The South African Cricketers' Association (SACA) has withdrawn player
action against CSA after commitments were made to board restructure
yesterday, but remain unhappy with the possibility of expanding the board.
SACA lodged a dispute with the country's Commission for Conciliation,
Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA) in November last year as it looked to
force CSA to follow the recommendations of the Nicholson report. That
document suggests an 11-member board with five independent directors
including the chair.
CSA has opted for a 12-man structure with the same number of independents
but not the chairperson and will expand the board after 18 months. Then,
they will have 16 directors with seven independents and nine provincial
presidents to satisfy the South African Sports Confederation and Olympic
Committee (SASCOC) who require that all nine provinces be represented on
the board.
Since SASCOC is the governing body for all sports federations in the
country and the Nicholson report was a "guideline" only, CSA decided their
most recent decision would be the best compromise for all parties. SACA is
satisfied with most of the decisions including the non-independent chair
but their chief executive, Tony Irish, hinted they could go back to the
CCMA when the enlargement happens.
"The players have stood up for good governance in cricket. We have a world
class national team and the players expect world class governance in the
game. Yesterday's resolution by CSA to implement a 7:5 director board is
not perfect, but it is a vast improvement on the existing 22 director Board.
"There has been so much politics and in-fighting within the existing board
and we hope that the significant reduction in size and the higher degree of
independence on the board will make it less unwieldy and political and more
focused on good cricket decision-making.
"Hopefully they will appoint the best person for the chairmanship bearing in
mind he is also likely to be the person who will sit on the ICC's executive
board. Good cricket credentials and an understanding of the international
cricket landscape are vital here."
SACA and the players are not happy, however, with the indication given that
CSA will increase the Board to 16 directors in the future. We don't think
there are good reasons for this and it simply moves further away from the
Nicholson Report recommendations and closer to the existing structure,
which we all know has been a problem. Should this actually happen it is
likely to again become an issue for SACA and the players."
The players are also unhappy that acting CSA chief executive Jacques Faul
will
not apply for the job permanently. Faul told ESPNcricinfo he will remain in the role until a new boss is found, which is after the February
2 AGM, but then he will pursue other interests. "Jacques has done a lot for
cricket in the short time that he has been acting chief executive. He has
been primarily responsible for bringing sponsors back into the game despite
what has gone on at board level," Irish said.
Under Faul, CSA signed major sponsors across all formats, having lost them
in the throes of the bonus scandal. Although many of the contracts were
already in negotiation when Faul began in the job last March, he managed to
get the deals signed and there is worry in circles of South African cricket
that the corporates may become nervous of CSA once again.
Sponsorship has been the only area in which the national team was directly
affected by the administrative issues. They played a T20 and ODI series in
2011 against Australia without corporate backing and the domestic one-day
competition that season was also unfunded.
While that did not affect player payments, potential existed for it to do
so in the long-run, if companies continued to stay away from cricket. Irish
does not want to run the risk of that again, hence the objection for
straying too far from the Nicholson suggestions.
Firdose Moonda is ESPNcricinfo's South Africa correspondent