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Hong Kong Football Association board urged to stop interfering and let staff do its job

Vice-chairman Pui Kwan-kay says a hands-on approach from directors, many of whom are involved with clubs, leads to perceptions of conflict of interest

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HKFA vice-chairman Pui Kwan-kay says local soccer will be much better off if the association's board lets key staff, who are trying to revitalise the game, get on with their work. Photo: Jonathan Wong

A key Hong Kong Football Association official has called for directors to take a hands-off approach to the running of the game on the eve of elections to the board that will direct the future of local soccer for the next four to six years.

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Vice-chairman Pui Kwan-kay, who is up for re-election himself, urged the new board to give more leeway to the governing body's secretariat, headed by the chief executive and a 70-plus-strong staff, to make the decisions.

We [directors] are all volunteers and many of us have club interests. Our decisions can easily affect other clubs who do not have representation on the board, leading to accusations of making our own agenda
HKFA vice-chairman Pui Kwan-kay

"I have found the directors too hands-on in their job over the past four years to the extent that some of them work like paid staff in the association," said Pui, the chairman of Citizen.

"I don't think this should be the way forward as the directors should only give out clear directions and only get involved in key decisions that will affect the future of Hong Kong soccer."

The new board will have 11 members: president, chairman, four club-linked directors and five with no club links.

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The secretariat is headed by chief executive Mark Sutcliffe with key positions underneath him being referees manager, technical director and head coach, head of football development, general secretary, head of competitions and head of corporate governance.

Pui says the board must let these key figures and their staff - paid considerable sums of money with government support under the Project Phoenix plan to revitalise local football - get on with their work.

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