Mark Darbon has been appointed as chief executive of The R&A and secretary of The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews.
Mark will succeed Martin Slumbers in the role leading the governing body and the organisation which runs The Open and AIG Women’s Open, and invests in developing golf around the world, in November. He will also become secretary of the 270-year-old club, which has a global membership of more than 2,400.
A former senior member of the team leading the London Organising Committee for the Olympic Games and Paralympic Games in 2012, Mark is leaving his role as CEO of Premiership Rugby club Northampton Saints.
He led Northampton Saints to their first Premiership title since 2014 earlier this year and implemented a commercial strategy which enabled the rugby union club to bounce back from the Covid pandemic to achieve record revenues in consecutive seasons.
“I am thrilled and honoured to be taking up these positions with The R&A and The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews, and to be moving into golf, a sport I have always loved,” he said. “The R&A is a globally renowned organisation and does so much to ensure that golf prospers from grassroots through to the professional game. I am looking forward to working with a hugely talented team of staff, the club membership and such an impressive array of partner organisations to achieve even more success in the years to come.”
Niall Farquharson, chairman of The R&A, said: “We were greatly impressed with Mark’s knowledge and experience of the global sport industry and his ability to develop successful teams and deliver fantastic events. We believe he will be an excellent leader for The R&A and The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews and will play a key role in helping us to achieve our goal of ensuring a prosperous and sustainable future for golf.”
Mark started his career as a management consultant at Marakon Associates, before joining Diageo plc where he held a number of strategic and commercial roles, living and working in markets all over the world, including the USA, Russia, China and Australia.
Having transitioned into sport event organisation in 2009, he held several senior roles with the London Organising Committee for the Olympic Games and Paralympic Games and was latterly head of Olympic Park operations, overseeing the Olympic Park which housed nine competition venues with 20,000 employees and welcomed 250,000 spectators a day throughout the 2012 games. He went on to serve as an expert adviser to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) from 2013 to 2018.
Following London 2012, Mark was senior vice president of Tough Mudder Inc in New York and was involved in planning, promoting and staging mass participation events in North America, Latin America, Europe and Australasia.
Before joining Northampton Saints as CEO in 2017, Mark served as CEO of Madison Sports Group, a sports events and content company which created an award-winning international series of professional track cycling events and, in doing so, brought a series of new sponsorship arrangements and media rights deals to the sport.
Mark is a graduate of Worcester College, Oxford University, where he read geography.
As well as being a keen golfer, playing to a handicap of 3.1 as a member of Northamptonshire County Golf Club and Saunton Golf Club, Mark is a former Under-21 England hockey international and a Full Blue for hockey at Oxford University. He is a non-executive director of England Hockey and Women’s Premiership Rugby. He is married with two children, and plans to move his family to St Andrews when he takes up his new role.