87 nominees, 6 months, no appointments: CSA’s search for independent directors drags on

Is CSA’s board afraid of exposing its incompetence to new members? Or are they waiting for incompetents to be nominated?

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

CRICKET South Africa (CSA) have had at least 87 nominations for the three vacancies for independent directors on their board. Yet none of those openings has been filled despite existing for almost six months.

That failure alone rings alarm bells about the way the game is being administered in South Africa. But, added to the suspensions of senior CSA staff, most of them unresolved, and the dearth of leadership during the coronavirus pandemic, it only builds the widespread disbelief and disgust that the board members remain in office.

That might change at the annual meeting scheduled for September 5. But the damage has long since been done under this board’s watch, what with CSA estimated to lose more than R1-billion by the end of the 2022 rights cycle. At least, that was the projection before the pandemic plunged the world’s economy into chaos and uncertainty. Given those circumstances responsible administrators would see the value in shoring up the independent component of a derelict, destructive board. Responsible administrators are hard to find in South Africa.

How have board members clung to their positions in the throes of shambling mismanagement and unprecedented financial strife? CSA’s highest authority, the members council, which has the authority to dissolve the board, is dominated by board members: six of the current board of eight also sit on the members council. They are hardly going to vote themselves out of business — especially as a seat on CSA’s board can be worth R400,000 a year to incumbents.

Albeit after presiding over so much that had gone so wrong, Shirley Zinn, Mohamed Iqbal Khan and Dawn Mokhobo resigned as independent directors in the first week of December — which ended with the suspension of chief executive Thabang Moroe, whose ballooning, recklessly wielded power was a factor in their decision to walk away.

Moroe’s removal from the equation cleared the way for progress: it is understood Graeme Smith, CSA’s director of cricket, refused to accept that job while Moroe was part of CSA. But as disciplinary procedures against Moroe have yet to be completed he is still being paid his monthly salary, which is believed to be R350,000.

Moroe enjoys significant support on the board, where he previously served as vice-president under Chris Nenzani, who has been president since February 2013. Last year changes to CSA’s constitution were engineered to prop Nenzani up as he neared the end of his second term, which would otherwise have been his last.

Thus it isn’t surprising there are vacancies for independent directors on CSA’s board. But is the members council — more than a third of it made up of by board members — delaying the process for fear of exposing their own and the board’s incompetence to more able eyes? Or are they waiting for incompetents of their own ilk to be nominated, and so enable the shoddy show to go on?

One well regarded business figure with experience as a company director and in cricket administration said they had “put my name forward late last year but haven’t heard anything”. Maybe credible candidates should stop holding their breath. “They’re not keen to go out publicly,” a source with knowledge of CSA machinations told Cricbuzz. “Seems like they still want to hand pick independents instead of going for the best.”

The agenda for a members council teleconference on April 9 said “the list of previously shortlisted candidates does not fully encompass skills needed on the CSA board, which therefore necessitates the head-hunting of candidates with the requisite skills and experience outside of the shortlisted candidates”. If that wasn’t a big enough hint that the matter was to remain an inside job, it was proposed that, “[I]n the event that the interim selection panel [established on February 12 to find new independent directors] is authorised to extend the recruitment, the board members and members council be invited to nominate potential candidates they deem would add value to the CSA board and submit those nominations with their respective curriculum vitae to the secretariat”. More names? When there are already 29 times as many as there are positions available? At least the members council was reminded to “[keep] in mind that these nominations would be in addition to the current 87 candidates being considered”.

Asked to confirm that still more nominations had been demanded, and why that might have happened, CSA spokesperson Thamie Mthembu offered nothing illuminating or helpful. Instead he said that “the processes involving the nominations for the vacant positions of independent directors have not yet been concluded and as such, CSA is presently unable to share any new knowledge with members of the media”.

That’s as close to engaging with relevant issues as CSA’s elected echelons venture. Just how out-of-touch the board is was revealed in a release on March 25, which was issued in part to pay tribute to former Western Province player Noel Brache, who died the previous day. “Graham will be particularly remembered for his contribution to the development of youth cricket in the Western Province,” Beresford Williams, CSA’s vice-president and formerly Western Province’s president, was quoted as saying. “Graham” was corrected to “Noel” in an update. But that happened under cover of adding a quote from another administrator and without pointing out the original clanger, which could by then have been published.

