform for hearing the views of some of the people all of the time. It isn’t biased, uncaring or lacking in empathy for any of those concerned. It’s CSA’s Social Justice and National-Building (SJN) project, and this week it has proved that it exists to serve the game, the whole game and nothing but the game.

The first round of SJN hearings, from July 5 to August 6, necessarily dealt with testimony from people who alleged they had been victims of racism since cricket in South Africa was supposedly unified in 1991. Their anger and hurt was palpable, and led to tears being shed on the witness stand.

Cricket has been played in the country since the first years of the 19th century, and for most of the ensuing time by people of all races. But the SJN was the game’s first honest look in the mirror. The reflection wasn’t pretty. South Africans didn’t so much see the inner workings of a sport as they saw another tumour in their sick society. Cricket, like everything else, had been diseased by racism — even after the defeat, at the ballot box, of racism as the law of the land. Apartheid was dead. Long live apartheid.

But black and brown people exposing injustice, while vital for their own healing and for denying whites their crutch of denial, was never going to start the difficult dialogue on race so sorely lacking in all areas of life in South Africa. Mark Boucher’s written submission, dated August 9, was the vanguard voice from the other side. He admitted his failings, apologised and laid out how he was trying to improve the present to help build a better future.

Even so, the coldly legal tone of Boucher’s affidavit — inevitable given the quasi-legal setting of the SJN hearings — allowed his most irrational critics to parse the phrases they didn’t like from those they chose to ignore and to rage still more loudly.

That was no surprise. Given the toxicity of cricket’s nascent race discussion, simply writing to the SJN will only give the vexed — particularly the cynically vexed — more ammunition with which to dominate the conversation. There is, as there is for most things that need doing well, no viable substitute for turning up in person or at least electronically. If you can’t look into someone’s eyes when they’re telling you what they say is the truth, how do you decide whether they are telling the truth?

That said, pitching up, either in the flesh or on a screen, does not seem an option for Boucher. He was in Ireland with his team when the hearings started and, if they adhere to their current schedule, he will be at the T20 World Cup until after they conclude. Contrary to what some might want us to believe, finding a few free hours to talk to the SJN while you’re trying to win a tournament is far easier said than done. The haters are no doubt relieved at that: the last thing they need is for the totem of their abhorrence to prove himself human despite all allegations to the contrary.

But Graeme Smith, another figure with a target on his back, has no excuse for not testifying. After this week, he should also not need convincing that appearing before the SJN is the only way to defend himself with integrity. And, by doing so, call the bluff of those who would seek to rubbish him at every turn.

Proof of that was delivered in the space of 24 hours, starting with the testimony of Mohammed Moosajee, the former long-term manager and doctor of South Africa’s men’s team, on Wednesday afternoon. He was followed by former selection convenor Linda Zondi, and, on Thursday morning, by former CSA acting chief executive Jacques Faul. All had been accused of wrongdoing, to varying degrees, in the first round of hearings. And all were able to refute, with solid evidence, many of the claims made against them. They also owned up to their roles in the problems cricket had stumbled into. Most importantly, they sketched the complexities of realities that hitherto had been painted in starkly simplistic terms.

Here’s Moosajee on the touchiest subject of all: “In my view the targets or quotas gave opportunities to people of colour, and many of them proved that they could be world-class performers on the international stage. Examples include Makhaya Ntini, Herschelle Gibbs, Ashwell Prince, Hashim Amla, Vernon Philander, Kagiso Rabada, and Lungi Ngidi. They were undoubtedly good enough, but they may not have been given the necessary opportunities if it was not for the quotas or targets.

But there were also “unintended consequences” in trying to remedy racism in this way: “Certain players become ‘undroppable’ because their inclusion in a team is necessary to meet the quotas or targets. A few of these players allowed their fitness levels to wane and were guilty of disciplinary misdemeanours, but these misdemeanours went unpunished because there were concerns that the quotas or targets would not be met.”

Zondi spoke of working hard to engineer opportunities for black and brown players who had been unfairly overlooked, only for some of those players to spurn their chance: “[Imran] Tahir was dominating and, for future purposes, we needed a spinner who could bat and bowl. But [Aaron] Phangiso wasn’t playing red-ball cricket for the Lions. The South Africa A side was in India at the time [in 2015] and I asked Phangiso to play for them. To my surprise, he turned the offer down. We took a different player into the South Africa A side and he ended up playing for the Test team.” That player was Keshav Maharaj, now South Africa’s first-choice Test spinner.

Faul rued the whiter shade of pale CSA’s top brass showed to South Africans in December 2019, when he took office and Smith became director of cricket. Smith appointed Boucher, which prompted the demotion of Enoch Nkwe, who is more qualified than Boucher and had served as interim coach. Boucher signed Jacques Kallis and Paul Harris as consultants. Black and brown outrage, stoked by the suspension days earlier of Thabang Moroe as CSA chief executive, duly followed.

“The optics were totally wrong,” Faul said. “We should have been politically more sensitive; it’s something I regret. We should have been emotionally more intelligent around that. We struggled to fully anticipate the outcry and it was a huge outcry. We didn’t anticipate that we would be viewed as a white takeover. If I knew that this was going to be the sequence of events, I would not have taken the job.”

