Suits go where team needs to tread

“After the trauma we went through it was in all our interests to align and reset. Cricket is all of our livelihoods.” – Pholetsi Moseki, CSA’s chief executive, on the improved relationship between players and administrators.

Telford Vice / Cape Town

ENOCH Nkwe’s WhatsApp profile picture is a stylised eight-ball, as used in the game of pool. To be “behind the eight-ball” is to be under pressure. Does Nkwe consider himself behind the eight-ball?

“I never looked at it that way,” Nkwe told Cricbuzz. “It’s just that eight was my number as a player; I liked the icon. But I like that idea.” As CSA’s director of cricket Nkwe is indeed under pressure. The buck for so much that happens in the game in South Africa stops with him, although he knows the public doesn’t see things that way: “Some people think I’m director of Proteas.”

That would be the men’s national team, who were hammered by an innings in the Boxing Day Test and in two days at the Gabba last month, which followed a meltdown at the T20 World Cup in Australia, lost ODI and T20 series in India, and twice being beaten in three days in England.

However unfairly, whatever any other team or individual in South African cricket might accomplish, how the men’s side fares is a barometer for the state of the game. When they lose, especially in the abject way they have gone in recent months, Nkwe isn’t alone in suddenly seeing the eight-ball up close and personal.

The skewed focus isn’t only about sentiment, misogyny and misplaced patriotism. The broadcast rights fees attracted by South Africa’s men’s team represent 53% of the revenue CSA earned in 2022, according to the organisation’s annual report. Maybe the money, as it does in other major cricket-playing countries, follows all that sentiment, misogyny and misplaced patriotism. 

What’s not in doubt is that CSA need money. The inaugural edition of the SA20, which starts next Tuesday, is expected to clear around USD16.2-million in profit. CSA are 50% shareholders in the tournament, so their slice of the windfall would go a long way to erasing the USD11.65-million loss they declared in November. But that won’t take the game out of the red, especially with earnings having dwindled in other areas.  

CSA were paid the equivalent of USD2.95-million in sponsorship revenue in the 2021-22 financial year, USD1.53-million less than the previous year. The downward trend started in December 2019, when title sponsors Standard Bank announced they would end their relationship with CSA — which had lasted 21 years and was reportedly worth USD27.3-million over four years at the time — in April 2020 because of, the bank said then, “a culmination of long-standing problems which have damaged Standard Bank’s reputation”. CSA have yet to replace them. 

Under Chris Nenzani and Thabang Moroe, CSA’s president and chief executive, cricket in South Africa lurched from one governance crisis to the next. They, along with the board then in office, are no longer around and the game is exponentially better off without them. A new board, chaired by Lawson Naidoo, has been in office since June 2020. Pholetsi Moseki, who served as acting chief executive from December 2020, was appointed to the position permanently in March. In June, Nkwe succeeded Graeme Smith, who became the SA20 commissioner in July.

The flood of negativity about cricket’s administration in South Africa that had dominated the media for years has slowed to a trickle, the crazier confines of social media aside. Whether CSA have repaired the trust they broke is difficult to know, and the pandemic, which dealt South Africa’s already struggling economy and crumbling infrastructure serious blows, has hampered attempts to secure new corporate partnerships. But could it be that, after so much chaos, something like cohesion has been established?

Like other cricketminded South Africans, Dean Elgar will hope that is the case. Unlike most of his compatriots, his opinion is informed. “For the first time in a couple of years it’s at its most stable,” he said during the first press conference of South Africa’s Australian tour. “We’ve had a lot of changes with regards to administrators in CSA. As players, those things can’t hinder us from performing. We’ve almost gotten used to those kinds of bad headlines. But for now it’s stabilising quite nicely.

“We’ve got a new CEO, we’ve had a new board come in and make good cricketing decisions, and we have a new director of cricket who’s really focusing hard on our Proteas brand. Those are things we can’t focus on. It’s totally out of our control as players. We need to do what we can do to try and get results on the board. That’s our currency as players.”

