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Ken Borland



1st week of SJN hearings a mere aperitif 0

Posted on August 03, 2021 by Ken

The first week of the Social Justice and Nation-Building hearings have been a mere aperitif for what I sense many people are hoping are more sensational revelations from next week when former players start appearing before Advocate Dumisa Ntsebeza, the ombudsman appointed by Cricket South Africa.

But in many ways, this week’s “scene-setters”, as Ntsebeza has called them, have provided vital testimony because they have given a factual account of the transformation policies of CSA and how they have changed through the years. There have been successes, but there have been failures as well and surely no-one can question that the national team is not as transformed as it should be nearly 30 years after Unity.

The SJN commission did not have a promising start though. The first witness was Dr Eugenia Kula-Ameyaw, which was fair enough because the SJN was largely her idea. But the former CSA independent director produced a couple of hours of largely incoherent testimony riddled with factual errors. As a former Board member, how does she not know that the players’ association (SACA) don’t pay the players’ salaries?!

She then thought it would be appropriate to give Ntsebeza a cricket bat, signed by her, to commemorate the occasion. The ombudsman looked bemused and it was telling that he never mentioned Kula-Ameyaw’s presentation again during the week.

It was onwards and upwards from there though as Advocate Norman Arendse, former CSA president and current independent director, and Max Jordaan, CSA’s head of transformation, spoke of the steps taken to ensure equal opportunities for all before cricket was captured and the likes of Kula-Ameyaw took the reins.

Mary-Anne Dove, a doctor of sports and exercise science whose thesis was on the role of socio-ecological factors in talent development in sport, gave insights into how targets or quotas have to be accompanied by development and other interventions, and Zola Thamae, a former Board member and manager of the Proteas women’s team, gave shocking evidence of how the women’s national team was treated a decade ago.

Professor Richard Calland, an expert on sustainable governance and organisational culture, gave an interesting presentation too.

It is clear that CSA have made a meal of transformation, but it does not matter how many Black player quotas or targets they have, the failure of the Proteas to be truly representative of the country is firstly down to socio-economic issues.

Jordaan, who has been at CSA for 20 years, apart from the disingenuous comment that “nobody is missing out on selection because we are juggling numbers”, made the salient points that when the Proteas won the ICC mace for being top of the Test pile, targets were in place, and that transformation has to start at the many non-former-Model C and private schools and at clubs, but CSA runs into difficulties when they try and improve facilities in these areas due to recalcitrant city councils and the lack of support from the department of education.

Jordaan gave the example of a cricket facility in Welkom being taken over by the local council, who built a casino instead on the land, and buildings in townships “disappearing brick-by-brick”.

Instead of just congratulating themselves for having ticked the box of having a certain number of Black players in the Proteas and domestic teams (which is not a valid measure of transformation success because teams are forced to meet the racial targets), cricket needs to firstly make sure the pipeline at grassroots is working.

I believe CSA have actually done okay in this regard and have worked very hard to keep the pipeline flowing. But there is no doubt Black players still predominantly come from the former Model C and private schools – a much smaller pool.

This is due to structural, systemic problems that only national and local government can fix, especially with the currently constrained financial resources of CSA.

The frustration of Black African cricketers was evident in the presentations of Johannesburg coach David Mashiyi and former player Zonde Mbekeni.

The fact that Mbekeni feels as frustrated and angry about the lack of opportunities for Black Africans as he did in his playing days back in the 1970s is not okay.

But in many ways it boils down to a struggle for scant resources and opportunities.

Hands off our cricket, Guptas! 0

Posted on March 29, 2016 by Ken

 

It would be naïve to think, after all the dramatic revelations this week of just how far the tentacles of the Guptas have infiltrated into practically every organ of state, that sport in this country is okay. Never mind football’s problems now that Fifa have named South Africa as being complicit in bribery.

Sports Minister Razzmatazz may just want to carry on partying and living the life, hoping it all just goes away (“Fifa must retract”, have you ever?), but the government’s ability to make things just disappear doesn’t work so well in overseas courts.

And cricket could face another day of reckoning once it is exposed just how thoroughly Cricket South Africa sold out to the Guptas. It was a few years ago, but many of those same, morally deficient administrators are still on the board.

As with so many of CSA’s problems, it all started with the IPL South Africa hosted in 2009. Initially it all looked okay, a wonderful jamboree of cricket brought to our shores. But it didn’t take long for the sordid underside of the tournament to become visible.

Such a billion dollar event was obviously going to be irresistible to the rapacious Guptas and their fingers had to be in the pie. The Family (ironically, this is how they are known in cricket circles) were involved in the assault of a man in the Wanderers Long Room and when the police were called they were instructed by the Guptas to arrest the victim. It is believed he was subsequently deported.

The IPL was moved to South Africa due to security concerns surrounding the Indian general election, and the South African government instituted a requirement that anyone travelling from troubled areas of India to the tournament would have to undergo a 30-day security clearance process. But when all the Guptas’ friends from Uttar Pradesh wanted to come over for the IPL final, this requirement was mysteriously waived for them, allegedly on the instruction of the family.

