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Susanna Dinnage pulls out of becoming Premier League chief executive Susanna Dinnage pulls out of becoming Premier League chief executive
(about 1 hour later)
Susanna Dinnage has told the Premier League she will no longer be taking up her position as its chief executive. The Premier League has been rocked by the shock withdrawal of Susanna Dinnage from the role of chief executive, to which she was appointed with some fanfare only last month.
It was announced in November that Dinnage would replace Richard Scudamore at the Premier League at the beginning of the new year, having worked as the global president of Animal Planet, part of the Discovery group of TV channels. “I am excited at the prospect of taking on this fantastic role,” she said at the time. “The Premier League means so much to so many people.” Currently the global president of Animal Planet, part of the Discovery group of TV channels, Dinnage was described as “the outstanding choice” when she was announced as the replacement for Richard Scudamore, who has stepped down with a £5m golden goodbye after 19 years in the role.
No details were disclosed by the Premier League about Dinnage’s reasons for pulling out of a new job she had described as a “fantastic role” when she was appointed. The league issued a brief statement, timed minutes after Manchester United’s 4-1 victory over Bournemouth concluded an intense run of post-Christmas Day fixtures, with wording which carried a hint of irritation at Dinnage’s withdrawal: “Despite her commitment to the Premier League in early November, Susanna Dinnage has now advised the nominations committee that she will not be taking up the position of chief executive,” the statement said.
Richard Scudamore: the ‘devil you know’ quits while he’s still ahead | David ConnRichard Scudamore: the ‘devil you know’ quits while he’s still ahead | David Conn
Issuing a statement regarding her decision to no longer take up her post, the Premier League said: “Despite her commitment to the Premier League in early November, Susanna Dinnage has now advised the nominations committee that she will not be taking up the position of chief executive.” “The committee has reconvened its search and is talking to candidates. There will be no further comment until an appointment is made.”
It is understood Dinnage is staying at Discovery, which she joined in 2009. Her only involvement in sport was when she ran Discovery’s British and Irish operation, which included responsibility for Eurosport. The league’s reaction was to emphasise that there will be no panic at headquarters, even though Scudamore has now actually left with his £5m, and the search for his replacement has to begin all over again. Dinnage was said only to have reflected, after accepting the move she had described as “a great privilege” to which she was looking forward “for many years to come”, and has now decided to stay at Discovery after all. She did not actually have a start date set, and the Premier League had already planned in the interim to be headed by an acting chair, Claudia Arney, a non-executive director at Aviva plc and Halfords, and an acting chief executive, the long-serving former director of sales and marketing, Richard Masters.
She had been described as the “outstanding choice” by the Chelsea chairman, Bruce Buck, who led the Premier League’s recruitment process. Her U-turn comes as a huge surprise and blow for the administration of English football’s top-flight, which generated a record £4.5bn in revenue in the 2016-17 season, with that figure projected to rise further over the next two years. The five-person nominations committee which has now restarted the recruitment process is chaired by Bruce Buck, the Chelsea chairman who also chairs the Premier League remuneration committee, which awarded Scudamore his £1m salary and £1.5m bonus last year, as well as the £5m departure package. When announcing Dinnage’s appointment on 13 November Buck stressed that her experience on the corporate side of broadcasting was important to help steer the Premier League through a changing programming landscape.
The Premier League will have to begin a fresh process to find a successor for Scudamore, whose departure after a 19-year tenure has been overshadowed by controversy after he accepted a £5m golden handshake made up of £250,000 contributions from all 20 top-flight clubs. Scudamore repeatedly sold the main live broadcast rights exclusively to Sky, as the league has since its breakaway in 1992, with the prices paid to the 20 clubs increasing exponentially after BT Sport emerged in 2013 as Sky’s first genuine UK rival. Now English football’s prime rights have to be navigated through the emergence of streaming via restlessly acquisitive digital platforms, including Amazon Prime, which has bought one package of 20 matches in the next round.
Buck said of Dinnage when announcing her appointment: “We had a very strong field but Susanna was the outstanding choice given her track record in managing complex businesses through transformation and digital disruption.
She is a leading figure in the broadcasting industry, a proven business executive and a great developer of people. She is ideally suited to the role and we are confident she will be able to take the Premier League on to new heights.”
Dinnage said then, of joining the Premier League: “I am excited at the prospect of taking on this fantastic role. The Premier League means so much to so many people. It represents the pinnacle of professional sport and the opportunity to lead such a dynamic and inspirational organisation is a great privilege. With the support of clubs and the team, I look forward to extending the success of the League for many years to come.”
Dinnage had a fierce dispute with Sky last year, protesting about cuts in the fees being paid to carry the Discovery channels on its platform. She alleged then that Sky was exploiting its “dominant market position to further its own commercial interest over those of viewers and independent broadcasters”.
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