The New Zealand Herald

Kiwi lands ICC chair in tight vote

There will be no honeymoon period for Barclay — the pandemic has hit hard

- Dylan Cleaver

Auckland-based commercial lawyer Greg Barclay has landed one of the biggest, most politicall­y charged jobs in sport. An email was sent at 3am yesterday by the independen­t auditors EY, confirming that Barclay had secured the two-thirds majority needed to be the Internatio­nal Cricket Council’s new independen­t chairman, gaining 11 of 16 votes.

“I waited up until about 11.45pm half expecting the result to come through,” Barclay told the Herald.

“When I woke at 4am there was a whole string of WhatsApp messages on my phone, including one from [Cricket Australia chairman] Earl Eddings, so I knew something was up.”

In an arcane voting process, Barclay had to “win” 11 of the 16 votes available from the 12 full ICC member countries, three members representi­ng the associate member countries, and independen­t female director Indra Nooyi.

After the first round of voting Barclay had 10 votes, one shy of securing the job over interim chair Imran Khwaja. If it had remained deadlocked after two rounds there would have been one more chance to vote. After three rounds, if Barclay couldn’t secure the votes, the role would have reverted to Khwaja.

“I was confident I would get the majority, but I wasn’t necessaril­y confident I would get the two-thirds,” Barclay said.

Although the distributi­on of the votes is kept under wraps, it is believed that after the first round Barclay had all the votes except Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Afghanista­n, Zimbabwe and Khwaja’s vote as one of three for the associate members.

The Herald understand­s that the elusive 11th vote in the second round came via Afghanista­n. Although speculativ­e, it would be understand­able if India’s influentia­l former captain Sourav Ganguly reminded the fledgling full-member nation that their existence at the top table owed much to India’s largesse.

Barclay, director of New Zealand Cricket since 2012, fills the role vacated by India’s Shashank Manohar who stepped down in July. The position had been held in interim by Khwaja, a former president of Singapore Cricket.

There will be no honeymoon period for Barclay. The pandemic has ravaged the coffers of the global sporting complex and cricket has not been immune.

“It sounds glib but optimising cricket outcomes in the men’s and women’s games has to be the number one priority at the moment,” Barclay said. “We’re in a difficult situation with the pandemic and playing cricket has to be front of mind.”

The ICC can be a cultural minefield, but Barclay welcomes that challenge. “We need to work towards a new calendar [after Covid-19] and get it commercial­ly leveraged,” he says. “We need to revisit the ICC strategy to get us through to 2030 in great shape.”

Barclay is also an experience­d company director holding board positions with various New Zealand and Australian companies.

He was a director of ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup 2015 and is a former board member and chairman of the Northern Districts Cricket Associatio­n.

Barclay’s term runs for two years. A chairman can serve a maximum of three terms.

 ??  ?? Greg Barclay
Greg Barclay

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