Business Day

CSA turn Teeger affair into shameful mess

- Stuart Hess

Cricket SA’s (CSA’s) board of directors contains a full house of expertise covering topics ranging from law to finance, marketing, broadcasti­ng and cricket, but has managed what is akin to a “soft dismissal” in dealing with the David Teeger affair. What a mess it is.

And not the first time either for an organisati­on that simply cannot free itself of controvers­y and whose management and communicat­ion are so horrendous that had it been a player, CSA would have been dropped and sent back to the “B” team to find itself again.

The organisati­on does find itself in a tricky position regarding Teeger. When the 19-yearold made his remarks in support of the Israeli Defence Force on receiving the “Rising Star Award” at the Jewish Achiever Awards last October, he wasn’t captain of the under-19 team or in a World Cup squad because one hadn’t been named yet.

That’s not how communicat­ion management works, certainly not in the 21st century, and definitely not for an organisati­on with CSA’s recent history. That a board with the kind of expertise CSA has, didn’t foresee trouble ahead shows poor judgment.

It would have received criticism anyway, but making the decision to remove Teeger as captain and basing that decision on care for a young player and a team that was suddenly under more scrutiny was a move that could have assuaged much of the tension that has arisen since.

SECURITY

There are certainly strong concerns within CSA about security for SA matches at the under-19 World Cup. A senior official said: “Imagine if because of protests someone gets hurt or worse because a rubber bullet is fired. We don’t want that happening at a cricket match.”

The security assessment­s handed to CSA apparently make no direct reference to Teeger or any other player’s safety, but it does concern what may happen with protests planned for Friday’s opening match between SA and the West Indies in Potchefstr­oom.

The Palestine Solidarity Alliance has applied for a permit to protest, though its involvemen­t in other protests have not led to violence, which would make concerns seem unnecessar­y. Yet, if there were security concerns, CSA needs to be seen to be acting responsibl­y.

Of course the broader context cannot be ignored and, specifical­ly, government’s decision to launch a case before the Internatio­nal Court of Justice, accusing Israel of genocide.

SA made its case in The

Hague last Thursday. On Friday, CSA stripped Teeger of the captaincy. Again CSA and its leadership refused to communicat­e publicly beyond its statement about its decision. CSA is walking a fine line, and finding that balancing on it is nearly impossible. It has been accused, in mainstream media and on social media, of infringing on Teeger’s right to free expression.

One senior official said the organisati­on accepted it would upset everyone with whatever decision it made regarding Teeger, and it “is a storm they would have to ride out”.

TRUST

That may be so, but CSA broadly remains an organisati­on the public cannot trust.

It is trying to rebuild bridges after its own management drama, which led to forensic audits and government interventi­on less than five years ago and ultimately to the new administra­tive structure.

CSA has not shaken off the widely held belief that it is inept, and the recent poor management of the Teeger episode adds to other matters it has bungled since the new board structure, with its majority independen­t directors, was confirmed in 2021.

From the Black Lives Matter kneeling issue that caused Quinton de Kock to withdraw hours before a World Cup match and the lack of Test cricket, to the continued delay in appointing a head coach for the women’s team, which is understood to be mired in politics, CSA simply cannot come up with a clear strategy that outlines a path forward.

Trust is thus lacking with the public and potential sponsors. These are weighty world issues confrontin­g CSA, but managing them was the kind of thing a new, more independen­t board, with a range of expertise, was expected to do.

Instead, CSA finds itself trying to put out fires everywhere while simultaneo­usly creating new ones.

 ?? ?? David Teeger
David Teeger

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