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We will be working to gather comment and reaction to Gawain Briars' retirement announcement (PSA Release Below). Here is what we have pulled together so far ... Chaloner, Power, Nimick, Anon
PSA Chairman Mark Chaloner:
"Gawain’s retirement as Chief Executive marks a turning point for the Association. His high standards have led the men’s professional game into a new era where compensation levels, event and membership numbers are at an unsurpassed level. His legal experience has been invaluable in ensuring the Association is well placed in its increasingly complex contractual arrangements, and his willingness to continuously travel the world to visit our customers and tournaments has ensured that PSA’s profile has remained at the highest level.
Under Gawain’s steady stewardship the Association has reached a point now where its resources and broadcast vision provide us with our best opportunity to harness the appeal of the men’s game as the most exciting spectator sport.
PSA thanks Gawain for his major contribution to our development and wishes him the very best for his retirement and future plans."
Jonathon Power:
"This is a great time for squash. Here is an opportunity for healthy change. I hope for our sport that the right person, with the right motives, becomes CEO."
A well connected squash source, who wishes to remain anonymous:
"The PSA has been a shambolic institution for many, many years. Too many people have jumped aboard to line their own pockets at the expense of the PSA's integrity and development. I see that Mr Briars is taking the credit for the increase in prize money. Make no mistake, the only people responsible for this are the small group of promoters who take all the risk involved in setting up tournaments.
As for the improvements in television coverage, this is a myth. Any TV coverage generated by the sport is down to the promoters who stump up the dollars to pay the bill for the production costs.
The PSA web-streaming service is another myth. This is a fourth-grade production at best.
The PSA needs to embrace the professional people who are all out there, wanting to help the sport to grow, but these individuals are being turned off by the small-time egomaniacs who have been allowed free rein to damage the sport's credibility for so many years. We all know who they are and I hope the current PSA Board will get rid of them once and for all and also come down hard on one or two promoters whose behaviour is bordering on corruption."
John Nimick: when asked to comment on Gawain Briar's retirement and if he will be putting his name forward for consideration for the newly vacant CEO role, if sufficient interest and support came from the players & Board?
"To his credit, the PSA World Tour grew tremendously under Gawain's tenure as Chief Executive. Personally, I always found Gawain to be trustworthy and highly professional in our squash dealings. I wish him great success in his next endeavour and, as a promoter, thank him for his steady stewardship of men's professional squash."
As to my potential thoughts about the job, I haven't any at this time. I think the sport is poised to break out of its poorly recognized condition and this is the right time for the right person to make that happen."
PSA Press Release
By Howard Harding
Gawain Briars has revealed his decision to retire from the post as Chief Executive of the Professional Squash Association on 31st March 2008.
Under Briars's stewardship since October 1999, the PSA has enjoyed an exponential growth in tour event numbers, tour revenue and membership numbers.
Briars inherited a world tour programme of 100 events with US$ 1.5 million prize money. The PSA Tour currently boasts over 371 events and a total prize fund in excess of US$ 3.2 million - a dramatic increase. Furthermore, membership numbers have increased in that time from 301 to over 400 players from 59 countries, covering the five continental regions of the world. Television, both programme and live through the PSA Super Series coverage, has continued and built on its strong lead in the promotion of squash worldwide as the sport seeks to increase its exposure in a competitive and congested market.
The introduction of the Point-a-Rally scoring system to eleven points was promoted and driven by Briars. This reform has contributed more than any other to the new era of exciting and dynamic performance at the top level. The former world No4 led the Association into the pioneering web streaming service PSALive, in conjunction with partners Horizon Software Systems, which provides live, replay and archive coverage of all major PSA events in the year and continues to increase as a service and broadcast medium opportunity for the professional game.
"Gawain’s retirement as Chief Executive marks a turning point for the Association," said PSA Chairman Mark Chaloner. "His high standards have led the men’s professional game into a new era where compensation levels, event and membership numbers are at an unsurpassed level. His legal experience has been invaluable in ensuring the Association is well placed in its increasingly complex contractual arrangements, and his willingness to continuously travel the world to visit our customers and tournaments has ensured that PSA’s profile has remained at the highest level. Under Gawain’s steady stewardship the Association has reached a point now where its resources and broadcast vision provide us with our best opportunity to harness the appeal of the men’s game as the most exciting spectator sport.
"PSA thanks Gawain for his major contribution to our development and wishes him the very best for his retirement and future plans."
Briars added: "I have immensely enjoyed my nine years at the helm of PSA. These have been uniquely challenging times for the growth and marketing of the professional game and I am privileged to have had the opportunity of taking part in the steady and marked growth of the tour in all its facets. The lot of the professional squash player is an exceptionally hard one with travel and on court physical exertion tested to the maximum. The players deserve every dollar they receive and more. I am confident that my successor will continue to provide increased events and remuneration to the players who travel the world exhibiting their talents.
"I will be passing now to the next phase of my working career, pleased that my contribution to the PSA has been positive and rewarding. I especially want to thank my staff at Cardiff head office and, in particular, my Tour Executive Sheila Cooksley. She has been my rock of support in the office as I travelled the world, and in leading our ladies Anna, Lynne, Alison and Sheryl.
"I wish to also thank the PSA Board of Directors for their understanding and support through the years, especially when difficult decisions have required support and faith for the greater cause. I have made many wonderful new friends during this time and renewed old acquaintances from my playing days, but I want to single out for special thanks both Jack Herrick and Robert Edwards for their help and support of my projects on behalf of the Association. Their insight and experience has been an invaluable asset in assisting me through the years and consequently been of benefit to the fortunes of PSA."
Briars concluded: "I wish the Association the very best for its next phase of development. The professional game is a fabulous product and has a shining future.”
The PSA will be initiating a search for a new Chief Executive in the near future.
"We can assure all our partners that normal service will continue at PSA in the period until a new appointment is made," explained Chaloner. "The Cardiff staff, headed by Tour Director Sheila Cooksley, will continue with the excellent work they do in managing the PSA Tour - and Ted Wallbutton, former CEO of the World Squash Federation, will step in as interim CEO of PSA to facilitate the change process and ensure that there is effective communication at all levels."
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So true, squashsite is part of the old guard - unable, unwilling or too scared of ruffling any feathers. Very old school, happy to have found this site with a range of opinion and outlooks, not just stuffy, conservative Brits.
But it all makes sense if its true the PSA paid for a mini-vacation for Steve (webmaster of Squashsite). Best not bite the hand that feeds you.
Keep up the good work Shawn - squash needs you and somewhere where our sport can receive both coverage and healthy scrutiny