The founder and majority owner of
Sports Direct, Mike Ashley, has stepped in as chief executive at the
retailer after the surprise resignation of Dave Forsey.

The
company has been under fire over zero hours contracts and disclosure
that staff at a warehouse were paid less than the minimum wage.
Independent shareholders had called for changes to the way the company was run.
The main request, though, was for the removal of chairman Keith Hellawell.
Mr Ashley said in a statement: "I feel like I have lost my right arm, but I do hope to have the opportunity to work with Dave again in the future."
He owns more than 50% of the business he founded. His formal position was executive deputy chairman.
The
Sports Direct statement does not make clear why Mr Forsey is leaving.
He has worked there for 32 years after starting as a part-time worker
when he was 18.
Earlier this year he agreed to forgo a £3.7m share award in recognition of the problems at the company.
Mr
Forsey said: "I have given my entire working life to the company and in
return the company has given me amazing opportunities and experiences."
Sports
Direct's board made two other changes, promoting Karen Byers to the
role of global head of operations, and Sean Nevitt to the role of global
head of commercial.
'Workhouse'
Sports
Direct, which has around 450 retail outlets, came under the spotlight
after an investigation uncovered that staff were kept on site at its
giant Shirebrook warehouse in Derbyshire after their shifts for body
searches.
These took so long that their pay effectively dipped below the minimum wage.
Mr
Ashley, Sports Direct's billionaire founder, was called to answer
questions from MPs, who compared working practices at the warehouse with
"that of a Victorian workhouse than that of a modern High Street
retailer".
In the wake of that, the sportswear chain's lawyers produced a critical report of its working conditions.
The
company was criticised for its use of zero hours contracts. It says it
will offer workers who want them guaranteed hours. It also said it would
put a worker on the board.
That report also criticised Mr Forsey for failing to inform the Sports Direct board about some of the issues at Shirebrook.
But
calls for an independent review continued and earlier this week, Sports
Direct said it would authorise such a study of working practices and
corporate governance, following concerns raised by shareholders.
Mr
Ashley denied knowing much about the way Shirebrook operated, telling
the BBC: "You'd be surprised how little I knew of what was going on."
Who is Sports Direct's Karen Byers?
Like
so many in the company's hierarchy, Karen Byers, Sports Direct's new
global head of operations met founder Mike Ashley informally and has
known him a very long time.
She's been with the company for more
than 20 years and it is said she got the job after trying to sell Mike
Ashley a pair of jeans. Despite being head of retail at a publically
listed retail giant with 30,000 employees for much at that time, she's
very low profile indeed.
Earlier this year Mike Ashley himself
singled her out in a rare interview he gave to the Times newspaper:
"Karen Byers runs Sports Direct. She runs the retail, all the money
comes out the retail, [the warehouse workers and store managers] are her
army. She is the person who sets the rules. Not me."
One
investment analyst firm said she was well regarded inside the company
and out. The same firm though said she was not known for her "flowery or
evasive approach". Just like her boss.
'Bad capitalism'
Paul
Blomfield, a member of the Business Innovation and Skills committee
which grilled Mike Ashley in June, is not convinced by the changes:
"What our committee wanted to happen was for the company to seriously
address what was, not just problems around the edges, but systemic
labour exploitation in the workplace. And whether Mr Ashley is the
person to do that - given the evidence he gave to our committee - is yet
to be seen."
Mike Fox, from major shareholder Royal London Asset
Management, wasn't impressed with Friday's board changes either: 'The
installation of Mike Ashley as chief executive, consolidating his
influence at the top of the business, is unlikely to reassure anyone."
He
said the way the company was run had long been a problem and that
Sports Direct still needed a new chairman before it could rebuild trust
with investors.
Sarah Wilson, chief executive of shareholder
pressure group, Manifest, told BBC Radio 5 live the move added another
corporate governance problem: "Are we going to see [Mike Ashley] step
down from his other job as deputy chairman?
"Had Mike Ashley listened to shareholders four or five years ago, we might not be in the situation we're in at the moment."
She
said the company's actions were not just damaging to shareholders but
"undermined the general public's perception of capitalism - full stop".
Nevertheless, market reaction suggests most investors were pleased
that Mike Ashley would have a more direct role in the company and the
shares were up about 5% in morning trade.
Fallen
Mr
Ashley's brash style is unorthodox for the founder and executive of a
leading UK company. The owner of Newcastle United football club was
photographed with a wad of cash when he took shareholders and
journalists on a tour of the Shirebrook site after the shareholders'
meeting.
He also revealed that he travels to work by helicopter.
The company employs Mike Ashley's daughter's boyfriend to run its
property arm.
Financially, the company is not in a good place.
The
company's shares have fallen by 50% this year, and earlier this month
Sports Direct warned that that profits next year would be down on this
year.
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