’We should have done more to assist Aya Myoli after Robbie Frylinck incident,’ Saca CEO tells SJN Hearings

SA Cricketers Association’s CEO, Andrew Breetzke, has acknowledged that they should have given Aya Myoli more assistance after he was punched and burned with a cigarette by former teammate Robbie Frylinck. Photo: YouTube Screengrab

SA Cricketers Association’s CEO, Andrew Breetzke, has acknowledged that they should have given Aya Myoli more assistance after he was punched and burned with a cigarette by former teammate Robbie Frylinck. Photo: YouTube Screengrab

Published Oct 27, 2021

Share

Johannesburg – The SA Cricketers Association’s CEO, Andrew Breetzke told the Social Justice and Nation Building hearings that it had taken heed of lessons learned from the Aya Myoli/Robbie Frylinck incident to improve the support Saca provided for players.

Breetzke acknowledged that Saca – the players union – was mistaken in not giving Myoli further assistance after he was punched and burned with a cigarette lighter by Frylinck in an incident dating back to 2016.

The incident happened at Cape Town airport following a match the pair played for the KwaZulu Natal semi-professional side in Paarl. Although dealt with by the KwaZulu Natal Cricket Union at the time, it received publicity again last year after Lungi Ngidi’s call for the Proteas to show support for Black Lives Matter movement unveiled a racial storm in South African cricket.

ALSO READ: David Becker tells SJN he feels sorry for players banned in match fixing saga

It was raised again when Myoli appeared before the SJN in July. “In 2020, Myoli engaged with Saca and advised that we didn’t provide the requisite support, in 2016,” Breetzke told the SJN hearings on Wednesday.

“I as CEO reviewed what we did, and I agreed with Mr Myoli. We did offer psychological support for him back then, but I think we should’ve engaged directly with him and to offer him support in the process.

“An assumption that it was adequate for Saca to fight his cause by actively seeking disciplinary steps against Mr Frylink due to Mr Myoli not being charged, I think that was wrong. Believing he did not require further assistance was in hindsight mistaken. Hence at the end of last year I apologised to Mr Myoli. We even offered him further legal assistance to possibly clarify any issues he had.

ALSO READ: Advocate Ntsebeza ’uncomfortable’ with match fixing saga being raised at SJN Hearings

"I do think we should have gone back to Mr. Myoli after the event, and said, ‘this event is concluded, where do you stand, are you happy with how it’s been concluded’ – because now it’s come out that he wasn’t happy with how it’s been concluded. It was a mistake on our side.”

Following an internal review into how Saca dealt with the issue, the organisation now retains the services of a third party assistant when dealing with disputes between players. “It’s like our own ombudsman – we go ‘is this an issue of discrimination, how do we assist this person,’ rather than saying the province has dealt with the issue and concluded it,’" Breetzke explained.

In another matter, Breetzke also told the SJN that various parts of former CSA Board member Dr. Eugenia Kula-Ameyaw’s testimony in July were false.

ALSO READ: SJN Hearings: Black players implicated in match-fixing were set up by ’intermediary’ Gulam Bodi

Kula-Ameyaw had testified that Saca paid the salaries of players in the country, something Breetzke said had caused professional players considerable harm.

“We do not pay the salaries (to the players). The salaries of the Proteas’ contracted players are paid by CSA, and the provinces pay the provincially contracted players. We do not pay salaries,” Breetzke stated.

“In addition, (Kula-Ameyaw) seemed to imply that we collude with the coaches, on a formula, so that the players get paid less. Again, that’s just not true. She fails to understand contracting and selection,” said Breetzke.

ALSO READ: Match-fixing probe was not racist, CSA’s anti-corruption head tells SJN Hearings

“She speaks of contract fees, match fees and commercial rights payments in the same breath. There are important distinctions in those income streams and she references the formula as being relevant for all, the formula is not relevant for match fees.

“Sadly, the narrative of Dr Kula-Ameyaw that got a lot of publicity has damaged the player's cause. I’ve had to engage with provinces, where there are new CEOs, or new board members, to correct part of her narrative which has been disappointing,” said Breetzke.

@shockerhess

IOL Sport

Related Topics: