The Scotsman

JEFFREY: ‘ WE NEED TO BURY THE HATCHET’

- By GRAHAM BEAN

Scottish Rugby Union’s interim chairman pleads for the game’s warring factions to come together

John Jeffrey achieved great things in adversity on the rugby field but the former Scotland flanker may have taken on his toughest task yet as he bids to unite the sport.

Jeffrey, the Scottish Rugby Union’s i nterim chairman, has issued an impassione­d plea for the game’s warring factions to “bury the hatchet” and come together in these most difficult of times.

Rugby has long been riven by infighting and the current Murrayfiel­d regime has done little to endear itself to the game’s rank and file. The marginalis­ation of the club game during 25 years of profession­alism has created a festering sense of mistrust in the sport’s hierarchy. Achievemen­ts on the pitch in the pro era and u n p r e c e d e n t e d c o mmercial success have been rightly lauded but there remains a sense of discontent with some of the actions of the SRU’S top brass and the astronomic­al salar y and bonus package awarded to its chief executive, Mark Dodson, last year.

His pay has been reduced considerab­ly in the Covid era but there remains a disconnect between the club game and the people who run the sport at executive level. This was highlighte­d vividly at part two of the SRU’S annual general meeting on Thursday night when separate motions from Glasgow Hawks and Currie Chieftains delivered a bloody

nose. Jeffrey, a stalwart of Kelso and a hero of Scotland’s 1990 Grand Slam success, was once on the outside looking in, a strong voice criticisin­g the way the SRU was running the game. Now he preaches unity.

“We need to start working together,” Jeffrey said. “It’s all ver y well saying we can do it but we need to bury the hatchet. You go back to when I was involved 20 years ago,

you were almost Judas if you stopped playing and joined the union.

“Look, we’re a bloody small nation. We’ve got the smallest playing numbers by a country mile. We consistent­ly punch above our weight - and that’s when we’re still arguing with each other. Imagine how good we would be if we all pulled t ogether? And I genuinely think we all want to do that.”

The clubs delivered a strong message to the SRU board at the agm by voting through two motions aimed at addressing a range of concerns about governance. The motion from Glasgow Hawks calling for more openness and t ransparenc­y within the SRU, was approved by 157 votes to 16. And a motion f rom Currie Chieftains to amend byelaws to “reset the balance” in allow

ing the Scottish Rugby Council to oversee and review the management of t he union was passed by the same overwhelmi­ng majority.

Jeffrey, who suggested he would like to take on the chairman’s role on a longer- term basis, said he wants to end the acrimony. “Absolutely. I think everybody involved in Scottish rugby wants to do that,” he said. “I’m interim chairman

until next May and I probably would chuck my hat in the ring if offered the opportunit­y. We all love the game and I genuinely believe we can move forward and to do that we’ve got to do it together.

“I know you’ve got to earn trust, you can’t just be given trust. But I genuinely believe the time for all that stuff is behind us. Let’s move forward together.”

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 ??  ?? 0 John Jeffrey would like to serve as SRU chairman on a longer term basis. ‘ I probably would chuck my hat in the ring if offered the opportunit­y,’ said the former flanker.
0 John Jeffrey would like to serve as SRU chairman on a longer term basis. ‘ I probably would chuck my hat in the ring if offered the opportunit­y,’ said the former flanker.

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