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With Cullen only here to steady the ship, article stating potential new CEO he is sharks fan Stuart Clark details and link below
Gow puts his hand up for Sharks, but only as an adviser
PETER Gow is making some noises about getting involved at the crisis-torn Cronulla Sharks again.
He is Elle Macpherson's dad and the former chairman who was famously sacked for cutting up a
St George fan's jersey in the Sharks' King Wan restaurant.
"There can be no doubt the coach and his staff should not have been made scapegoats," Gow told me.
"The only way forward is for the existing board to resign and pledge not to stand for re-election."
Gow doesn't want his old job back.
He's moved on from those days and is too relaxed in retirement.
"I am 100 per cent for the Sharks and don't aspire to political ambitions but feel something must be done," he said.
"This real need is to invite genuinely talented, well connected people to join the board. You don't ask them to contest an election. People like James Packer and David Gyngell don't contest elections, nor should they."
Gow is happy to act in an advisory role. He is still a popular figure in the Shire and hugely influential among the members.
The other man being spoken about over the weekend is former Australian cricketer Stuart Clark.
He did a wonderful job as chief executive of the Sydney sixers and is regarded as one of the brightest young sporting administrators in the country.
Clark is a Shire boy and a lifelong Sharks supporter.
He would make an ideal member of the board, or better still, a chief executive.
http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/sport/nrl/stickys-eels-a-real-deal/story-fn7r8vs2-1226594361358
Gow puts his hand up for Sharks, but only as an adviser
PETER Gow is making some noises about getting involved at the crisis-torn Cronulla Sharks again.
He is Elle Macpherson's dad and the former chairman who was famously sacked for cutting up a
St George fan's jersey in the Sharks' King Wan restaurant.
"There can be no doubt the coach and his staff should not have been made scapegoats," Gow told me.
"The only way forward is for the existing board to resign and pledge not to stand for re-election."
Gow doesn't want his old job back.
He's moved on from those days and is too relaxed in retirement.
"I am 100 per cent for the Sharks and don't aspire to political ambitions but feel something must be done," he said.
"This real need is to invite genuinely talented, well connected people to join the board. You don't ask them to contest an election. People like James Packer and David Gyngell don't contest elections, nor should they."
Gow is happy to act in an advisory role. He is still a popular figure in the Shire and hugely influential among the members.
The other man being spoken about over the weekend is former Australian cricketer Stuart Clark.
He did a wonderful job as chief executive of the Sydney sixers and is regarded as one of the brightest young sporting administrators in the country.
Clark is a Shire boy and a lifelong Sharks supporter.
He would make an ideal member of the board, or better still, a chief executive.
http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/sport/nrl/stickys-eels-a-real-deal/story-fn7r8vs2-1226594361358