But those white people hadn’t appointed themselves: “Out of nine board members at the time there were seven people of colour. There was only one objection and that was to the duration the coaching staff would be appointed. [Former board member] Angelo Carolissen objected to the duration because Mr Smith only signed for four months [initially] and he was appointing people for a three-year period. [Former board member] Stephen Cornelius said it is best practice to appoint them for that duration. The appointment of all of that staff happened more or less the same way and was approved by the board.

“The appointments that were made for cricketing reasons, but I admit we got it wrong. There were too many whites involved in a short period of time. Was it procedurally unfair? Not at all. Did a black board approve it? Yes, they did. Should they have been wiser? I think so. We should have been smarter.”

There was far more where that came from. The wilder conspiracy theories wielded like flamethrowers by previous witnesses were doused by the inflammable infallibility of fact and logic. But, mostly, Moosajee, Zondi and Faul concerned themselves with the seriousness of leaving cricket in a better state than that in which they found it. As importantly, the SJN ombud, Dumisa Ntsebeza, protected the space in which they wrestled with that responsibility and showed their efforts due respect. 

No-one who has yet appeared at the SJN can claim they have not been properly and fairly heard. So what’s stopping others from answering the charges that have been made against them? Irredeemable guilt is one answer. Another is that they don’t care, and that’s far worse.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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All the presidents’ people

A roll call of the more or less reprehensible in South African cricket, recording their names and the context of their involvement.

TELFORD VICE | Cape Town

DESPITE mounting pressure from every stakeholder in South African cricket, along with the threat of either state control or international suspension — or both — two votes went against appointing the interim board at CSA’s members council meeting on Monday.

The council is the game’s highest authority in the country, and thus central to the shambles cricket has been steered into during the last three years. So it was surprising that it initially rejected, in a letter to sports minister Nathi Mthethwa last Wednesday, the get-out-of-jail card represented by Mthethwa’s proposed interim board. Only following four meetings after that was the light seen, and even then not unanimously. That does not bode well for the hope that the board and the council find ways to work together, which both have expressed. 

Council members received a summary of Monday’s vote, not a breakdown. Cricbuzz has been told who the dissenters might be, and has asked them to confirm. Neither has responded. Even so, we know who sits on the members council, and how long they have been there — crucial facts in the effort to root out the rot. 

The structure normally comprises representatives of CSA’s 12 provincial affiliates, its two associates, and CSA’s president and vice-president. Of the current members, five were part of the council on September 28, 2017: Rudy Claassen, Craig Nel, Donovan May, Rihan Richards and Angelo Carolissen. A sixth who was around then, Oupa Nkagisang, hasn’t been part of council business since December 2018, when CSA took control of the affiliate he leads on claims of maladministration.

The 2017 date is important because it was when Thabang Moroe made the unlikely leap from serving as Gauteng’s president and CSA’s vice-president to CSA’s acting chief executive, a vacancy created by Haroon Lorgat’s engineered ousting. Also crucial is that it was the board, not the council, that installed Moroe despite the fact that — CSA told parliament in October — he was not qualified for the position.

The board responsible for appointing Moroe comprised Chris Nenzani, Beresford Williams, Richards, Zola Thamae, Tando Ganda, Faeez Jaffar, Norman Arendse, Mohammed Iqbal Khan, Dawn Mokhobo, Vusi Pikoli and Louis von Zeuner, although Arendse missed key meetings because of ill health. Along with Moroe, Nenzani, Williams, Thamae, Ganda and Richards also sat on the council at that stage. Richards is the only survivor who was part of both of those bodies. He is now the acting president of the council.

When Lorgat left CSA, it had a bank balance of the equivalent of USD73.7-million and did not want for sponsors. Moroe was appointed to the job proper by the board on July 17, 2018. When he was suspended on charges of serious misconduct in December, having given himself sweeping powers, it was projected that CSA would be USD68.4-million in debt by the end of the 2022 rights cycle. Sponsors had either announced their impending departure or were scaling back their commitment.

Tebogo Siko, Anne Vilas, Ben Dladla, Xolani Vonya, Xander Snyders, Ashraf Burns, Dawid Roodt and Simphiwe Ndzundzu became part of the council after Moroe was appointed in a permanent capacity, and thus cannot be blamed for abiding by the board’s decision. Vilas, Burns and Roodt came onto the council between May and August this year — after Moroe was suspended — so are unsullied by this saga.

The same cannot be said for Claassen, Nel, May, Richards, Siko and Carolissen. May and Siko joined the board last year, in February and September, and Carolissen in September 2018, so they are even more culpable. They didn’t help appoint Moroe, but they also didn’t stop him damaging the game.

After months of unheeded calls for the board to go, Nenzani resigned as CSA’s president on August 17. He was followed by the remaining members on October 25 and 26: Williams, Carolissen, May, Siko, Thamae, John Mogodi, Dheven Dharmalingham, Marius Schoeman, Eugenia Kula-Ameyaw and Vuyokazi Memani-Sedile. But Carolissen, May and Siko are still with us as affiliate presidents and thus council members.

