Quantcast

'A very sad day': South African cricket in 'crisis'

South Africa's sports minister officially intervenes in the governance of cricket in the country, potentially putting them in the ICC's crosshairs

The South African government has exercised its power to intervene in the running of the country's cricket association, leaving it to face its "greatest crisis" since the end of apartheid.

Cricket South Africa's interim board said on Friday it had received notice from sports minister Nathi Mthethwa that he had invoked a section of law allowing the government to take decisions out of the hands of sports officials when disputes can't be resolved.

The move threatens South Africa's teams because the International Cricket Council does not allow governments to interfere in national cricket bodies.

The ICC has previously banned countries from international competitions when that happens.

The ICC said on Friday it had not received a complaint from Cricket South Africa for government interference.

Stavros Nicolaou, chairman of CSA’s interim board, said: "It is indeed a very sad day for our country, for cricket, for the millions of fans who love the game and the sponsors who have committed to cricket and its grassroots development.

"But it is a specifically sad day for the players, staff and others whose livelihood are at stake."

The government and CSA’s interim board are effectively working together against a third body, the decision-making members' council of CSA.

The latest dispute relates to the refusal by the members' council at a special meeting last weekend to approve a new constitution for CSA that would have given its board an independent chairman and a majority of independent members.

The government and interim board are both pushing for the reforms.

The members' council is made up of the 14 presidents of South Africa's provincial cricket unions.

They rejected the changes in a secret vote where a 75% majority was required.

Six members voted for the changes, but five voted against and three abstained, stalling a months-long process of rebuilding South African cricket.

That led to the sports minister taking control.

"It is deeply disappointing that a self-interested vocal minority voted against change while three members chose to abstain," CSA's interim board said of the failed vote.

"These actions have now brought the game to its knees and will cause the greatest crisis since (South Africa's international) readmission."

CSA's troubles date back years but reached tipping point last year when chief executive Thabang Moroe and other officials were fired for misconduct and an investigation showed how the previous board had failed in its oversight duties.

Since then, the CSA president and a stand-in chief executive have quit, and a second stand-in chief executive was suspended for alleged misconduct.

Along with the extensive reputational damage, CSA is in deep financial trouble.

Players, with their livelihoods threatened, have also had enough.

"Government intervention in the sport will have dire consequences, the full extent of which we do not yet know," South African international players, including Test captain Dean Elgar and limited-overs captain Temba Bavuma, said in a joint statement earlier in the week.