The Guardian (USA)

Premier League moves quickly for new chief executive after Dinnage U-turn

- Paul MacInnes

The Premier League is determined to make a swift appointmen­t to fill the vacant role of chief executive after the surprise decision by Susanna Dinnage to walk away from the job.

That leaves the broadcast executives Tim Davie and Tom Betts, the two candidates understood to have been on the original shortlist with Dinnage, as the most likely candidates. Davie runs BBC Studios while Betts is ITV’s director of strategy.

Dinnage accepted the task of succeeding Richard Scudamore in November but changed her mind over the Christmas period and has opted to stay at the media company Discovery, where she is the global president of Animal Planet.

The Premier League has an interim CEO in place, Claudia Arney, after Scudamore vacated his position last month. But it is understood to be set on making a quick appointmen­t and is in the process of interviewi­ng candidates.

Davie, 51, has been at the BBC since 2005, when he joined as director of marketing, communicat­ions and audience. He went on to become director of audio and music at the corporatio­n before taking his current role in charge of the internatio­nal for-profit division formerly known as BBC Worldwide. He also temporaril­y held the role of director general after the resignatio­n of George Entwistle in 2012 during the Savile affair.

Betts has worked in independen­t television for nearly 30 years and held several senior commercial positions at ITV. His current role sees him responsibl­e for all mergers and acquisitio­ns at the broadcaste­r.

Davie and Betts have been in the frame as Scudamore’s possible replacemen­t ever since succession planning began for the man whose20 years at the Premier League turned the competitio­n into the most valuable sporting competitio­n on earth. Dinnage’s name was a surprise, meanwhile, with some Premier League club owners having reportedly been unaware of her candidacy before being asked to confirm her appointmen­t.

The Premier League believes Dinnage’s U-turn was a simple change of heart, with the 51-year-old having decided she preferred not to leave the industry where she has worked throughout her career. She has not commented herself but she would have been taking a job whose main responsibi­lity is to secure ongoing broadcast revenue for the league at a time of structural uncertaint­y and with most of the current deals having only recently been tied up.

Domestic TV rights have been shared between Sky and BT Sport until the end of the 2021-22 season, with Amazon also entering the fray with the rights to two complete ‘match days’. There is a similar story overseas, where Scudamore recently agreed new deals in the US and China, as well as an arrangemen­t with Facebook to stream every Premier League match in Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos.

 ??  ?? Susanna Dinnage’s unexpected U-turn after accepting the job in November has left the Premier League searching for a new chief executive once more. Photograph: Amanda Edwards/ Getty Images for Discovery, Inc.
Susanna Dinnage’s unexpected U-turn after accepting the job in November has left the Premier League searching for a new chief executive once more. Photograph: Amanda Edwards/ Getty Images for Discovery, Inc.
 ??  ?? Tim Davie, who currently runs BBC Studios, is thought to be among the candidates to replace Richard Scudamore. Photograph: Sean Smith for the Guardian
Tim Davie, who currently runs BBC Studios, is thought to be among the candidates to replace Richard Scudamore. Photograph: Sean Smith for the Guardian

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