The Guardian (USA)

Yorkshire chair Harry Chathli willing to talk to Azeem Rafiq to help club heal

- Tanya Aldred

The new chair of Yorkshire CCC, Harry Chathli, has said that he would be willing to talk to Azeem Rafiq if it meant helping the club to heal.

Chathli, 58, was appointed chair after an extensive recruitmen­t process, which was ratified by members’ vote at September’s extraordin­ary general meeting. He succeeds the interim chair Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson, who remains on the board as a non-executive director, and Lord Kamlesh Patel, who stepped down in March. Chathli, who became a non-executive director in June, will serve a three-year term.

“The club has been through a really difficult time and has to find a way of healing itself,” says Chathli, “and if that means talking to Azeem Rafiq then of course I will do that.

“I would say that most of the hard work has already been done. My appointmen­t has come on the back of some really good work by the board over the past 18 months – increased participat­ion from all ethnicitie­s, and in the pathway programme, and the culture of the club has changed dramatical­ly over the last three years.

“It is the most exciting job in English

cricket to get into Yorkshire after it comes out of this dark period and tries to get back to the top.”

Chathli was born in India and grew up in Mumbai (then Bombay), coming to the UK in 1980. He founded two successful communicat­ions agencies and is an experience­d internatio­nal capital markets expert – financial acumen that is much needed at Headingley.

He is also a lifelong cricket fan, and a keen club player, describing himself to the Yorkshire Post as a “hit and hope” batter. His daughter Kira plays for Surrey, the South East Stars and the Oval Invincible­s. He has a clear idea of where he wants the club to be in three years’ time.

“If you want to create an elite pyramid then you need a broad pyramid

to do that, and you have two hurdles to overcome: financial and inclusivit­y. The vision I want is for a club that is financiall­y stable and socially and economical­ly inclusive for everybody.”

Yorkshire are in financial dire straits. The club owes the Graves Trust £14.9m – though the Trust has agreed to postpone a £500,000 payment due this month until next April.

Various proposals have been on the table since the start of year, including bids from Rajasthan Royals and Mike Ashley, and the club hope to have signed an agreement to stabilise the club finances by Christmas.

In July, Yorkshire were handed a £400,000 fine – £300,000 of it suspended for two years – by the ECB’s Cricket Discipline Commission as a result of allegation­s of racism and discrimina­tion at the club over a 17-year period. They were also deducted 48-points in the 2023 County Championsh­ip, finishing second from bottom.

Chathli is unperturbe­d. “If you’re a lover of English cricket then you know everything there is to know about Yorkshire – some of the drama is second to none. Yorkshire have won the most number of championsh­ips and contribute­s a significan­t number of cricketers to England. A strong Yorkshire is a strong England.”

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