A leading administrator of the time says “Many cricket administrators colluded with the Guptas, like the politicians. The Guptas controlled the administrators and Gerald Majola, especially, was their man. He was the means to their control and so, when we were fighting him, we were actually fighting the Guptas.”

Little wonder then that, when some board members, with the support of then BCCI president Shashank Manohar, called for clarity as to how the amount of R400 million paid to CSA for the tournament was spent, there was a furious response from other directors and KPMG were prevented from doing an audit.

There is no doubt there was a you-scratch-my-back-and-I’ll-scratch-yours relationship between CSA and the Guptas. The Guptas even had their family spokesman, Gary Naidoo, sitting on the board.

When Majola was finally removed from office, his successor, Jacques Faul, faced a vicious onslaught from The New Age, the Gupta newspaper.

Board members have often been invited to Saxonwold and in return the Guptas are used to being treated like royalty at cricket matches, demanding their own tables and such like. The Guptas invited the CSA board to 2010 soccer World Cup games and CSA had board meetings in the family’s R50 000 a day penthouse at the luxurious Oyster Box in Umhlanga Rocks. Security measures that have been in place for everyone else attending matches, including top CSA administrators, have been waived for the Guptas because they refused to comply.

No one seems to know for sure how much per annum stadiums like Willowmoore Park, Newlands and Kingsmead received for Sahara [the Guptas’ computer company, they even “borrowed” the name of the more famous Indian version] getting the naming rights; but the talk is it was a negligible amount.

The finger has also been pointed at TV broadcasters, with a schools cricket game at St David’s being shown live in prime time; co-incidentally one of the Gupta sons was playing.

Cricket administrators also speak of the build-up to the IPL when they were told by the Guptas not to bother keeping then sports minister Makhenkesi Stofile informed of proceedings because “we have been to the cabinet kgotla and he won’t be sports minister for long”. That’s another thing Fikile Mbalula has to answer for, given his denials about how he was put in his post in the first place.

The day is hopefully coming soon when South Africa is rid of this parasitic family, whose presence must become as unpopular as e-toll gantries given how they have sucked the blood of the people along with their corrupt accomplices.

 

SuperRugby revelations 0

Posted on July 27, 2012 by Ken

10. Willie le Roux (Cheetahs)

The 22-year-old fullback was fearless in bringing his running game into his debut SuperRugby season, his counter-attacking skills often lifting an ailing Cheetahs team. Good in the air too and a strong kicker, his move from Boland has certainly paid off.

 

9. Paul Jordaan (Sharks)

The Sharks have had a motley record recently in terms of backline selection, but they recognised an exciting talent in centre/wing Jordaan, who was not even a member of their original squad. An explosive runner, the IRB Junior World Championship winner has the pace to threaten the best but also the ability to read the nuances of the game.

 

8. Tim Whitehead (Sharks)

The 24-year-old is in his third season of SuperRugby, but moved this year from the Stormers, who have considerable riches in midfield. The move has paid off for Whitehead, who has been a regular in the Sharks team and has stated his claim for future higher honours with commanding displays at centre, especially defensively. Well organised and strong.

 

7. Steven Kitshoff (Stormers)

Inexperienced and the youngest member of the Stormers squad, but charged with being the foundation of their scrum, a problem area in the past. The 20-year-old member of South Africa’s winning IRB Junior World Championship squad made life difficult for far more experienced tightheads and was also a test for defences with ball in hand.

 

6. Siya Kolisi (Stormers)

The 21-year-old filled in for the injured Schalk Burger so well that the Stormers hardly noticed the absence of the Springbok legend. A major defensive force, Kolisi gets himself around the park and has impressive strength.

 

5. JJ Engelbrecht (Bulls)

Lanky but fast with ball in hand and ferocious in defence, the former Stormer enjoyed a top-class season that brought him to the brink of a Springbok cap. Works well with the Bulls backline coach, former Springbok wing Pieter Rossouw, with whom he shares many similarities in playing style.

 

4. Jacques Potgieter (Bulls)

One of the Bulls’ best signings in many years, the former EP Kings loose forward delivered for his new employees with his unyielding defence and the momentum he generated with ball in hand. And he’s now a Springbok having never played SuperRugby before this year.

 

3. Juandre’ Kruger (Bulls)

The 26-year-old lock resurrected his career with his fiery displays in the tight and his tremendous lineout ability, both in terms of winning his own ball and disrupting the oppositions’. Seen as the potential successor to Victor Matfield, Kruger’s move from the Northampton Saints paid off with selection for the Springboks.

 

2. Marcell Coetzee (Sharks)

His work-rate alone pulverises the opposition and his all-action game includes efficient defence, powerful ball-carrying and the ability to play to the ball, working hard in the rucks as well. Coetzee made his SuperRugby debut last year, but this year he became a standout for the Springboks.

 

1. Eben Etzebeth (Stormers)

It is not often that someone as brilliant as Bakkies Botha seems to have a ready-made replacement within a year, but Etzebeth was a massive success both for the Stormers and South Africa. Over two metres tall and weighing 120kg, the 20-year-old lock makes big hits, can dominate the front of the lineout and has an unrelenting work rate.

 

 

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