Nenzani — CSA’s president, lest we have all forgotten — was last heard from in January. Not once since the coronavirus cast cricket deep into the unknown has he emerged to show anything like leadership. Instead it has been left to Jacques Faul, CSA’s acting chief executive, and Smith to explain how the game plans to survive the crisis. Happily for the cricketminded public, they are responsive to the press and have proved themselves as people for the trenches: Smith on the field, Faul as a fire fighter when pyromaniacs in suits burn down the game.

South African cricket can trust in them. In too many of the rest, not so much. Maybe three among the 87, or more, who are still in limbo after nearly six months will put a dent in the credibility deficit.

First published by Cricbuzz.

No Banquo in CSA’s Macbeth

“The entire board should be fired or dissolved for rubbishing CSA’s brand.” – Gauteng president Jack Madiseng

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

SOME of Thabang Moroe’s best friends are Cricket South Africa (CSA) board members. That remains true even as pressure, from inside and outside the organisation, mounts on the under fire chief executive to resign.

But the previously strong bond between Moroe and CSA’s president, Chris Nenzani, has been broken. Now Moroe’s remaining allies on the board are taking aim at Nenzani for the mess the game is in. That is hardly surprising considering other alliances will need to be strengthened before Nenzani, having overstayed his welcome by a year, vacates his position in 2020. Even so, it offers an illuminating twist on a narrative that has hitherto dumped all the ills on Moroe’s desk.     

There was more of that, although nudged in the board’s direction, in the letter Mohamed Iqbal Khan wrote to Nenzani on Wednesday to resign from CSA’s board: “The criticism in the media, and by the public who love and support cricket, has reached such a crescendo that I can no longer be deaf to the cries for immediate changes at CSA board level. Before … Shirley Zinn resigned [from the board this week], I still maintained that I would give things a chance, and wait until at least Saturday [when a board meeting is scheduled] for us to address the deep crisis we find ourselves in. I seriously doubt however that you and/or the board is capable of doing so, and in the circumstances, I have reached the only conclusion, and that is that I must resign my position on the board as well as my position as chairperson of the CSA finance committee.” Khan wrote that, “Unfortunately, all the fingers point at the CEO. But having said that, I cannot believe that you are not aware of the many issues that have caused this malaise, and to that extent, you are also complicit, and perhaps even the entire board. However, I can no longer be party to an organisation that is fast ruining the game. … I can no longer afford to be held accountable for the misconduct of the CEO. If I continue one day further as a member of the board, I will become an accomplice to what the CEO has done, and is doing.”

Khan slammed Sunday’s decision, rescinded six hours later, to revoke the accreditation of five senior journalists as “certainly unconstitutional and illegal” and said “blaming the head of communications [Thamie Mthembu] for mis-communicating or failing to communicate effectively with the media when he is ultimately responsible for such communication”. He damned Moroe further with “… if the CEO is or was not aware of what is happening in his office, then this aggravates his conduct”. Khan also alleged, among other issues, “several resignations in the CSA office due to what they claim is a legally toxic environment”, “widespread credit card abuse in the office”, and “very selective communication with SACA [the South African Cricketers’ Association, who on Wednesday threatened strike action], and a failure to engage with them in terms of the CSA collective agreement with SACA”.

Khan’s strong statements are being widely reported, less so that he is apparently being investigated by CSA’s ethics structures over a potential conflict of interest — his professional superior is Mustaq Ahmed Brey, who sits on the board of the Western Province Cricket Association (WPCA). Another member of the latter, Fagmeedah Petersen-Cook, formerly of the Gauteng board, posted on social media: “Jack Madiseng positioning himself for CSA presidency? As guilty as all the non-independents in the patronage network. I resigned as lead independent at Gauteng because of his behaviour.”