Nkwe believes a board engagement with the players before they left for England in July “was a turning point” in narrowing the rift: “That was needed to try and bring CSA and the players closer together, and create a platform where everybody can have a voice; in particular so the board can listen to the players’ frustrations to see how we build a better relationship.”

Nkwe serves as a bridge between the players and other elements of the game, and he likes what he has been seeing: “I’m excited about the new, better relationship between the players, CSA, SACA [the South African Cricketers’ Association], all of us. We all care about the game; we all want cricket to succeed in South Africa. Yes, we might have had different perspectives. But that engagement went a long way, for the players and the board. How do we re-align, how do we support you, how do the players try to understand what’s been happening?”

Speaking to Cricbuzz, Moseki concurred and also gave SACA credit: “It’s definitely better but there’s still a lot of work to be done. Players and administrators will always have their issues but all parties are trying to improve relations. After the trauma we went through it was in all our interests to align and reset. Cricket is all of our livelihoods.”

Even so, the distrust sown by the recklessness of their previous administration remains a hurdle to be cleared. “Standard Bank’s sponsorship ended during that meltdown, and for two years after that it was difficult to get people to even want to speak to CSA,” Moseki said. “That has really changed, especially after the new board was appointed and the changes to the memorandum of incorporation and the new governance structures. Since June last year we’ve been speaking to far more people. A lot of them have been keen to engage with us, even our current sponsors. The mood has definitely changed but it’s still a work in progress. It’s far more positive than it was 18 months ago, when I don’t think anyone wanted to speak to us.”

Andrew Breetzke, SACA’s chief executive, offered a similarly hopeful view: “The relationship between CSA and SACA and the players has improved significantly in the past 18 months, coming from total breakdown. But it’s imperative that we keep open lines of communication and synergy on issues that affect players careers.”

That doesn’t always happen. There is unhappiness at slow and inadequate dissemination of crucial information to players and the press alike. For instance, CSA bungled the explanation for Ryan Rickelton’s omission from the Test squad in Australia. Rickelton has chosen to keep playing for his province despite carrying an ankle injury that requires surgery. CSA say — or should have said — that they can’t pick a player who might break down on tour.

The public invariably take the players’ side. Given what they know about CSA, that’s hardly surprising. If the suits don’t do their jobs, the players are left to twist in the wind. But the converse applies. Keep losing Tests in two or three days and bombing out of tournaments and potential sponsors will be reluctant to seal the deal. Nobody wants their logo on damaged goods.

“We want to give the team as much support as possible, but they’ve got to understand certain challenges,” Nkwe said. “If teams, coaches and players don’t really understand the outside world that you’re operating in, you’re going to struggle. Have 10% of understanding but have 90% of knowing that the organisation is behind you with a high level of support and alignment.”

How far were CSA from putting signatures on the dotted lines of contracts to fill empty spaces on playing shirts? “We’re hoping to sign someone before the end of this season so we can start the next financial year [in May] with a sponsor,” Moseki said. “The South African economy has changed drastically over the last two or three years, and the biggest challenge we’re facing is that the values have drastically dropped. Research says they will start going up again but there’s a big difference in what we were getting from Standard Bank compared to the offers we are getting locally now.

“We don’t want to dilute the value of our product. So we decided to broaden the parties we speak to, not just to South African companies. We see ourselves as a global presence: the Proteas play outside the country for half the year, so we felt it was good to also look at companies that operate in major cricket-playing countries.”

Did that mean South Africans should ready themselves for, say, the Cycle Pure Agarbatti Proteas? “We won’t be going that route anymore,” Moseki said, and made his point using the example of South Africa’s rugby union team: “The Springboks are the Springboks. They’re not the [mobile phone service providers] MTN Springboks. Whoever we sign will have their names on the front of the playing shirt, but we won’t name the team after them.”

