Colin Graves scrutinised by MPs over Yorkshire demutualisation plans
Written by I Dig SportsCaroline Dinenage, chair of the Culture, Media and Sport Committee, queried the timing and content of Graves' remarks, made in a letter to Yorkshire's members on Monday, which she felt contradicted his previous assurances that the club would remain a members-owned institution under his leadership.
Graves appeared before the CMS select committee on February 20, after his return as Yorkshire chair had been ratified at an EGM earlier that month. Yorkshire claimed at the time that it had engaged with more than 350 interested parties, including the former Newcastle United owner Mike Ashley, but had deemed his offer was the only one capable of retaining the club's existing status as a mutual society.
"Your return to the club was predicated on your financial support not being contingent on demutualisation of the club, in contrast to alternative bids discussed by the board," Dinenage wrote in a letter to Graves on Thursday, which was also posted on X (formerly Twitter). "We are therefore concerned that you have now decided that converting the club to a private structure is now 'essential'?"
"Prior to your bid's approval, you reassured the members of the club on 16 January that 'there are no discussions or plans to change the mutual status of YCCC.' This claim was made despite your September 2023 offer to the YCCC board, which you initially denied any knowledge of to us, which was contingent on such a demutualisation."
Dinenage also queried the nature of Graves' relationship with the family trust, overseen by independent trustees, which is a legacy of his original bail-out that saved Yorkshire from bankruptcy in 2002, and still constitutes some 15 million of the 20 million of the club's "long-term borrowing" that Graves outlined in his letter to members.
Graves' proposed process of demutualisation would unlock those loans and open the club up to private investment - a prospect that has already be raised among county clubs via the ongoing discussions over the future of the Hundred.
In his update to members, he pledged that any potential windfall "for either myself or my family trust would be donated in full into a charitable trust supporting Yorkshire recreational cricket, both men's and women's". Dinenage, however, requested more information on that commitment, and set a deadline of May 31 for a response.
"You have previously told the Committee that you have no role in your family trusts," Dinenage wrote. "We would be grateful for clarity on the following points: