« Blog Home
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars
Loading ... Loading ...

So the nominations are in and the fierce lobbying, counter lobbying and electioneering starts. This elections, while not necessarily being the most crucial in the history of the organisation (in its many incarnations) will give us a view of just how much it has matured from the politics and cronyism riddled mess it was up until (embarrassingly) recently.

Why do I say that? Well in the past South African Rugby Union office has always been seen as little more than a gravy train. It was a case of get in there, get your friends snouts in the trough and sod the rugby. Oh, and battle government every so often. As long as the Boks kept winning it was all good. And if the Bokke weren’t winning, fire the coach, heap all the blame on his head and then get on a business class seat to a presidential box in some far off stadium.

The Hoskins era changed all that. The Boks have gone from strength to strength on the field. Messy political battles fought in the media are a thing of the past and relations with government have never been better.

It is very telling that Hoskins’ only rival for the post of president is his own deputy. This speaks of an organisation that is full of faith in how thing are currently run. No one is seeking a revolution at the palace. That surely is a first for SA Rugby. The lack of acrimony between the two men tells a story in itself. The two gentlemen also seem to me to be pushing the same agenda with but a few differences in the nuances of the broader plan.

One wonders then, if there would be any sense if having change at the top? Hoskins has only been in the position for four years. Saru is in the middle of a major organisational structure change, the Bokke are about to embark on their busiest season outside of World Cup years and major development initiatives are at crucial phases of implementation. Now is not the time to rock the boat for the sake of change.

Let us continue with the current path of progress and success, surely only good lies ahead for our beloved sport.

The nominees and the respective positions are all listed below.
President: Mark Alexander, Oregan Hoskins (incumbent)
Deputy President: Mark Alexander (incumbent), Jan Marais, Hein Mentz, Rautie Rautenbach, Tobie Titus
Vice President: Dawie Groenewald, Jan Marais, Rautie Rautenbach (incumbent), James Stoffberg
Executive Council (four to be elected): Altmann Allers, Francois Davids, Boet Fick, Dawie Groenewald, Peter Hassard, Jan Marais, James Stoffberg, Sampie Pienaar




Related Posts

2 Responses to “Saru ain’t broke. Why fix it?”

While the Hoskins era certainly has been faaaaaaaar more stable then his predesessors, the failure of sorting out Super rugby in the Eastern Cape is a major cost on SARU’s part. They’ve been dragging their heels for ages, and not everything has gone swimmingly under Hoskins watch. Let’s hope that whatever happens, SA rugby can continue on its current path (and ensure they don’t burn out their most valuable commodity: the players).

(Report abuse)

Adam Wakefield on March 12th, 2010 at 11:07 am

@Adama- I ahve to agree with you on the Spears.

Could they have done worse than the Lions?

(Report abuse)

bonga ntshingila on June 7th, 2010 at 2:16 pm

Leave a Reply

All comments must be approved by our editors, click here to read the editorial guidelines for comments. Please allow some time for our editors to approve your comment after posting.

Send me the Thought Leader daily newsletter

profile
Bonga Ntshingila is an avid sports fan,he had a promising youth sports career (as in coaches always promised he would play in the next match,and teammates always promised to moer him if he shanked yet another scoring opportunity).When he realised that maybe he wasn't going to be the next Andre Joubert thanks to a few shortcomings (hand-eye co-ordination,timing,pace (buffet lines excepted) he proceeded to satisfy his huge passion for sport from the stands and immerse himself in in-depth analysis of sport and atheletes.This may (not) have been made even more inviting by the prospect of imbibing a few refreshing beverages while casting a critical eye over the latest choke/cheat/fluke by (insert geographically correct team here) and telling all and sundry just how and why he and only he saw it coming.

Bonga indulges the following sporting passions:

1.Orlando Pirates (no I have never set any stadium on fire)
2. Rugby.anywhere and everywhere it is played on the planet
3. Curling

One of the above may be made up.
Technorati RSS
Siyabonga's links
Newstime
News, Views and incisive analysis. Newstime. All the time.
Newstime
News views and top notch analysis
more posts
Lonwabo Tsotsobe's devastating form against the Bangladeshis should, hopefully, have made the selectors sit up and take note. Having been consigned...
Arsenal have had a topsy-turvy time of it since their calamity against Birmingham in the Carling Cup final a fortnight ago. Victory against Leyton ...
Maybe Jermain Defoe has a future as a soothsayer. Just months after the often misfiring Tottenham Hotspur finisher was derided for saying Harry Re...
Firstly, before Arsenal throw their toys out the cot blaming ref Massimo Busacca, they must remember they had 90 minutes in which all they needed to d...
Only South Africans would, faced with the prospect of having two genuine world-class pivot prospects, seek to align among provincial lines and do thei...
latest activity
Blog Statistics
Total reads 27587
Total comments 357
Siyabonga's tags
advertisement
All material copyright of the author, or the Mail & Guardian, unless otherwise specified
Author Login
Afrigator