Rugby, which also suffers from administrative problems, doesn’t struggle to attract sponsors — not least because the Springboks have won the World Cup three times. The Proteas, infamously fragile under pressure, have yet to reach a final.

That could change this year. Should South Africa win the Sydney Test, which starts on Wednesday, as well as both matches against West Indies at home in February and March, Elgar’s team could stay in the running for a place in the WTC final at the Oval in June. On current form, that seems unlikely: they have lost four consecutive Tests. If they don’t make the final, the relevance of teams like South Africa in a Test arena increasingly bent to the will and wealth of India, England and Australia will diminish all but unnoticed. If the South Africans do make it to the Oval in June, they will be more difficult to ignore.

South Africa’s suits have done their bit to make that happen. It’s up to the players to bring their end of the bargain. They need to see past the eight-ball.

Cricbuzz

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Not before time, movement in Moroe mess

“We will certainly be able to act on the issue of the suspended chief executive on the basis of the first report.” – Chris Nenzani says something worth repeating.

TELFORD VICE | Cape Town

IT’S been almost seven months since Cricket South Africa (CSA) suspended chief executive Thabang Moroe on claims of misconduct. That’s nearly 30 weeks ago. Or 4,968 hours. Or 298,080 minutes. Or 17,884,800 seconds.

And all the while Moroe, his employers and important aspects of cricket’s operations have been in limbo, not least because, thanks to the board, the forensic investigators appointed in the case weren’t able to start work until March — three months after Moroe was forced to vacate his post.

He won’t mind going nowhere slowly. While CSA decide what to do about him, Moroe continues to be paid his salary of more than USD20,000 a month.

Finally, on Tuesday, the suits blinked and proffered a release: “The board … had its initial discussion of the first report of the commissioned forensic audit on Monday evening and will have a follow-up meeting on Friday when they will take the actions necessary from its findings and recommendations.

“There has been a slight delay in the delivery of the final report, and it is anticipated that this will be received during the course of next week.”

CSA president Chris Nenzani was quoted as saying: “I would like to stress that the board is treating this matter with urgency and is committed to bring it to immediate conclusion.”

Perhaps that was intended as a joke to defer attention from the last sentence of the release, which was also attributed to Nenzani: “We will certainly be able to act on the issue of the suspended chief executive on the basis of the first report.”

Seasoned CSA watchers know that if there is any news in a board release it will be in the document’s concluding words. So it has proved again.

Repelled sponsors — Standard Bank ended a 21-year relationship with cricket during Moroe’s last days in the job — and an alienated press — five senior journalists who had reported critically on his performance had their accreditation revoked — could, if the guilt for those sorry situations is proved to be his, already be enough to sack him.

Whatever Moroe did or didn’t get up to with his company credit card — the allegations are hair-raising enough to avoid reporting on pain of legal action — might not have to come into the conversation. Similarly, for the purposes of getting rid of him, the reasons behind his ruthless aggregation of authority may not need to be probed.

Moroe’s tenure started in September 2017 when he was parachuted into the chief executive’s office from the board, where he had served as Nenzani’s vice-president, in an acting capacity in the wake of Haroon Lorgat’s abrupt and fuzzily explained departure. He was appointed on a three year-contract in July 2018.

That alone should have raised the alarm. Surely Moroe would take his support on the board into his new role, which could have led to conflicts of interest. Indeed, the possibility that the investigation is taking so long because it will implicate board members in wrongdoing cannot be discounted. 

But CSA are under too much pressure not to do something about Moroe. Something — or someone — has to give. Count on Moroe being that someone. Don’t count on board members going down with him.

Remember, they’ve had almost seven months, or nearly 30 weeks, 4,968 hours, 298,080 minutes or 17,884,800 seconds, to get their story straight.

First published by Cricbuzz.

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Biff and Biffer aboard, but …

 … CSA’s bamboozled, bamboozling, bamboo-for-brains board still a blight on the game.