The point of this roll call of the more or less reprehensible is to record the names of those involved in South African cricket’s ongoing ugliness and to sketch the context of their involvement. It isn’t intended to make for sparkling reading. 

The names of 31 administrators are recorded above. That only three of them — Vilas, Burns and Roodt — can be given a clean audit is an indictment on the state of the game in this country. And even that is conditional: we don’t know whether any or two of them voted against the sanity of allowing the interim board to be appointed.

As for the other, blemished 28, we know what you did last summer. And the summer before that. And the one before that. And before that. And in the winters, too …  

First published by Cricbuzz.  

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72 hours that shook SA cricket’s world

CSA’s entire board has resigned, although some will roam the game like zombies. What made them go after months of bloodymindedness, and what happens now?  

TELFORD VICE | Cape Town

SEVENTY-TWO hours after Cricket South Africa’s (CSA) board were asked, not for the first time, to step aside and, also not for the first time, refused, all 10 directors had resigned.

The announcement that Zola Thamae, Marius Schoeman, Eugenia Kula-Ameyaw and Vuyokazi Memani-Sedile were out of the game was posted on CSA’s official twitter account on Monday morning. 

They followed Beresford Williams, Angelo Carolissen, Donovan May, Tebogo Siko, John Mogodi and Dheven Dharmalingham, who quit on Sunday.

“After the Members’ Council had deliberated and resolved that in order to best serve the interest of cricket in South Africa, the entire Board should resign — which they did,” CSA tweeted. “All Independent and Non-Independent Directors have now resigned.”

What cricket’s stakeholders have been calling for since December has been achieved. Now what?

CSA are nominally led by Rihan Richards, the former board member who represents Northern Cape on the Members Council — cricket’s highest authority — of which he was named president on Sunday. But Richards could be reduced to a figurehead by Wednesday.

Sports minister Nathi Mthethwa will wait until close of business on Tuesday for CSA to argue against his intervention in their affairs. Whatever they say is unlikely to cut much ice with him.

Not so fast, sportslovers. Having allowed cricketminded South Africans to enjoy the moment of the despised board’s demise, CSA put out a lunchtime release that said: “All resignations are with immediate effect except for three members, namely, Zola Thamae, John Mogodi and Donovan May, who will remain as directors until the interim board structure has been appointed to ensure the continuity and stability of the organisation.”

The release also said Richards would chair this zombie board, which might not be with us for long.

Mthethwa will probably instruct the South African Sports Confederation and Olympic Committee (Sascoc) to establish an interim structure to control cricket, at least until CSA’s annual meeting on December 5.

Speculation on who might be part of this body is running wild, but it seems sure to include a respected former player and a figure who has high level experience with the International Cricket Council. 

South Africans more interested in who is on the field rather than in the boardroom should be assured that the domestic season will still start on November 2, and that England remain on course to send their men’s team to the country on November 16 to play six white-ball internationals.

But what changed between the Members Council asking the board to go at a meeting on Thursday night, and being rebuffed, and Monday morning?

Because the players in this contest wear collar and tie and not pads and helmets doesn’t make the question any less intriguing.

The answer could lay in the weakness that has been baked into CSA’s organisational design. The same Members Council that asked the board to resign includes six now former board members — who opposed the proposal when it was debated.

But they were outvoted by the eight people on the Members Council who were not on the board, and it was resolved that the board should be asked to relinquish their positions. 

That put the suits who were on both structures in an invidious position. They couldn’t very well refuse to enact, at board level, a Members Council resolution they had been part of, even though they had dissented. Once the decision to ask the board to quit had been made they were duty bound to walk the Members Council’s talk.

Even so, except for Williams, the non-independent directors will remain on the Members Council as provincial representatives. 

That no doubt accounts for the jarringly touchy feely tone of other CSA tweets on Monday: “The Members’ Council thanks every member who diligently served on the Board and selflessly sacrificed their time for extended and often, overwhelming periods, to assist [CSA].

“The Members’ Council appreciates their commitment to cricket and despite the turbulent economic climate, CSA, under their leadership, received an unqualified audit for the financial year ending 30 April 2020. The Council wishes them well in their future endeavours.”

The undearly departed directors should be under no illusion that that sentiment is shared in the provinces from which most of them came, and to which they owed their places on the board.  

“It’s a shit show,” Garret Perry, the vice-chair of the Nelson Mandela Bay Cricket Association and the president of Port Elizabeth Cricket Club, told Daily Maverick on Monday.

“Maybe it’s because there are people in important positions at CSA who have never played the game, or maybe because they are trying to make as much as they can out of cricket.

“But you get the feeling that people who do want to give back to the game and want to do the right thing — people like [former acting chief executive] Jacques Faul — are worked out of their positions.”

Independent directors are not part of the Members Council, so aren’t subject to the kind of pressure faced by non-independents. 

