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James Sutherland: Cricket Australia chief executive quits | James Sutherland: Cricket Australia chief executive quits |
(about 2 hours later) | |
Cricket Australia chief executive James Sutherland has announced that he will step down. | Cricket Australia chief executive James Sutherland has announced that he will step down. |
Mr Sutherland said the "time is right" for him to depart his position, which he has held for 17 years. | Mr Sutherland said the "time is right" for him to depart his position, which he has held for 17 years. |
He denied that his resignation had been hastened by a ball-tampering scandal that has rocked Australia and prompted the suspensions of three players, including former captain Steve Smith. | He denied that his resignation had been hastened by a ball-tampering scandal that has rocked Australia and prompted the suspensions of three players, including former captain Steve Smith. |
Mr Sutherland will stay on for up to 12 months until his replacement is found. | Mr Sutherland will stay on for up to 12 months until his replacement is found. |
"I feel very comfortable that this is the right time for me and a good time for the game," he said on Wednesday. | "I feel very comfortable that this is the right time for me and a good time for the game," he said on Wednesday. |
"It is something that I have been thinking about for a long time. We have had some big, big things to deal with over the course of the last 12 months." | |
During his tenure, Mr Sutherland oversaw the introduction of day-night Test matches and the highly successful Twenty20 series Big Bash League. | |
Among recent achievements, he cited a new strategy for Australian cricket, a lucrative television rights deal and a pay agreement for male and female cricketers. | |
Year of turmoil | |
In recent times, however, Mr Sutherland also presided over arguably Australian cricket's most tumultuous period. | |
The pay agreement in 2017 descended into a messy dispute that saw cricketers threatening to boycott matches. | |
He also faced scrutiny over his response to the ball-tampering scandal at a Test match in South Africa in March. | |
Smith, former vice-captain David Warner and batsman Cameron Bancroft were given lengthy suspensions for the tampering, a ploy to give the team's bowlers an advantage. | |
Coach Darren Lehmann also stood down after the incident, despite being cleared of wrongdoing. | |
Some observers had suggested that Mr Sutherland was slow to respond to the crisis, and that as chief executive he should also accept blame for team culture. | |
But he was strongly defended by Cricket Australia's board at the time, which expressed full confidence in his actions. | |
Mr Sutherland, a former accountant and first-class player, joined Cricket Australia in 1998. | |
Cricket Australia chairman David Peever said Mr Sutherland had been "instrumental in driving change around the game". | |
"When he leaves the game, he can most certainly say it's much stronger for him having been here," Mr Peever said on Wednesday. |