TELFORD VICE in Paarl

CRICKET South Africa (CSA) have pinned their hopes on Graeme Smith and Jacques Faul to try and stop the bleeding, in effect calling back the past to try and forge a better future from the wreckage of a calamitous present.

At a press conference in Johannesburg on Saturday, CSA said Smith was on course to become their first director of cricket while Faul had been appointed acting chief executive. Smith was South Africa’s captain from 2003 to 2014 and took them to the No. 1 Test ranking. Faul guided CSA out of another crisis by serving in the same position in 2012 and 2013. But what many will see as the biggest obstacle to progress, CSA’s board, have resisted attempts to remove them.

Smith had been in talks with CSA but on Monday he said, for the second time, that he had pulled out of joining their staff. His agreement to come on board is understood to have been conditional on the absence from CSA of Thabang Moroe, the chief executive. That door was opened on Friday when Moroe was suspended over what CSA termed “allegations of misconduct, pending further investigations”, a decision that followed “reports received by the social and ethics committee and the audit and risk committee of the board related to possible failure of controls in the organisation”.

Chris Nenzani, CSA’s president, said on Saturday that Smith was close to shaking hands on a deal: “We have engaged him and he has agreed that, by next week Wednesday, all the negotiations around the contract terms that need to take place will have been concluded.”

Smith has little administrative experience, but the respect he earned in a stellar playing and captaincy career would lend integrity to organisation that has squandered that vital commodity. Faul, currently chief executive of the Titans franchise and among the most experienced and respected administrators in South Africa, stepped in when CSA suspended former chief executive Gerald Majola over undeclared bonuses — he was eventually sacked — and remains a trusted and highly regarded figure.

But the survival of CSA’s current board, despite eight provinces resolving on Thursday that they should be dismissed, will disappoint legions of cricketminded South Africans. Saturday’s press conference followed a CSA board meeting, which came after a gathering in Johannesburg on Friday of the members council — CSA’s highest authority — that started as 7pm (local time) and dragged on until 1.15am on Saturday, and that apparently included the minister of sport, Nathi Mthethwa. The members council has the power to dissolve the board, but declined to exercise that option — not least, probably, because several of the 14-strong members council also sit on CSA’s board. “We had very robust meeting,” Nenzani said of Friday’s affair. “It was very honest in terms of addressing the issues. But at the end of the day, or at the end of the night, or in the morning, the members council supported and endorsed the board to continue in its role and move forward in its efforts to turn the organisation around.” A high-ranking provincial official saw things differently: “I am gutted. There is no appreciation by Chris Nenzani and his fellow board members that their credibility is shot and that their stakeholders will not engage with them.”

One of those stakeholders, major sponsors Standard Bank, whose involvement in cricket started 21 years ago, said on Friday they would not renew their current agreement — which was worth USD 27.3-million over four years — when it expires at the end of April. That could be seen as an effort to put pressure on CSA to right their wrongs with a view to re-establishing the connection in future. But as things stand the national team are set to lose their title sponsor. The relationship between CSA and broadcaster SuperSport has sunk to its lowest ebb because of disagreement over the latter’s rights to the Mzansi Super League, and the value of the rights the board are able to command going forward is likely to fall thanks to the declining fortunes of South Africa’s team. The South African Cricketers’ Association (SACA) have estimated that by the end of the 2022 rights cycle CSA could face losses of USD 68.3-million, and have dragged CSA to court over a domestic restructure plan that could put 70 players out of work. Nenzani said repairing CSA’s on-the-rocks marriage with SACA was on the agenda: “If the players weren’t there, there wouldn’t be a CSA. This is part of an engagement CSA will have with SACA as a matter of urgency.”

