The make-up of the 2024 Nottinghamshire General Committee has been confirmed, with Richard Stevenson and Diana Peasey re-elected, and Navdeep Sethi and Andy Hunt appointed by the club’s Nominations Panel.

The positions were confirmed at Nottinghamshire’s 2024 Annual General Meeting, with Hunt subsequently re-elected to the position of Chair by the committee. Stevenson, meanwhile, has been re-elected as Vice Chair.

“It has been a privilege to serve as chair of this club for the past year, and I’m delighted to have the opportunity to continue the work we’ve started as a committee and a club,” said Hunt.

“As we adapt and move forward in a fast-changing cricketing landscape, we'll seek to both respect our rich heritage and look to the future, to ensure our venue and our club are in the best possible shape for the decades to come.

“But the club is, of course, all about the action on the field at heart – whether at Trent Bridge or in our thriving recreational clubs and leagues.”

Hunt joined the committee in 2021 and became Chair in 2023, having previously served as Chair of the Nottinghamshire Premier League for six years. He chairs the club’s Ground Development Working Group and Remuneration Sub-Committee.

Stevenson has been a member of the committee since 2018, chairs the Cricket Sub-Committee and is sole proprietor of an accountancy practice.

Sethi is Chief Operating Officer of the Nottingham-based sports technology company BatFast, whose cricket simulators aim to increase levels of participation in the sport. He is a trustee of the Trent Bridge Community Trust, and is strategic advisor to Nottingham High School and Loughborough University’s Woolfson School of Engineering.

Peasey, who joined the committee in 2019, worked as a journalist at the Leicester Mercury, Radio Trent and the BBC, and is currently a member of the club’s Heritage Working Group.

Former Notts and England opener Chris Broad, meanwhile, will continue as Club President for a second summer upon the recommendation of the General Committee.

The AGM also saw amendments passed to ensure that the constitution reflects that the club holds hybrid general meetings – with members invited to attend and participate in such meetings either in person or via videoconference.

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