But when the independent Dharmalingham — the only director who was willing to resign on Thursday — went on Sunday, the other independents, Schoeman, Kula-Ameyaw and Memani-Sedile, had nowhere to hide.

Dharmalingham, who chaired the finance committee, and Schoeman, who was in charge of the social and ethics committee, brought competence to a structure in dire need of exactly that. But the removal of Kula-Ameyaw, the transformation chair, will not be lamented.

Faul’s resignation on August 17 is understood to have been fallout from the publication in the Sunday Times of a full-page advertisement that cost CSA R521,000 — and which was placed at Kula-Ameyaw’s insistence.

The chief financial officer and the chief executive were required to approve expenditure of that size. Pholetsi Moseki, the CFO, at first opposed it but then made a curious about turn. Faul was never in favour, and maintained his stance. The advertisement was published nonetheless.

Dharmalingham boxed clever in his explanation to parliament on October 13: “As a non-exec director, we do not have any mandate to authorise any expenditure. So, from that perspective, Dr Eugenia could not have authorised that expenditure.

“In terms of the process within the organisation, any procurement goes through procurement and, depending on the quantum — and in this case the quantum was such that it had to be approved by at least the CFO and the CEO — in this scenario it was actually approved by the CFO and it was done within his mandate.”

The fact that Faul did not sign the purchase order, as he would have had to do for the money to be spent legitimately, was conveniently glossed over.

By then, it was plain Kula-Ameyaw was ill-suited to her role. On August 28 she told a press conference: “What I don’t like about cricket is they don’t predict how long they will play. Football is 45, 45 [minutes]; then you are done. I only watch the highlights of cricket, not the whole game. I don’t have time for that.”

On September 16, after Momentum, one of CSA’s few remaining sponsors, said they were ending most of their relationship with cricket, she tweeted: “Momentum forgets that we invest hundreds of millions in Momentum in our SOE [state-owned enterprises] and pension funds. I remember asking for the BBBEE [broad-based black economic empowerment, and affirmative action policy] certificate in my other board.”

Momentum are a Level One Contributor in BBBEE terms, the highest certification there is, and they have a BBBEE recognition level of 135%.

Kula-Ameyaw had ended her tweet: “Just check before you make an irrational decision.”

Sound advice. Clearly, it was not taken.

First published by Daily Maverick.

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Four more run … from the game … Nathi’s in the mood

“All resignations are with immediate effect except for three members …” – CSA take 10 steps forward, three steps backward.

TELFORD VICE | Cape Town

THE resignations of the remaining four CSA board members were revealed on Monday, a day after six others quit. That clears the way for an interim structure to be put in place by government, through its satellites, to run the game.

Former acting president Beresford Williams led the way out of the organisation on Sunday. He was followed by Angelo Carolissen, Donovan May, Tebogo Siko, John Mogodi and Dheven Dharmalingham. Only Zola Thamae, Marius Schoeman, Eugenia Kula-Ameyaw and Vuyokazi Memani-Sedile were left.

But, on Monday morning, CSA tweeted: “After the members council had deliberated and resolved that in order to best serve the interest of cricket in South Africa, the entire board should resign — which they did. All independent and non-independent directors have now resigned.”

A few hours later, CSA appeared to backtrack in a release that said: “All resignations are with immediate effect except for three members, namely, Zola Thamae, John Mogodi and Donovan May, who will remain as directors until the interim board structure has been appointed to ensure the continuity and stability of the organisation.”

The release said Rihan Richards, who was appointed acting president of the members council on Sunday, would chair the board comprising Thamae, Mogodi and May.

That comes after umpteen calls from a range of stakeholders, since December, for the board to go. And a day before CSA runs out of time to tell sports minister Nathi Mthethwa why he shouldn’t intervene in the game.

Mthethwa first gave the job of sorting out cricket to the South African Sports Confederation and Olympic Committee (SASCOC), which in September told CSA’s now former board and key executives to step aside while a task team investigated the game’s ills. The board refused, and left SASCOC with the impression that it would unleash lawyers to avoid being usurped. SASCOC passed the buck back to Mthethwa, who gave CSA until close of business on October 27 to argue against him taking action against it — which could include removing the Proteas from the international arena.

Whether the board’s resignation en masse will be enough to stop Mthethwa from exercising the more extreme aspects of his authority remains to be seen, especially as executive staff like acting chief executive Kugandrie Govender, director of cricket Graeme Smith and company secretary Welsh Gwaza appear to be still in their positions.

It is unclear who will be on the interim committee, although there seems to be support for a senior player representative and an ICC voice. Also not known is whether the game will be handed back to CSA after its annual meeting on December 5.

What is known is that the domestic season will start on November 2, and that England’s men’s team will arrive next month to play three ODIs and three T20Is.  

First published by Cricbuzz.

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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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Looming Mthethwa deadline flushes CSA suits

“I wish and hope that CSA finds peace in the coming months and cricket takes centre stage.” – Dheven Dharmalingham after resigning from CSA’s board.