So much more that is wrong with CSA. Last Sunday they revoked the accreditation of five senior journalists, and seven staff members are suspended currently while three of the five independent board members have resigned. So it would take a brave administrator to wade into the mess. Was Faul up for that challenge? “You can’t blame the public for not trusting us after what’s happened, so you’ve got to act in an ethical way, plus you’ve also got to put out fires,” he said. “You’ve got to solve the SACA issue, and it sounds like we are close to [appointing] the director of cricket. Ultimately, you’ve got to relate to attaining sponsors and attracting sponsors. That to me is the indicator — if you can appoint new sponsors that means corporate South Africa has again agreed to … give you a chance. It’s easy to say to you that we are going to do the right thing, we’ve actually got to do the right thing. As the relationship becomes better with SACA and with sponsors, that’s when credibility returns.”

For the sake of the future of South African cricket, the present needs to be relegated to the past post haste: the first ball in the Test series against England is set to be bowled in Centurion on December 26.

First published by Cricbuzz.

Moroe goes, but so do major sponsors

“Extremely poor leadership, both at operational level and at board level, is what has got cricket into this disastrous position.” – SACA boss Tony Irish nails CSA to the cross.

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

PUSH came to shove for Cricket South Africa (CSA) on Friday when the national men’s team’s title sponsor announced the imminent end of their involvement with the organisation. The decision has everything to do with the toxicity of being aligned to a game in deepening crisis, and that is likely to hamper cricket’s ability to secure new backing.

But there is a glimmer of light at the end of cricket’s darkening tunnel: controversial chief executive Thabang Moroe has been suspended. A letter from CSA to staff on Friday, which has been seen by Cricbuzz, said Moroe had been “put … on precautionary suspension with pay, effective 06 December 2019, on allegations of misconduct, pending further investigations”.

The decision came in the wake of “reports received by the social and ethics committee and the audit and risk committee of the board related to possible failure of controls in the organisation”. While Moroe wasn’t around, “a forensic audit of critical aspects of the business and the conduct of management related to such aspects shall be conducted by an independent forensic team”. CSA president Chris Nenzani will meet with former International Cricket Council chief executive Dave Richardson with a view to appointing an acting CSA chief executive to serve during Moroe’s absence. The names of Haroon Lorgat, CSA’s chief executive until he fell foul of the current regime in September 2017, and Jacques Faul, who acted as chief executive during CSA’s previous major scandal — over undeclared bonuses — in 2012 and 2013, are swirling. It is understood neither has been approached. Another mentioned in dispatches, Cricket Boland chief executive James Fortuin, shut the door on that theory: “I haven’t been approached and I’m not interested.” Might Richardson himself be the prime candidate?

The Moroe bombshell followed Standard Bank announcing that their relationship with the game, which started in 1998 and currently is worth USD 27.3-million over four years, will end when the existing contract expires on April 30 next year. “Standard Bank is committed to upholding the highest levels of leadership, integrity and governance,” a release from the bank quoted Thulani Sibeko, their group chief marketing and communications officer, as saying. “In light of recent developments at CSA, which are a culmination of long-standing problems which have damaged Standard Bank’s reputation, it has decided not to renew its partnership with CSA.” The release stopped just short of lecturing CSA on their responsibility towards the game and its stakeholders: “Cricket is a national asset valued by millions of South Africans, many of them our clients, and is an integral part of the bank’s heritage.” 

Months of unease over governance issues issues at CSA came to a head on Sunday, when five senior journalists’ accreditation was revoked. It was reinstated the same day, but the damaging episode prompted Standard Bank to demand a meeting with CSA on Monday. “In recognition of the widespread interest in and support for cricket, we value the right of South Africans and the broader cricket community to know about developments within CSA, especially those that relate to governance and conduct,” Sibeko was quoted as saying in a release on Sunday. 

Until their meeting with the bank CSA had tried to claim the moral high ground, claiming the journalists had been reporting untruthfully and had refused to meet with them. CSA changed tack dramatically on Tuesday, with Moroe calling four of the five reporters — the fifth was unreachable — to personally apologise. A public apology followed. But that wasn’t enough to stop the wheels from coming off, with three independent board members resigning this week and, on Thursday, eight provinces demanding Moroe and the entire board resign, that an interim structure be set up to run the game, and a forensic investigation conducted into cricket’s ills.

