New Zealand Cricket leads the world in sporting governance. In 1995, the old cricket board voted itself out of existence after the John Hood report and ushered in a fully independent model that the rest of the cricketing world is now rushing to imitate.
International jurist Lord Woolf is leading a team to renew the International Cricket Council governance structures. Many, including New Zealander Alan Isaac, who will assume the ICC presidency in June, expect Woolf's recommendations to mirror the Hood report when it is released at the end of the month. Last month Cricket Australia slashed its board members from 14 to nine (New Zealand went from 13 to seven, now expanded to eight) after a long-ranging report headed by David Crawford, who also restructured the AFL.
Justin Vaughan, outgoing New Zealand Cricket chief executive, can't understand the long wait.
"Facetiously, I said to my chairman [Chris Moller], why did they pay Mr Crawford so much and why did it take him so long when all they wanted to do was copy what New Zealand Cricket does," he says.
It's not just cricket, the AFL moved to a quasi-independent model, New Zealand league has gone independent, Australian league is looking at similar measures and the rugby union is instituting a review of its governance.