That brings us, admittedly not before time, to Moroe’s remaining allies, his rift with Nenzani, and what needs to happen in the coming months to keep power in South African cricket where it is now. In a letter to Nenzani and his vice-president, Beresford Williams, dated November 29, Madiseng, the Gauteng president and a member of the CSA board who has recently been made chair of the influential cricket committee, mounted a strong defence of Moroe — which meant attacking the lame duck Nenzani and his deputy. “I would like to exercise my fiduciary duty as a board member of CSA and express my disappointment at both of you for the poor or lack of leadership that we find our brand in,” Madiseng wrote. “I could have taken an easy path and resigned. Fortunately, I have mentors and guides that have advised me to be part of the change and solution at CSA. So I decided to act responsibly as a member of this board and bring the concerns stipulated below for your attention. … The poor CEO has been getting all the klaps [slaps] and punches from the media and the public without the presence of the CSA leadership, which is both of you. Let me unpack a couple of examples … to demonstrate your poor or non-visible leadership which has led to the excruciating and bad personal brand reputation of our CEO.” Whereupon Madiseng launched into critiques of the breakdown of CSA’s relationship with the WPCA, the ongoing delay in making key appointments, a slew of high-level suspensions, transformation issues, and a domestic restructure that could cost 70 players their jobs. “The leadership was nowhere to be found; non-existent and non-visible. The operational team [Moroe and his staff] is all alone. … My expectation was for both of you [Nenzani and Williams] to take the leadership and face the music on behalf of the board and executive team. It didn’t happen. … Kudos to the CEO and his executive for having the balls to take such astronomical and damaging reports from the public and media. … Your non-visibility gave the media and the public a perception that the CEO unilaterally makes all the decisions, which is not true. We all know that the CEO can’t act without a mandate from both of you. I hold ourselves (the board) accountable and not the CEO and his executive team. … If someone had to be fired or dismissed, in all honesty, the entire board should be fired or dissolved for rubbishing CSA’s brand.” It is true that turkeys do not vote for Christmas, but it is just as true that the turkeys who run South African cricket are a special breed. Madiseng says the only response he has had to his letter is a “defensive call from the leadership”, and that despite him following it up with “a reminder which fell on deaf ears”.  

Madiseng followed Moroe as Gauteng president, and Moroe was CSA’s vice-president before being appointed their chief executive. The alliance between the two men runs deep, and its logical next level would be for Madiseng to succeed Nenzani as CSA president next year. Hence the conscious loosening of the ties between Moroe and the now expendable Nenzani. Williams will likely be Madiseng’s opponent in the coming fight. But, for that plan to come together, Moroe needs to keep his job — which is by no means certain what with figures of the stature of Ali Bacher, a known confidante of Moroe, now saying he should go.

In a statement on Thursday, the Willowton Group, whose Sunfoil subsidiary has in the past been a major CSA sponsor and still supports the game, added their voice to what Khan rightly called a crescendo. The company called for the “immediate resignation of the CEO”, the “immediate resignation of the president”, the “immediate reinstatement of the three suspended CSA officials [chief operating officer Naasei Appiah, interim director of cricket Corrie van Zyl, and sales and sponsorship head Clive Eksteen]” the “immediate reappointment of the two board members who have resigned”, the “immediate appointment of a lead independent director”, and an “immediate independent audit and review”.

That’s a lot of immediacy, and some of it may indeed happen soon enough. CSA have scheduled a board meeting for Saturday, which is to be followed by a press conference. Not since Hansie Cronjé and all that has a South African cricket gathering been so keenly anticipated. A drama of Macbethian proportions is sweeping across the stage. With a difference: there is no Banquo because there are no good guys.

First published by Cricbuzz.

CSA spiral further into chaos as first fatcat flees

“It’s not just for ethical reasons but for my love of cricket that I adhere to due process, especially during uncomfortable moments.” – Thabang Moroe

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

RARELY has so banal an announcement as the rescheduling of a press conference carried as much weight as the notification Cricket South Africa (CSA) sent out on Tuesday afternoon.

The evening’s planned appearance by president Chris Nenzani and chief executive Thabang Moroe had been moved, an hour-and-a-half after it had been promised, to Saturday because “there will be a board meeting on Saturday at which important decisions will be made”. 

