Surrey Chief Executive Resigns (06 Dec 1995)
GLYN Woodman has resigned as Surrey`s chief executive with effect from the end of this month after three years at the Oval, saying his position had become "untenable"
06-Dec-1995
Surrey are hit by resignation of chief executive
By Charles Randall
GLYN Woodman has resigned as Surrey`s chief executive with effect
from the end of this month after three years at the Oval, saying
his position had become "untenable".
His departure, a surprise to the cricket world yesterday, seems
to have been prompted by exasperation after his attempts to
weave strong management into the county club structure were unravelled at committee level.
Woodman, given a three-year contract in February 1993, made a few
unpopular decisions at the head of a hard-nosed regime, winning
admirers and making enemies during a term most notable for lack
of success on the pitch and ambitious long-term planning off it.
Geoff Arnold was sacked as coach at the end of Woodman`s first
season of restructuring and Grahame Clinton, a replacement,
resigned after this summer.
There were occasional membership rumbles, and perhaps the chief
executive`s problem was more to do with style than content.
Woodman said in a letter, announcing his decision: "I was brought
in three years ago by [the then chairman] Derek Newton businesslike basis, while recognising that it was still a members`
club.
"This was a difficult and not always popular task, not made
easier by having to serve under three separate chairmen in three
years. I worked well with all three, but their views on the club
were different."
Paul Sheldon, who has been running the club`s 150th anniversary
this year, is favourite to succeed Woodman.
Ian Caller is to stand down as Durham`s president after seven
years. He will be succeeded by Bill Midgley, chief executive of
the Newcastle Building Society.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)