Cape Argus

CSA, Sascoc try to work as one

- STUART HESS stuart.hess@inl.co.za

CRICKET South Africa (CSA) and Sascoc are trying to work together to devise solutions that will please both parties as crisis continues to grip local cricket’s mother body.

While CSA claimed in a statement yesterday that while Monday night’s meeting between the SA Sports Confederat­ion and Olympic Committee’s board and CSA’s Members’ Council was “positive”, there remain difference­s that need to be ironed out. One of those is the forensic report, which Sascoc still expects to see, in full without signing a Non-Disclosure Agreement.

The other is who will pay for Sascoc’s task team, that it wants to establish to investigat­e Cricket SA. Sascoc, through acting chief executive, Ravi Govender said last week that the Olympic body can’t pay for the task team – which he explained would be made up of at most four people and will take a month to complete its work – because it is “cash-strapped.”

“We have to fund this from somewhere. The task team is intended to benefit cricket,” said Govender. Sascoc wants CSA to fund the investigat­ion.

At last weekend’s workshop, where the Members Council – CSA’s highest decision-making body, comprising the provincial union presidents – were shown a summary of the forensic report, Sascoc’s resolution that the Board of Directors and some senior management be suspended, was also rejected. As was Sascoc’s demand that CSA foot the bill for the task team and its investigat­ion. Both decisions were based on legal advice.

The weekend workshop also resolved that the summary of the report be made available to the provincial affiliates through the respective CEOs.

This was to be done, according to one insider, to “take away the public perception that the report is being hidden to South Africa at large and affiliates.” However by yesterday afternoon three major provincial affiliates had not received the summary. It is expected that it should be made available by the end of the week.

CSA’s Members Council will meet with Sascoc again tomorrow, where the two organisati­ons hope to achieve some sort of finality around the issues dividing them. “At Monday’s meeting we discussed certain modalities around our proposals ... we want to put one or two things into place for the purposes of completing those modalities,” Gonder said yesterday.

“Our position has not changed, but obviously we need to collaborat­e with Cricket SA.”

Govender couldn’t say if Sacoc would acquiesce to CSA’s demands about its Board and senior management including, company secretary Welsh Gwaza and acting CEO Kugandrie Govender “stepping aside,” while the task team did its work.

“It’s a little complex to explain, for the simple reason that over the next 48 hours we have to deal with certain issues we’ve agreed on for purposes of presenting formally our position on Thursday.”

Meanwhile, Momentum yesterday announced it would not be renewing its sponsorshi­p of One-Day cricket when its current deal with the CSA expires next April.

Crucially, Momentum will continue to support the national women’s team. The naming rights contract currently in place, expires in 2023.

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