Andrew Voss
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I mean, that's it, full stop, next sentence.
We are looking to add value to our clubs and bring good partners in.
And the decision on who those partners are are at the behest of the states.
So it's on them to choose their partners.
Now, in relation to India, what I find a little polarizing is almost every business, every government agency I talk to are desperately keen to do business in India to create diplomacy and trade and opportunity.
So the flip of that is that we would look to do that in our country as well, in some parts of the B Bill, not the entire part.
And I think we've got to have a very open mind.
I don't think we should be closing our minds to any type of partner who wants to come into cricket.
The idea is to add value to cricket, not take it away.
Yeah, look, there's no doubt we could have and should have done a better job of the public narrative of why we're doing private capital and why the concept of private capital is valuable for Australian cricket.
I do think it's easy to run the other argument.
because ultimately people don't like change.
In any form of life, cricket particularly, change comes hard.
So on reflection, we probably could have and should have done a better job of that.
In saying that, we have desperately tried to run this project with our stakeholders, with our members, with our players, and have...
a good natural discourse through that.
And, you know, one of the things I am proud of is despite some tension in the system, relationships are really strong.
We've got alternate views, but those views are well heard.
They're well understood.
I maintain really good relationships as does our board with all of our counterparts.