The President recently acknowledged that there is work to be done, and that there are divisions at Ski-Norge.
– Have. Fortunately, there is a sound that is quite clear. Buses have to run in groups, which I’m interested in. “There’s a lot of good going on in Ski-Norway, and then there’s a part that we have to work on,” Dyrhaug told NRK.
In the future, he would sit down and gamble the course, but he already had a clue as to the things that needed to be done.
– We will work with extensive and recruitment. The numbers just went down. Cooperation with the jump is important, and I think we’re getting a good dialogue about that,” the president said recently.
– Is it relevant to changes in administrative management?
– There will always be changes with a new leader. So there will be a change: Yes.
– Does it involve Secretary General Ingvild Bretten Berg?
– I don’t comment on that.
– Can he sit as general secretary with you as president?
– I don’t comment on personnel matters.
– A competent and experienced president
Dyrhaug is also known for his role as general manager at Rosenborg, something he has been doing since 2013. In addition, he has been on the ski board of the Norwegian Ski Association for ten years. There are three relevant female candidates to take over Erik Rste’s job and become ski president.
Dyrhaug, Katharina Rise and Kristin Vestgren Sæterøy are candidates for the new president.
– Ski-Norge gets a competent and experienced president. He has a lot of knowledge about skiing, and he has relevant management experience through Rosenborg, says NRK cross-country expert Torgeir Bjørn.
Now he believes that the key to a newly elected president is to get the various branches moving in the same direction.
– In addition, it is necessary to clarify the responsibilities between the President and the Secretary General. The relationship of responsibility between employees on the one hand and politicians on the other should also be clarified, according to the NRK expert.
– Monumental work
NRK commentator Jan Petter Saltvedt thinks Ski-Norge has picked the right candidate.
– The bus must go in the same direction, as Dyrhaug himself said on the podium. Now Ski-Norge has got the bus driver they can get and need to get, Saltvedt said.
He points out that the number of voices speaks for itself.
– Ski-Norge is tired of division and factionalization. Ironically, it was she who led the work of uncovering this through this winter’s evaluation report, Katharina Rise, the one who contributed the most extra votes this time. Which at first seems a bit unnecessary, but for democracy this organization is good, commentators believe.
He said the job ahead of Dyrhaug was excellent.
This was monumental work that Dyrhaug did, in terms of creating unified thinking, unity between branches and circles and not least slowing down dropouts, but Dyrhaug emerged as a gentle and moderate force with highly relevant backgrounds and personal qualities that could support the process. , Do not disturb. The NSF has – and in this case also has – challenges, Saltvedt said.
There has been a commotion around the association over the past year, especially after the conflict with the former manager of the jumping sport, Clas Brede Bråthen. Among those at the center of the case, is Secretary General Ingvild Bretten Berg. Saltvedt believes that one should consider whether he or she is the right person for the position in the future.
– Is Ingvild Bretten Berg a general secretary he can work with so well that will help create unity and peace in ski Norway? The answer does not give itself, commentators believe.
Nomination Committee: – Overall, the best candidate
Dyrhaug is also known for his role as general manager at Rosenborg, something he has been doing since 2013. In addition, he has been on the ski board of the Norwegian Ski Association for ten years.
He is on the nominations committee on the Ski Association’s recommendations, and he is considered the favorite to become the new president.
– He is the one who is the best candidate overall. He has shown he is a unifying leader, popular and has a twinkle in his eye, but gets things done, election committee leader Sverre Seeberg said before the election.
In addition, the nomination committee proposed Aage Schaanning as vice president. They thought he would get along with Dyrhaug, and it was also an advantage that he came completely from the outside. He is an active former cross-country skier.
Three new board members were also proposed.
– We have to admit that there are things we need to get better at. So we must have change and renewal. The NSF is a demanding organization, so it must be coordinated. When everyone wants change, we have to stand together and do it, Dyrhaug said on stage before the election.
Lawyer and former leader of Holmenkollen loses
Rise was a candidate for promotion by the stfold ski district. He has a background as a lawyer and public prosecutor, and the ski district highlights this.
But he was also a well-known figure in Ski-Norge. He has chaired both the so-called asthma committee – under the auspices of the cross-country committee – and the committee that looked at the handling of the Class Brede Bråthen conflict.
Rise points out that the lawyer in her cares about laws and rules, which she will use to her advantage.
– We have a big job ahead of us. I am very motivated to lead this work. The world needs lots of happy skiers in the years and generations to come. Together we must succeed, he said on stage.
Sæterøy, who was the third candidate, was promoted by the Buskerud ski district.
He is the former general manager of the Holmenkollen Ski Festival. He was also proposed by the same ski district to the nomination committee, but they ended up landing on Dyrhaug.
The Buskerud ski district, for its part, believes that Dyrhaug’s choice did not provide sufficient change in the management of the Ski Association.
Sæterøy himself thought it was an advantage that he had seen the skis and connected from the outside.
– I will give 100 percent to solve and become ski president. We need someone who has seen the sport from the outside. Let’s think of a course, and let’s do it together, he said.
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