The South African Cricketers’ Association (SACA) echoed that call, and went further, in a damning release on Friday. “Extremely poor leadership, both at operational level and at board level, is what has got cricket into this disastrous position,” Tony Irish, SACA’s chief executive, was quoted as saying. “It is abundantly clear that there is no confidence, from any quarter amongst cricket stakeholders, in the CSA board. No-one on the board can say that he, or she, was unaware of what has been unfolding over at least the last year. It has all been happening, in many respects even publicly, under the board’s very nose, and in some instances with board support.”

SACA have estimated that CSA could lose USD 68.3-million by the end of the 2022 rights cycle, and have launched legal action over a CSA domestic restructure plan that might put 70 professional players out of work. “We have consistently flagged CSA’s financial position as being an area of real concern,” Irish was quoted as saying. “Everyone in cricket, including the players, is dependent on the ongoing health and financial sustainability of CSA. Accurate forecasts over a financial cycle are critical as one has to understand how big the financial problem actually is in order to find a solution to it. We have also just seen the resignation from the board of CSA of the chairman of its finance committee and its audit and risk committee [Mohamed Iqbal Khan] citing amongst other things financial irregularities relating to credit card use. [On Wednesday] more CSA employees were suspended, including the former acting chief financial officer [Ziyanda Nkuta].”

But the prospect of strike or protest action, while “not ruled out”, was unlikely. “SACA re-iterates however that industrial action by the players should be viewed only as a very last resort,” Irish was quoted as saying. “We also wish to reassure cricket fans, and other cricket stakeholders, that SACA will not embark on industrial action with the players during the upcoming England [Test] series [which starts in Centurion on December 26]. We are very aware of the importance of this series to the Proteas and to England, to the many fans from both countries and to the media and commercial partners.”

As things stand South Africa do not have a permanently appointed coach nor selectors to pick the squad. “We know that the players will give 110% for South Africa on the field but it is critical that a proper professional structure is in place around the team,” Irish was quoted as saying. “The way in which CSA has dealt with this to date, and the fact that nothing is in place, is totally unacceptable. It is ludicrous to expect players to be selected by unknown selectors.”

Moroe’s fate will be considered a positive development by cricketminded South Africans, not least because it could clear the way for Graeme Smith to agree to become CSA’s first director of cricket — a position Smith is thought to have rejected because of Moroe. But the bigger news is the withdrawal of a major sponsor from an industry that cannot afford to lose what support it has. With the number of suspensions now up to seven and more resignations likely, the coming weeks and months are likely to loom like storm clouds, laden with the thunder and lightning of bad news and with little in the way of silver linings. That won’t help CSA attract sponsors, except at a bargain price. Cricket in South Africa is a long way from out of the woods.

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.

Finally, a voice of reason from within SA cricket

“There is too much at stake to permit our great sport of cricket to fall any further. Silence would be much more painful.” – Norman Arendse stands up to be counted.

TELFORD VICE in Cape Town

THE most damning indictment yet of the parlous state of the game in South Africa came from within on Monday.

An open letter from former Cricket South Africa (CSA) president Norman Arendse, who has also served as the organisation’s lead independent director and is among the most senior administrators in the country, exploded into public view like a supernova as the sun was setting on an already extraordinary day. The missive details the problems the game faces in the unsparing language Arendse deals with daily as one of South Africa’s top Senior Counsels. It only added to the gravity of the moment that Arendse, himself one of the most polarising figures in cricket, could understand and articulate how acute the situation had become. 

“It is painful to pen this letter,” Arendse begins. “However, there is just too much at stake to permit our great sport of cricket to fall any further. Silence would be much more painful. Therefore, I write this open letter of appeal to our cricket family members, the CSA board, the CSA members’ council [CSA’s highest authority, which is comprised largely of the presidents of the 11 provincial boards] and the paid CSA administrators to act before it is too late. I suspect, however, that the horse has bolted, and that we are beyond the precipice, and into the abyss. 

