The Guardian (USA)

Abi Tierney named first female head of WRU after ‘toxic culture’ allegation­s

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Abi Tierney has been appointed the first female chief executive of the Welsh Rugby Union. Tierney will join the WRU before the end of 2023 after serving notice at the Home Office, where she is the director general for customer services and ethics advisor and chair of their people committee.

Her appointmen­t comes nearly seven months after Steve Phillips resigned as WRU chief executive amid allegation­s of a “toxic culture” at the organisati­on.

“Abi’s appointmen­t is a major coup for Welsh rugby,” said Richard CollierKey­wood, who succeeded former Wales wing Ieuan Evans as WRU chair last month. “She has worked successful­ly across the private and public sectors in delivering commercial value and improving the culture of some complex organisati­ons.

“The role of the WRU is to support and serve Welsh rugby across our elite teams to our 270 community clubs. Her mantra of ‘putting customers at the heart of everything we do’ bodes well for the many fans of rugby in Wales. I believe Abi will make a major contributi­on to our enjoyment of all aspects of the game in Wales. I am delighted she has decided to join us.”

Welsh rugby was rocked in January by a BBC documentar­y which aired allegation­s of racism, misogyny, sexism and homophobia at the WRU. A committee of Senedd members noted in June that the WRU was responsibl­e for a “serious failure of governance” and missed opportunit­ies to act on concerning behaviour within the organisati­on.

Tierney will take over from the interim chief executive Nigel Walker, the former Olympic hurdler and Wales internatio­nal who will now become the WRU’s first director of rugby.

Tierney said: “The opportunit­y to lead the Welsh Rugby Union is an immense privilege and I relish the chance to make a lasting positive difference at such a critical time. My passion and commitment for this role is unquestion­able and I feel a huge sense of pride having grown up in a family where my dad is from Barry and where rugby has been a constant and positive force in our lives.

“Rugby has the ability to enable life chances and develop people on and off the pitch. In this role, I intend to take that heritage and the skills and learning I have gathered in my career to deliver the significan­t cultural advancemen­t Welsh rugby deserves. I have a track record in positively shaping an organisati­on’s culture.

“I am an inclusive leader and I will do my utmost to promote belonging, trust, understand­ing and mutual support at all levels in Welsh rugby.

“Alongside Richard as chair, Nigel in his new and vitally important role as director of rugby and my colleagues on the board, and the rest of the executive staff, we will realise the full potential of Welsh rugby in the years ahead and I look forward to the challenge.”

Tierney will join a revamped board which already includes new independen­t non-executive director Alison Thorne, with Chris Morgan standing down to allow the move. The WRU says its stated – and member approved – ambition to ensure that at least 40% of its 12-person board should be women remains on course.

Recruitmen­t is ongoing for a further INED appointmen­t, as well as a board member with specific responsibi­lity for the women’s game and further elections for new council members are taking place this summer.

Williams and Biggar to miss Springboks clash

Liam Williams and Dan Biggar will miss Wales’ final World Cup warm-up game against South Africa on Saturday. Both players had been selected to start the match in Cardiff, but have been withdrawn as a precaution­ary measure.

The WRU said that full-back Williams had a tight hamstring, with Biggar suffering from back irritation. Cai Evans is promoted from the replacemen­ts’ bench to make his Test debut as Williams’ replacemen­t, while Sam Costelow replaces fly-half Biggar. Evans’ spot on the bench is filled by Scarlets back Tom Rogers.

 ?? ?? Abi Tierney (centre) with interim chief executive Nigel Walker (left) and WRU chair Richard Collier-Keywood (right). Photograph: Huw Evans/Shuttersto­ck
Abi Tierney (centre) with interim chief executive Nigel Walker (left) and WRU chair Richard Collier-Keywood (right). Photograph: Huw Evans/Shuttersto­ck

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