There’s breaking news in that seemingly bland statement — cricketminded South Africans are increasingly of the opinion that important decisions haven’t been made at a CSA board meeting since forever. Instead, the suits have removed their hands from under their plushly cushioned posteriors only to take the USD 27 200 they could earn annually merely by turning up, even as the game lurches from one shambles to another. At least, that’s how it looks from every vantage point outside the boardroom. Three hours before the postponement it had emerged that one of the board’s sorry number, Shirley Zinn, had cut her losses and run. Or, if we must be polite about this, resigned her position, apparently for reasons “related to the principles of corporate governance”. You have to wonder how she suddenly remembered them, and when some of Zinn’s fellow zombies will also take the coward’s way out and flee the scene of their disgrace. Go ahead, punks, make our day. What’s taking you so long?

Another day, another drama. This day’s drama began with a telephone call from Moroe to four of the five journalists who had their accreditation revoked on Sunday. Moroe apologised and said sincere and serious attempts would be made to try and repair the damage, and that he had been misinformed that reporters had refused to meet with him. He had repeated this malicious nonsense in public several times since Sunday’s stupidly brazen assault on the press. So it will take far more than a press conference to fix things. That’s if the presser even happens, or if Moroe is still in his position by then. There is no gaurantee of the latter now that CSA have finally cottoned on to the looming reality that if they don’t stop their reckless attacks on any and all who question them they will soon have nothing left to defend. For the small-minded, that means someone will have to take the fall. Moroe is a prime candidate, along with calamity-prone spokesperson Thamie Mthembu, who it appears wouldn’t know a straight answer to a straight question if it smacked him upside the head. Might either or both Moroe and Mthembu already have been jettisoned had CSA been able to avoid tying their own shoelaces together? Cricbuzz understands that board members flew to Johannesburg on Tuesday for an emergency meeting that, thanks to the crippling chaos that seems to cloud everything CSA touches, never took place. So, for now, the muck stops with Moroe. Unsurprisingly, then, a cap-in-hand release quoting him arrived late in the afternoon.

“2019 has been a challenging year for CSA. As CEO of CSA, it is my responsibility to articulate solutions for the way forward and to take you, our stakeholders, into my confidence, in order to rebuild trust in brand CSA. To this end, I address this to the board of CSA, our members, our partners and sponsors, SANEF [the South African National Editors’ Forum], and the many journalists, and the fans of the incredible sport of cricket. I unreservedly apologise on behalf of CSA for the erroneous process that led to journalists having accreditation revoked. I am proud to live in a free and fair South Africa where each and every one of us has the ability to compliment and criticise any organisation, including my own for my and/or my team’s efforts. Too many people have made the ultimate sacrifice for the privilege of free speech and I’d like to apologise to SANEF and all of your members for any harm that was caused during our accreditation error in judgement. We encourage transparent reporting of the highs and lows of CSA and every South African institution – public or private. I would also like to apologise to our sponsors for the ambiguity of the CSA tweet [on Monday] where we thanked our sponsors for their support – it wasn’t our intention for that tweet to infer support for the accreditation blunder but instead to thank them for our longstanding partnerships … It is understandable that my job as CEO is always under the microscope. It’s not just for ethical reasons but for my love of cricket that I adhere to due process, especially during uncomfortable moments … What has become apparent and a learning point for us as an organisation, is the absolute need for more dialogue with our stakeholders. To this end, I commit to ensure that the outflow of communications from my organisation is far more frequent and transparent that has happened in the past.” 

Nice try. What no doubt dumped Moroe on the side of the Damascus Road with nary an Uber in sight was the meeting that Standard Bank, one of CSA’s few remaining major sponsors, demanded on Monday “in the wake of governance and conduct media reports which have brought the name of cricket into disrepute”. On Tuesday, a statement proclaimed a “productive meeting with CSA last night amid reported governance and conduct challenges that have tarnished the image of cricket in South Africa”. The bank said it “expressed its displeasure at the unsatisfactory manner in which CSA had engaged some of its stakeholders on the reported governance issues”, and that it “acknowledged CSA’s undertaking to urgently implement remedial actions to address stakeholder concerns, including the unacceptable manner in which it treated members of the media”.

