Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Buy now

spot_img
spot_img

Greg Barclay elected as independent ICC chairman

DUBAI: New Zealand Cricket’s Greg Barclay has been elected as the new independent chair of the International Cricket Council (ICC). The Auckland-based commercial lawyer succeeds Shashank Manohar, who stepped down in July.

The electronic voting process, which went into a second round, involved 16 board of directors – 12 full members (Test playing nations), three associate countries and one independent female director (Indra Nooyi of PepsiCo). 

In the second round of voting, Barclay secured the all-crucial 11th vote from Cricket South Africa to beat Singapore’s Imran Khwaja, who had been the interim chairman after Manohar stepped down.

Barclay has been a director of NZC since 2012 and is currently NZC’s representative on the board of the International Cricket Council. He will step down from his position at NZC to lead the ICC in an independent capacity.

He was a director of ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup 2015 and is a former board member and chairman of the Northern Districts Cricket Association. Greg is also an experienced company director holding board positions with various New Zealand and Australian companies.

Commenting on his appointment, Barclay said: “It is an honour to be elected as the chair of the International Cricket Council and I would like to thank my fellow ICC directors for their support. I hope we can come together to lead the sport and emerge from the global pandemic in a strong position and poised for growth.

“I look forward to working in partnership with our members to strengthen the game in our core markets as well as grow it beyond that ensuring more of the world can enjoy cricket. I take my position as a custodian of the game very seriously and am committed to working on behalf of all 104 ICC members to create a sustainable future for our sport.

“I’d like to thank Imran Khwaja for his leadership as acting ICC chair during a difficult period for the game and I look forward to continuing a close working relationship with him in the future.”

Related Articles

Stay Connected

0FansLike
0FollowersFollow
0SubscribersSubscribe
- Advertisement -spot_img

Most Popular