Howard to quit as CA high performance chief

Published November 8, 2018
This file photo taken on November 4, 2016 shows Cricket Australia team performance chief Pat Howard speaking to the media in Sydney.  — AFP
This file photo taken on November 4, 2016 shows Cricket Australia team performance chief Pat Howard speaking to the media in Sydney. — AFP

MELBOURNE: Cricket Australia (CA) announced on Wednesday that high performance chief Pat Howard will leave his role next week as the fallout from a scathing cultural review into the governing body continues.

Howard, who has been in the role since 2011, had intended to stay until the Ashes tour of England next year, the governing body announced last month, a week before releasing the Longstaff review.

However, he becomes the latest executive to fall in the wake of the review, which CA commissioned after the ball-tampering scandal in Cape Town in March.

“While Pat Howard has previously made clear his intentions not to renew his contract next year, it has been decided to bring forward his departure which will take effect next week after a handover,” CA said in a statement. “Belinda Clark ... has agreed to take on the role of Interim EGM, Team Performance until Pats permanent replacement is announced in the New Year.” Appointed in 2011, former rugby international Howard was a polarising figure in the role, with former players and pundits questioning his lack of a significant cricket background.

But CA chief executive Kevin Roberts said Howard’s tenure had been a success, praising him for bringing high performance into the ‘21st century’ and helping deliver World Cups for both the men’s and women’s national teams.

CA would look for a replacement with ‘deep cricket experience’, Roberts told reporters. “I’ll be seeking the counsel of other cricket experts in terms of determining our future direction.”

CA also said broadcasting executive Ben Amarfio had left the business on Wednesday, with Stephanie Beltrame stepping into a new role as Interim EGM Broadcasting and Commercial.

The changes come on the heels of Chairman David Peever’s decision to quit on Thursday after his position became untenable, while long-serving board director Mark Taylor, the former Australia captain, announced his resignation on Monday.

CA installed deputy chairman Earl Eddings as an interim replacement for Peever and said last week it would seek someone to take on the role permanently.

On Wednesday, however, Roberts said there would be no ‘significant change at executive level’ in coming months, barring the interim appointments being made permanent.

“From here on we’re about growing and building and moving beyond these tough decisions and tough times for some people that we really respect to take the game forward,” he said.

Meanwhile, Former Test batsman Simon Katich has ruled out taking a role on CA’s embattled board and predicted that the bloodletting will continue in the wake of a scathing review.

While announcing his resignation, Taylor said he hoped a former player would replace him on the board and nominated respected pundit Katich among a handful of potential successors.

But Katich said his media roles and family commitments ruled him out of the job.

“I’ve got too much on my plate,” he said in comments published by The Australian newspaper. “Mark Taylor spoke about his conflict with media commitments and the board role and I have signed to work with Channel 7 and [radio station] SEN during the summer so I would be equally compromised.

“I’m contracted and I am going to honour that contract ... I would love to help but I am happy doing what I am doing.”

Published in Dawn, November 8th, 2018

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