TELFORD VICE | Cape Town

PUSH finally came to shove for troubled CSA on Sunday, when acting president Beresford Williams led an exodus of six resignations from the board. The mass walkout follows months of calls from various stakeholders for the board to go, three days after it refused the latest demand that it do so, and two days before government is due to say what shape its promised intervention into the game’s affairs will take.

Williams, Angelo Carolissen, Donovan May, Tebogo Siko, John Mogodi and Dheven Dharmalingham all walked the plank. Only Zola Thamae, a non-independent, and Marius Schoeman, Eugenia Kula-Ameyaw and Vuyokazi Memani-Sedile, all independents, remain aboard the burning deck of cricket’s listing ship. But there are indications that they might also be on their way out.

Northern Cape Cricket president Rihan Richards, a former board member, has been installed as president of the members council, CSA’s highest authority where each of the 14 provinces is represented.

Williams, who assumed office when Chris Nenzani resigned in August, also left the members council — which still includes Carolissen, May, Siko and Mogodi. Whether their continued presence, and that of the four remaining board members, will prompt tough action from sports minister Nathi Mthethwa remains to be seen. Under South African law, Mthethwa has the authority to withdraw the Proteas from the international arena. But that seems unlikely as Mthethwa, along with the health and home affairs ministries, has granted permission for England to tour next month despite South Africa’s pandemic regulations keeping the borders closed to travellers from the United Kingdom. 

Dharmalingham, who chaired the finance committee and first tendered his resignation on Friday, is the only non-independent board member who quit on Sunday. “I wish and hope that CSA finds peace in the coming months and cricket takes centre stage,” CSA quoted Dharmalingham as saying on its twitter account.

Peace is too ambitious a goal for an organisation that has lurched from one crisis to the next for the past three years. If they weren’t in trouble for shoddy management they were in the spotlight for questionable governance, and all against a backdrop of plummeting finances.

What will probably happen next is that Mthethwa, who has given CSA until October 27 to furnish him with reasons why he should not get involved in cricket, will order the South African Sports Confederation and Olympic Committee (SASCOC) to establish an interim committee to run the game until CSA’s annual meeting on December 5.

A brave new world awaits CSA, which has already been transformed from what it was on September 18, when Williams was asked at a press conference why he had not resigned. “I believe I’m still committed‚ I’m passionate‚ and can still contribute and serve the game. I choose not to go. 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.”

It appears Williams felt that way going into Thursday’s meeting of the members council, where the entire board was asked to resign and reportedly refused. What a difference three days makes.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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CSA board rain on their own parade

That the see-no-evil, hear-no-evil, do-no-evil suits chose to sully the MSL final with their presence shows how out of touch they are.

On a good day in Paarl, you can’t see any CSA board members. Photograph: Telford Vice

TELFORD VICE in Paarl

SIGNS that Cricket South Africa’s (CSA) abnormal service at board level would not be interrupted, nevermind resume, were evident before the start of the Mzansi Super League (MSL) final between the Paarl Rocks and the Tshwane Spartans on Monday.

As the teams lined up for the national anthem, a bevvy of bumptiousness barrelled over the boundary to bask in the players’ presence and shake their hands. One of their odd number was Angelo Carolissen, looking fresh from an island holiday in his Panama hat and a shirt that might have borne the brunt of a collision with a hotdog stand’s entire condiment supply. Carolissen, the Boland president, sits on CSA’s board, and his prominence on parade on Monday meant nothing had changed. 

The board — or the eight members left in the wake of four resignations in 10 days — had gathered in Paarl for a meeting on Monday. Also present were the members council, which comprises the 14 provincial presidents and has the authority to dissolve the board. That should have happened, given that the board have proved themselves about as functional as a boxer shambling around the ring without the slightest intention of throwing a punch but determined to collect a purse regardless. So much so that the minister of sport, Nathi Mthethwa, summoned them on Thursday and, according to a source, “read them the riot act”. Monday was another opportunity to do the right thing: resign or be removed. Alas, Carolissen’s chest-out, stomach-in peacocking told us that hadn’t happened; that the fat cats were still at the cream. Instead, it was decided that a steering committee be formed to “retroactively” address the domestic restructure proposal that has landed CSA in a court battle with the South African Cricketers’ Association (SACA) because up to 70 professional players could lose their jobs as a result.

SACA blew that idea out of the water in a release on Tuesday that quoted chief executive Tony Irish as saying: “Although CSA has announced that SACA will be part of this committee we have yet to be formally contacted by CSA on this. I confirm however that SACA will not participate in this committee until the existing restructure decision is formally withdrawn. The fact that CSA is now, for the first time, going to look into what the domestic structure should be is a clear admission that the decision eight months ago was taken without this being done. This is precisely why we had to launch legal proceedings against CSA. Given that this is the subject of the court application we cannot participate in a formal committee where decisions taken by it may affect the outcome of the court case. It is therefore obvious to us that the restructure decision must be withdrawn and the court case settled with us first.” Irish said SACA had “no problem in sitting down” to find solutions to cricket’s problems. “However this time around the process needs to be done properly and if the current MOU [memorandum of understanding between CSA and SACA, the document that governs their relationship in law] is to be changed, because of a change in the domestic structure, then agreement must be reached with SACA. This is the only way to bring clarity for the players on what will happen next season and to ensure that we are able to deal with how any changes will affect them.”