“As a former CSA president [in 2007 and 2008], and until just over a year ago, the CSA lead independent director, I have the utmost respect for prescribed procedures and protocols to be followed when differences arise within the cricket family. It appears, however, that for several reasons that have manifested publicly, the family differences cannot and will not be resolved through the prescribed route. 

“What prompts me to say this is not sourced from any insider knowledge or some whistle-blower; they are sourced in CSA’s own public pronouncements and written media statements: the restructuring of our domestic competitions; the concentration of power in the hands of the CEO [Thabang Moroe] to make key appointments (approved by the CSA board); the failure to make key board committee appointments including the failure to appoint the independent lead director (after more than a year since the election of the board; the suspension of senior executive officials; the ongoing dispute with SACA [the South African Cricketers’ Association, who are taking CSA to court over a proposed restructure that could cost 70 professional players their jobs]; and the recent dispute with Western Province Cricket which ended in a humiliating loss … at arbitration [where CSA’s decision to suspend the Western Province board was declared unlawful].

“The last straw must surely be the most recent banning by CSA of several highly respected cricket journalists [whose accreditation was revoked, then reinstated after a public outcry] who collectively have decades of experience in cricket. (Some of them I have disagreed with both privately and publicly, but it never entered my mind to suggest or propose that they are banned from the game). Their banning is unconstitutional, and unlawful, and must be deplored by all cricket-lovers.”

And all that before Arendse got to what makes cricket, and everything else, go round: “The future sustainability of cricket is also at grave risk given the public CSA pronouncement of a projected shortfall of hundreds of millions of rands.” CSA have estimated that they could face losses of up to USD 44.9-million by the end of the 2022 rights cycle. SACA put that number closer to USD 68.6-million. “We had over [USD 41.2-million] in reserve. These reserves have now dwindled dramatically, and with the unsponsored Mzansi Super League [that lost USD 5.4-million last year, which could go up to USD 6.8-million this year], these reserves will likely be depleted shortly.” Arendse doubted that Moroe “is capable of arresting CSA’s decline, let alone turning around the organisation to put it on a more secure and sustainable footing”. “All of the above leads me to one very sad conclusion: the CSA board has simply abdicated its fiduciary responsibilities by failing to act with the due care, skill and diligence required of it by the Companies Act, and the CSA constitution. To the extent that the CSA members’ council are aware of the above-mentioned shortcomings and failures of governance, they too must share responsibility, and be held accountable. I … call on the board and the members’ council to meet urgently to consider the matters raised in this letter, and to hold the CEO (and those who have been complicit) to account.”

Arendse signed off by saying he had shared the contents of his letter with Vusi Pikoli, a former CSA board member who chaired the social and ethics committee, and said Pikoli — a former head of South Africa’s National Prosecuting Authority — “endorses the sentiments expressed”.

Not long before Arendse’s bombshell hit, the South African National Editors’ Forum (SANEF) issued a statement condemning the treatment of the five journalists who had their accreditation revoked and demanding CSA apologise to them. “SANEF believes CSA’s actions will have a chilling effect on the media’s ability to cover all aspects of cricket, not just what happens on the field of play, but also what happens behind closed doors where the sport is administered. CSA’s actions smack of bullying, are unacceptable and must be fiercely resisted in order to preserve the independence of the media and journalists’ ability to report without fear or favour.” SANEF took a dim view of Moroe’s admission on radio on Monday that the “journalists’ accreditation was revoked because the organisation was unhappy about their reporting on CSA and the sport. Moroe’s statements are deeply concerning.”

That came before another statement, this one from Standard Bank, one of CSA’s few remaining major sponsors, who demanded a meeting on Monday “in the wake of governance and conduct media reports which have brought the name of cricket into disrepute”.

And so the sun set on another strange day in the annals of South African cricket — just like the day before it. The next day? Can’t hardly wait.

First published by Cricbuzz.