The Gold Coast Bulletin

Clarke: It’s time for unity

Interim CEO wants calm

- MURRAY WENZEL

ROB Clarke is back at Rugby Australia for a good time not a long time, promising a ruthless competitio­n review and to stamp out the “factions and frustratio­ns” that have plagued the code as interim CEO.

Clarke, who has served as CEO of both the Rebels and Brumbies, accepted the shortterm post from executive chairman Paul McLean on Wednesday night, almost two weeks after Raelene Castle vacated the chair.

The former Australian Rugby Union chief operating officer won’t vie for the fulltime gig though, which could still fall the way of Australian Olympic Committee boss Matt Carroll despite his friend and would-be chairman Peter Wiggs’ resignatio­n earlier on Wednesday.

Clarke will oversee the code’s return to the field – ideally in July – while also addressing Rugby Australia’s financial woes and conducting a “complete review” of Super Rugby in 2020 and beyond.

But first he must resuscitat­e an administra­tion that has taken hits from outside and in since he last worked there three years ago.

In the days before Castle’s demise, 11 former Wallabies captains publicly demanded swift administra­tive change, while in the latest ugly episode Wiggs’ dramatic exit was detailed in an email exchange with McLean published in The Australian.

Describing himself as “open and transparen­t”, Clarke said he understood the challenges that came with the job and was ready to face them again.

“I know every one of those captains personally, worked in the game with many of them and some of them I would count as friends,” Clarke said.

“I don’t think they’ll have a problem in letting me know what their thoughts are and I’ll have an open ear.

“But my approach with everybody will be, let’s take it out of the public domain and communicat­e constructi­vely around a table and get some plans in place, as opposed to just highlighti­ng issues, which is easy to do.

“We have to unify our game and the factions and frustratio­ns that go with that just impede progress.”

Wiggs walked after his push to become chairman and fasttrack Carroll as CEO alongside him was shut down.

The board’s move was supported in a letter signed by all the state chairs of Australian rugby on Wednesday night, apart from NSW boss Roger Davis.

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