The release ended with the by now standard SACA demand for, in Irish’s quoted words, “the leadership of the CSA board to accept accountability for the position in which cricket has been placed. We repeat our call for that leadership to step down.”

That leadership and the rest of the board, and the members council, met at Grande Roche, a luxury winelands hotel where the cheapest room costs USD 340, on Monday. Some of the suits slept there on Sunday, and a few might have squeezed in another expensive night. And that in an organisation that has been forecast to lose up to USD 69.6-million by the end of the 2022 rights cycle. That would not sit well with many, but not South Africans who have become accustomed to the dismal behaviour of CSA’s see-no-evil, hear-no-evil, do-no-evil board.

That they chose to sully Paarl with their presence was evidence of how out of touch they are. The MSL is among the few aspects of the game in South Africa that could be considered in working order. It is losing money hand over fist — USD 7.7-million last year — and it couldn’t be worse timed to try and help a faltering men’s Test squad prepare for a series against England that starts on December 26. But, after playing to empty houses for the first few weeks, crowds picked up. The quality of the cricket has been decent throughout, with games keenly contested more often than not. Had CSA’s board a smidgen of awareness between them they would have met in secret at the other end of the country and not put themselves on view to remind the sold out crowd of 7 500, the biggest of the tournament crammed into its smallest ground, at the final that, however good things looked on the field, the same old rot stank beyond the boundary.

Three hours after Carolissen’s appearance, with the Rocks 16 runs away from winning the final and the country watching on free-to-air television — and waiting to celebrate with a team who are impossible not to like and blessed with almost equally entertaining supporters — a release fluttered into view. It was from CSA and, predictably, it dragged the attention of the cricketminded public off the game.

“The board of directors of [CSA] has given its consultant, David Richardson, the mandate to form a steering committee to make recommendations on the future structure of South African domestic cricket. The steering committee will examine all practical options on the future of the domestic game including the best manner in which to close the gap in playing standard between domestic and international cricket and its financial implications. The committee is expected to report back to the board at its next meeting in the first quarter of 2020. The committee, in addition to Mr. Richardson, will consist of the CSA Director of Cricket [Graeme Smith], the CSA chief financial officer [Pholetsi Moseki] and a representative of [SACA].”

Happily, Richardson was on hand to turn CSA’s bloodless organisation-speak into something more human.

What would he say to those who consider his appointment part of CSA’s whitewashing exercise? “It is a genuine commitment to try and help out, simple as that. I think there is an acknowledgment from the board that somehow CSA had got itself into a bit of a hole and they looked around for people who could maybe help, so its a genuine attempt to help. 

How deep is the hole CSA have dug for the game and its future? “It’s not good on a number of fronts. Things have been allowed to fester. Jacques [Faul, CSA’s acting chief executive] has got his hands full looking at the operations, there’s governance that probably won’t go away and then we’ve got the urgency of having to deal with the England team arriving [for a Test series starting on December 26] and having to put on a good performance. There’s a lot to be done.”

As a recent International Cricket Council chief executive, Richardson is well equipped to look at relevant issues through an objective lens. “The value of international rights is not what it was two years ago, so first of all we’ve got to make sure the forecasting and assumptions that are made when it comes to devising any kind of structure are robust enough,” he said. “That’s an exercise in itself. People throw around this R650-million [USD 45-million] forecast loss. Is it 650? Is it 300-million, is it 1-billion [SACA’s estimate]? We’ve got to establish that upfront and understand the challenges facing us. Then we need to make sure the stakeholders are all consulted and that we look at it from not only a cricket perspective, quality-wise, but also a financial and sustainable perspective. That is going to take a bit of work but a lot of work has been done, as I understand it, so its all about checking the robustness of the figures and then putting some cricket parameters in place and then trying to devise an option that the board will approve going forward.”

Ah, the board; the villains of the piece. “I always like to give the benefit of the doubt as far as integrity is concerned,” Richardson said. “From the management side, we need to put some decent proposals on the table. I think we have got the perfect guy in Jacques who understands the whole infrastructure here. He knows the sponsors, he knows a lot of the players. So he is ideally placed to put something in place that works and you can’t fault his work ethic and his integrity. Yes, we can’t guarantee the board will eventually approve any recommendations that come out of this process but if we put a good plan together, there’s no reason why they wouldn’t.”

Maybe Richardson hasn’t yet understood exactly who and what he is dealing with. CSA’s release on Monday quoted president Chris Nenzani as saying: “Domestic cricket is an important part of our talent development pipeline in ensuring that top quality players come through the system to maintain the … Proteas as a major force in the world game.”

South Africa were the first team to crash out of the reckoning for a place in the knockout rounds at this year’s World Cup and they currently sit at the bottom of the World Test Championship standings. Maybe someone should tell Nenzani. Try the Grande Roche Hotel first.