How far have we crashed when it falls to bankers, the coldblooded creatures who take our money for the privilege of keeping it safe from other, less well-dressed thieves, who suck the natural born goodness out of so many people, who damn near ended the world as we know it in 2008, to tell us when we have lost our way? That is truly terrifying. But it is the truth about cricket in South Africa today. That will not change whatever anyone says on Saturday, or any other day. It’s what is done that matters, and there is so much to do to save the game in this country from itself. If that is still possible.

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.

Graeme Smith ready to suit up for SA cricket

Corrie van Zyl and Hussein Manack have solid credentials for the position, but Graeme Smith is the obvious frontrunner, not least because he is the standard bearer for a more successful era.

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

GRAEME Smith is in the running to become Cricket South Africa’s (CSA) first permanently appointed director of cricket.

Putting the former South Africa men’s captain in the position would help quell doubts about the quality of administrative leadership in a turbulent time for the game in South Africa. 

Smith confirmed on Saturday that he was interviewed for the position on Friday.

TMG Digital has learnt that Corrie van Zyl, CSA’s interim director of cricket when he was suspended last month, and Hussein Manack, a national selector until the panel was dissolved in terms of the restructure prompted by the disappointing men’s World Cup campaign in July, were also interviewed.

Smith played 345 games for South Africa across all formats, and captained them 284 times.

He presided over 163 wins, 89 losses, 27 draws and a tie.

Smith’s 109 Tests as captain, one at the helm of an ICC XI, is a world record.

He was appointed at 22 in the aftermath of the 2003 World Cup, when South Africa crashed out in the first round at home.

Smith relinquished the one-day reins after the 2011 World Cup, by which time he was no longer the T20 skipper.

But he continued to lead South Africa’s Test team until March 2014 — when he announced his retirement during the third and last match of a series against Australia, a month after his 33rd birthday.

Many felt he called it quits too soon, and he has subsequently stayed in the game as a commentator.

In August 2014 he was named tournament director for CSA’s T20 competition, followed a month later by an appointment to a corporate social responsibility position by financial services company Momentum, a CSA sponsor.

Both Van Zyl and Manack likely had their playing careers stunted by apartheid.

Most of Van Zyl’s career coincided with South Africa’s isolation, and his international experience was limited to two ODIs on the tour to West Indies in April 1992.

A fast bowling allrounder, Van Zyl took 349 wickets at 23.38 and scored a century and 10 half-centuries in his 104 first-class matches.

He coached South Africa from January 2010 to March 2011 and was appointed CSA’s general manager in May 2009.

Manack, who is of Indian heritage, was prohibited from playing for South Africa by apartheid, but was listed as a non-playing “development” member of the squad that went to India in November 1991 to play three ODIs — the national team’s first engagement after 22 years of isolation.     

Manack, a highly regarded allrounder in the non-racial structures, was given no other opportunities to play at the highest level.

He played 52 first-class matches, scoring three centuries and 11 half-centuries and averaging 27.79.

A commentator of 16 years standing, he became a national selector in 2012.

Van Zyl and Manack have solid credentials for the position, but Smith is the obvious frontrunner, not least because he is the standard bearer for a more successful era.

South Africa established a brand of tough, competitive cricket under his leadership that saw them rise to the No. 1 Test ranking in July 2012 — where they stayed for the rest of his career.

Having suffered their worst Test series defeat in 83 years in India last month, which came in the wake of their worst performance at a World Cup, and all that in the shadow of multiple challenges on the administrative front — not least court battles with the players and a provincial affiliate — South Africa are in dire need of the good news that is Smith’s interest in the position.

TMG Digital has learnt that the panel that interviewed the three candidates comprised CSA chief executive Thabang Moroe and board members Jack Madiseng, Tebogo Siko, Dawn Makhobo and Shirley Zinn.

None of them played first-class cricket, some through no fault of their own.

It is understood they will make a decision in the next two weeks.

First published by TMG Digital.