The Citizen (Gauteng)

CSA fail to pin down slippery Moroe

- @KenBorland

Depending on whether you believe the suspended chief executive and his legal advisors, Cricket South Africa (CSA) now have two CEOs in Thabang Moroe and Jacques Faul and it is a chaotic situation that is almost entirely the fault of the president Chris Nenzani and the CSA board.

It has been more than six months now since CSA’s Social, Ethics and Audit and Risk committees provided the evidence needed to suspend Moroe on 6 December. A time period which, according to Moroe’s lawyer Michael Bill, means his suspension has lapsed. Which is why the suspended CEO pulled his brazen stunt this week of rocking up to CSA’s offices in Melrose Estate to “report for duty” and there just happened to be a radio journalist on the scene to take the photo.

Despite the South African Cricketers’ Associatio­n (Saca) warning CSA at the beginning of the week that their failure to make progress on Moroe’s disciplina­ry hearing would seriously erode the small gains in confidence that have been painstakin­gly acquired by acting CEO Faul and director of cricket Graeme Smith, the CSA Board were taken by surprise by Moroe’s act of defiance and, despite having practicall­y the whole day to respond, could only issue a statement after midnight in the early hours of yesterday morning.

While acknowledg­ing that it might not be easy to pin down a slippery character like Moroe, six months is surely enough time to formulate charges against him given that the financial audit was already picking up irregulari­ties a couple of months into their brief. Plus the state of cricket in December and the relationsh­ips Moroe had destroyed with vital stakeholde­rs such as the players

Ken Borland

associatio­n, sponsors and the media should be enough to dismiss a chief executive for obvious incompeten­ce.

The CSA board have made such a pig’s ear of the entire situation that it is easy to wonder if it has not all been deliberate. Nenzani and Moroe were certainly in cahoots for much of the program of “Cricket Capture” and it is known that there are still directors who want the former CEO back. Plus the person responsibl­e for handling disciplina­ry matters, company secretary and head of legal Welsh Gwaza, is a known Moroe ally.

Perhaps commercial manager Clive Eksteen and chief operations manager Naasei Appiah should also get ideas now and return to work after they were suspended by Moroe at the end of October. The then CEO made them, along with Corrie van Zyl, who has already been found guilty and given a final warning, the scapegoats for Saca not receiving the image rights money that was due to the players. But the players’ associatio­n say there is proof that it was not Appiah, Eksteen and Van Zyl who were delaying the payments but Moroe himself. Such malfeasanc­e should be sufficient reason to dismiss the CEO.

The CSA Board’s response to Moroe’s “return to work” was to say he is still suspended. Those incompeten­t directors who have shown themselves to be utterly incapable of coming up with ideas that will benefit the game look set to argue that the former CEO was never told his suspension would only last six months. But Nenzani is on record as having promised the process would be completed within six months.

There is little doubt the whole fiasco is heading for court and it will be for a judge to decide whether CSA or Moroe are in the right.

It’s going to be yet another financial drain on an organisati­on that was in dire straits even before the Covid-19 pandemic.

All of this overseen by Nenzani, who is still trying to wrangle the constituti­on into allowing him to stand for yet another term as president. He has changed the constituti­on three times and is the longest-serving president SA cricket has ever had to endure. And what good has he done for the game? For SA cricket-lovers, it has been another week of shame that our beloved sport is in the hands of such delinquent­s.

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