Not that South Africans aren’t used to this level of studied disinterest from their administrators. Minutes after he was first elected, in February 2013 at a meeting at the Wanderers with a Test against New Zealand in full flow on the field, Nenzani asked that questions from the press be brief. “We all have families to go home to,” he said. The cricket? It didn’t seem to matter much. Six years on, not a lot would appear to have changed. At least, not for the good.

First published by Cricbuzz.

Suits of different stripes in CSA’s doom spiral

“I unfortunately have to board a flight now.” – EP Cricket president Donovan May’s fourth and final failure to answer the same question.

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

LIKE a torpedoed ship, oil haemorrhaging out and water gushing in, Cricket South Africa’s (CSA) bumbling board is deep in its doom spiral. It will not rise, but still it tries, the impending demise ever more desperately denied. The sad saga reached a diabolical level between Wednesday night and Thursday morning, when two board members veered onto opposing paths.

First Jack Madiseng, Gauteng’s president, resigned his seat on the board, writing to president Chris Nenzani that “unfortunately moral and principle circumstances forced me to consider this action after witnessing the board refusing to take accountability and stepping down at the members council meeting [on Friday]”. Then came a tirade quoting Donovan May, the Eastern Province president and a board member, on TimesLIVE, the online platform of a national media group: “I am in full support of the board. I find nothing wrong with the board at all and I actually think that they have been doing a good job. The board is united and the members’ council has given us the green light, as you heard the president say at our AGM at the weekend. It is the media which is driving this thing. It is the media that is crucifying us.” Look at May in this light and he bears a striking resemblance to Mohammed Saeed al-Sahaf, Saddam Hussein’s information minister who in March 2003 appeared on television in Baghdad to say there were no American tanks in the city — even as they rolled through the background behind him. 

You wonder what May makes of the ultimatum on Thursday afternoon from financial services firm Momentum, CSA’s backer for one-day cricket from international level all the way down to the under-13s, that the company will “reconsider its … agreement at the end of the current season” unless six “requirements” are met. Top of the list was the “resignation of the current board of CSA (alternatively resignation of the current president and vice-president [Beresford Williams]) in order to address the leadership crisis at CSA”. The South African Cricketers’ Association have made the same demand, twice, and on Monday the declared they would “not lend credibility to the board of CSA by dealing with a ‘negotiating panel’ if this comprises any board members”.

We don’t have to wonder what Madiseng thinks. “If someone had to be fired or dismissed, in all honesty, the entire board should be fired or dissolved for rubbishing CSA’s brand,” he wrote in a letter to Nenzani and Williams on November 29.

Despite how this looks, Madiseng and May are from the same planet. That wasn’t always the case. Not long ago Madiseng was a staunch defender of Thabang Moroe, CSA’s chief executive, who was suspended on Friday for his role in taking the game dangerously close to self-destruction as a professional going concern. A few weeks ago May was said to be willing to go on record about his concerns over how the board were running the game. He was understood, for instance, to have opposed Moroe’s appointment as chief executive — surely a conflict considering Moroe was CSA’s vice-president — as well as the organisation changing their constitution to afford Nenzani a seventh year as president, 

Contacted on November 20, May shouldered arms: “I cannot speak to you regarding these matters. You know only the CSA president can speak to the media regarding CSA matters. I can only speak to media regarding EP cricket matters. I’m sure you can understand.” We understood. But, clearly, he has changed his mind. Apparently not, and that despite the compelling evidence to the contrary, as quoted above. “As discussed I can only speak on behalf of Eastern Province Cricket,” May told Cricbuzz on Thursday. That was also his answer when he was asked to confirm his reported stance on Moroe and Nenzani. Pressed on the latter, he said, “I cannot comment as I was not on the board to make any appointments. I only recently got into the board.”

That much is true. May joined the gravy train that is CSA’s board, whose members could earn up to USD 27 250 a year, in February — not quite four months before his home ground, St George’s Park in Port Elizabeth, was named as one of the venues for the four Tests England’s men’s team will play in South Africa this southern summer. St George’s, the country’s oldest international venue, last hosted an England Test in 2004. Since then, crowds at Centurion, Newlands and the Wanderers, and even Kingsmead — which like Port Elizabeth struggles with low attendances — have seen the English in two Tests. As many as 12 000 Barmy Army members are expected to turn up this summer, and the Eastern Cape city’s depressed economy could do with a week of steadily pinkening Poms proffering pounds at pubs, pizza parlours, and places to stay.

But we cannot say for sure that May’s supposed change of heart about Moroe and Nenzani was the price he was willing to pay for the privilege of hosting cricket’s biggest regularly travelling circus, and he would hardly be willing to say it was. So, back to the original question. May has been Eastern Province president since March 2014, which means he has sat on CSA’s highest authority, the members council, which has the power to dissolve the board, for more than five years. Did he oppose, in his capacity as a senior administrator, the appointment of Thabang Moroe as CSA’s chief executive in July 2018 and the extension, this July, of Nenzani’s term as president? “Like I said, the board makes those appointments,” May said. We tried again. Did he, as a senior administrator entrusted with doing what’s best for cricket in his province, agree with those developments at the time? And had he changed his mind? “I unfortunately have to board a flight now.” Cricbuzz told him we expected an answer when next he was available. So far, we’ve not heard him, and there doesn’t seem to be much point pursuing a sorry excuse for an elected official who, having been asked a similar question four times, continues to hide from answering it.

