NZR review
-
@pakman said in NZR review:
A Board is there to say yay or nay to Executive's proposals, and to sack the CEO if he proves incompetent.
From my experience, the Board sets the overall strategy and priorities, adn it's up to the executive to, er, execute Seriously though, in businesses of any serious size that I have been involved with, it's the Board who are critical to setting direction and (basically) hold the power.
-
@pakman said in NZR review:
OK just watched this video
Thanks for posting
I agree with Moffett. RN must go (maybe replaced by Conrad Smith as an option). His threat was a disgrace and totally unacceptable.
But also, this Board and Robinson need to go as well. This has been an unbelievable shambles that they have presided over. And the Chair wasn't even at this meeting.
Time for a total cleanout.
-
@nzzp said in NZR review:
From my experience, the Board sets the overall strategy and priorities, adn it's up to the executive to, er, execute Seriously though, in businesses of any serious size that I have been involved with, it's the Board who are critical to setting direction and (basically) hold the power.
Depend on how competent both groups are
A brilliant CE and team can almost do everything. Just getting approval from the Board who have their full trust and respect
Often Board member just haven't the time or ability (or they might not be that young anymore) to do they required work so rely heavily on the management team. Othertimes, the management team is a bit limited so the Board have to become (or one or 2) a lot more involved
-
@nzzp said in NZR review:
@pakman said in NZR review:
A Board is there to say yay or nay to Executive's proposals, and to sack the CEO if he proves incompetent.
From my experience, the Board sets the overall strategy and priorities, adn it's up to the executive to, er, execute Seriously though, in businesses of any serious size that I have been involved with, it's the Board who are critical to setting direction and (basically) hold the power.
I'm based in UK and here in all significant listed companies and most private equity ones the day-to-day operations and the materials which the Board receives are driven by the CEO who will also be a director. Independent non-executive directors are usually around 75% of the Board.
In practice, the Board isn't generally able to commit sufficient time to get into the detail of the actual workings.
-
@Winger said in NZR review:
@pakman said in NZR review:
OK just watched this video
Thanks for posting
I agree with Moffett. RN must go (maybe replaced by Conrad Smith as an option). His threat was a disgrace and totally unacceptable.
But also, this Board and Robinson need to go as well. This has been an unbelievable shambles that they have presided over. And the Chair wasn't even at this meeting.
Time for a total cleanout.
Isn't the expected result of Proposal 2 a new Board?
-
@Winger said in NZR review:
And the Chair wasn't even at this meeting.
Has she resigned as promised?
I was astonished the Chair wasn't there - this is arguably the most important vote in a couple of decades. Anyone know why not? Got the pip, or some other commitment?
-
The enromously disturbng thing anout the professional players tyring to split away is that it creates an us V them in NZR.
The NZPA needs the PU's to provide them with talent, its not like they can do any of this by themselves. Nor can they expect PU's to become the snake that eats it's own tail (just give them all their talent with no reward).
It needs to be a co operative arrangement between NZPA and the PU's and especially for NZR if we want to keep our best talent here.
None of this seems to be there.
It's all very worrying.
-
@Donsteppa said in NZR review:
"We're more committed to rugby and professional rugby in this country than anyone, including the community game and grass roots.
That's a strong statement from Mr Nichol. But it's going to be fabulous now seeing him and all of his NZRPA members out at the grounds before 8am each Saturday, giving up their time for free...
Personally I can't wait for Rob Nicol, or a suitable proxy coming down to the club an holding a tackle bag at our team training.
-
@Windows97 said in NZR review:
professional players
Or Rob and I suspect David Kirk had a lot to do with this. A few mainly ex-players also signed this letter but not many
-
@Windows97 if NZRPA want to bypass the PUs wont they then need to ensure they are signing these kids out of school to stop them buggaring off to league or other rugby playing countries?
Cant see any winners in this whole debacle.
-
@taniwharugby said in NZR review:
@Windows97 if NZRPA want to bypass the PUs wont they then need to ensure they are signing these kids out of school to stop them buggaring off to league or other rugby playing countries?
Cant see any winners in this whole debacle.
Super Rugby will be running the academies, so players will be signed to those directly and the PU academies will no longer be required.
-
@taniwharugby said in NZR review:
@Windows97 if NZRPA want to bypass the PUs wont they then need to ensure they are signing these kids out of school to stop them buggaring off to league or other rugby playing countries?
Cant see any winners in this whole debacle.
arent they kind of already?
-
@Kiwiwomble yes, but I expect the numbers will increase a bit quicker with these kids who would usually follow the path through their provincial team first with their dreams of bigger things.
-
It seems to me that the NZRPA has planned for both vote outcomes, and been very open about what the next steps will be.
So we'll get that professional council/board that negotiates directly with NZR to run the pro game. We'll probably end up with with more Super Rugby teams, a longer season and no contracted players in the NPC.
The NPC will go back to be being represenative rugby of their local clubs (not Auckland club players playing in Hawkes Bay for example). Effectively the top tier of club rugby and fully amateur.
In the current system West Coast gets a vote on how the game is run, but the Crusaders don't. That's ass backwards.
We can't afford two professional comps, so Super Rugby will be the new NPC and will have a dedicated organisation to improve the comp (hopefully with a new name). Without the PUs voting for self interest, we'll have a competition voting for it's own self interest, and PUs can run the grassroots.
There will have to be compromises between the NZR and the new org, but that's fine. Easier to herd 5 (up to 10) cats than 27 too.
The change over will be messy, but will be a more sensible structure than the worst of both words we have no, and the PUs have no interest in actually fixing.
-
I think there is about zero chance of this happening now. It would for one destroy super rugby (just when it's starting to pick up again) as there has been so much change now is the time to stick with SRP as it basically is. Not start from scratch with new teams etc
Aas well many loyal rugby men and women would just give up on rugby
RN needs to go.
-
Dylan Cleaver has a good summary
Put all those pre-existing biases aside and unless I’m missing the master-key that unlocks this issue, this is what it boils down to:
-
A review into the governance of a struggling game was commissioned.
-
The reviewers, deemed to be experts in their field, made findings, which were brutal while at the same time obvious to anybody who has cared about this sport for long enough.
-
They made recommendations, which, although obviously not universally popular, were easy enough to implement.
So… and this is the part that cracks me up, a group of people whose body of work was reviewed and found to be lacking in both the understanding and delivery of good governance, sat back and went, “Hmmm, I get where you guys are coming from, but leave it with us, we have a few ideas of our own.”
So we now find ourselves inside some of the denser pages of a Kafka novel, where the PUs noted the points made about the PUs and used the power vested in them by the PUs to come up with a compromise devised by the PUs for the benefit of the PUs.
Then put out a press release with a chef’s kiss of a pay-off line (emphasis and all-caps is mine):
“‘[This weekend] 150,000 people will be out on the playing fields, and the provincial unions will continue their work, UNCHANGED.”
-
-
@Winger said in NZR review:
@Kirwan said in NZR review:
The reviewers, deemed to be experts in their field,
People need to stop worshipping these so-called experts. Including Dylan.
Well, we've had at least 25 years of mis-management by the status-quo, so lets get people in that have run large businesses successfully.
Meritocracy is alweays better than jobs for the boys.