There is no longer need to bother Madiseng for comment. He is the first non-independent member to ditch a board that has also lost three of its five independent directors. But there is no gaurantee we won’t see him again: putting as much daylight as possible between himself and the sinking ship would seem a canny move for someone who is thought to have designs on the CSA presidency. Like Arnie, he will no doubt be back. For now, though, Madiseng has left us food for thought. Among the reasons he gave Nenzani for resigning was “your press statement that was meant to have been presented on December 3, 2019”. Cricbuzz has been reliably informed that, last Tuesday, “Chris was to make the statement that Thabang Moroe was not acting on his own accord, as per the picture painted in the media, but that he was following instructions from the CSA board”. Hark: a smoking gun.

Four days later Moroe was suspended and that narrative was no longer useful to Nenzani, Williams and May, along with Zola Thamae, Tebogo Siko, Angelo Carolissen, Steve Cornelius and Marius Schoeman — the rest of this risible, miserable, execrable bunch of suits. To own up to their complicity in the calamity would have been dangerous to their survival, and was therefore unutterable. For CSA’s board, that’s all that matters — not the public, not the sponsors, not the players, and certainly not the game. It’s all about them. And they have the sickening audacity to call themselves custodians. Of what, exactly?

First published by Cricbuzz.

Leading Edge: One more time with feeling

South African cricket needs a strong press now more than ever. Happily, we are stronger now than ever.

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

THIS column first appeared seven years and a month ago. Twenty-seven men’s South Africa Test players, among them wonders of world cricket like Kagiso Rabada and Quinton de Kock, have been minted in that time.

Others — not least Faf du Plessis, Dean Elgar and Temba Bavuma — have carved places in the memory and indeed the heart.

Twenty-two have, in the past seven years and a month, gone quietly into that good night of Test retirement.

Along with the triumphant triumvirate of Graeme Smith, Jacques Kallis and Mark Boucher, their number includes AB de Villiers, Morné Morkel, Dale Steyn and Hashim Amla.

That’s a bloody good squad of 12, a dazzling dozen, even if it is lopsided with three wicketkeepers and nary a spinner.

So much for the heroes.

This column has outlived the tenures of two Cricket South Africa (CSA) chief executives, but not the organisation’s current president. Originally elected more than six years ago, he has found a way to cling on despite having served both his allotted terms. As for the incumbent chief executive, may the cricketing gods watch over him. Closely.

The incumbent CSA board? Not worth feeding. For them to countenance the desperation that cricket in South Africa has sunk into and not be seen to do a damn thing about it makes them, at best, uncaring and, at worst, complicit. 

Consider yourselves named and shamed Chris Nenzani, Beresford Williams, Zola Thamae, Tebogo Siko, Donovan May, Jack Madiseng, Angelo Carolissen, Mohamed Iqbal Khan, Dawn Mokhobo, Shirley Zinn, Steve Cornelius and Marius Schoeman.

So much for the suits.

South African cricket needs a strong press now more than ever. Happily, we are stronger now than ever. Note: press. Not media. The electronic section of the industry is either compromised by the need to hang onto rights, or hamstrung by the subjects of their brief interviews having too much control over what is broadcast. In cricket, as in so much else, journalism is written. Not broadcast. 

It’s been a hell of a ride coming up, before the 10am diary meeting on Tuesday, with a decent enough pitch for a piece to be filed on Friday — near as can be to a prescribed length, which this week is 670 words, if you want to know — and published — still relevant, come what may — on Sunday.

By this columnist’s reckoning, that’s happened around 300 times.

But now it’s over. Almost. One more time. With feeling.

It has been a singular privilege and, mostly, a pleasure to sit down once a week and try to compose something about this richly writable game that might make you smile, care or think a little more. Sometimes it’s pissed you off properly? Thank you.

Be assured that your attention has never been taken for granted, and that the most important factor in this finely balanced equation is not the players, the suits, the editor, the publisher, the paper itself nor even the game. It certainly isn’t me. It’s you.

“Why should anyone bother reading this?” 

That’s me quoting myself, and it’s the question I ask before I begin every story I write. It isn’t always answered as well as I would like, but that’s part of the challenge: to try to keep doing it better.

“You must love cricket,” I’m often told. I don’t — do crime reporters love crime? But I do love writing about cricket.

On Thursday I had occasion to be in the same room where the King commission hearings were conducted in 2000, and for the first time since then. I looked at the same doorway we all stared at waiting for Hansie Cronjé to arrive, and shivered. The feeling was the same 19 years on. It was, still, like waiting for JFK to get shot.

Columnists come and columnists go, but cricket remains. It is the most cherished constant for those of a particular disposition.

Where is this columnist going? Not far. And he remains committed to finding out why the lying bastards are lying.

That’s 669 words. Close enough.

First published by the Sunday Times.