Broader minds in the broad acres
Demonised from the outside, defensive on the inside, Yorkshire and its lack of Asian representation has become one of cricket's political hot potatoes over the past decade
John Stern and Andrew Collomosse
15-Sep-2006
Yorkshire give Adil Rashid his chance and there are lots like him at the gates
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Demonised from the outside, defensive
on the inside, Yorkshire and its lack of
Asian representation has become one of
cricket's political hot potatoes over the
past decade. Then came Adil Rashid.
Rashid clearly has an immaculate
sense of timing. In mid-July he took 4
for 60 and hit an unbeaten 119 for the
Yorkshire Academy against Driffield in
front of David Byas, Yorkshire's director
of cricket.
That was all the evidence Byas
needed to call up the 18-year-old allrounder
for Yorkshire's game against
Warwickshire at Scarborough three
days later. And once again Rashid's
timing was spot on.
Following Ismail Dawood and Ajmal
Shahzad he is the third British-born
Asian to play for Yorkshire. He claimed
a wicket with his eighth delivery but
it was his marathon spell on the third
day that earned him an instant place in
White-Rose folklore.
The tiny legspinner, looking for all
the world like a schoolboy who had
strayed into North Marine Road by
mistake, bowled unchanged from half
an hour before lunch until the game
ended at 5.15pm.
He took six wickets for 67 runs from
28 overs, Yorkshire's best debut figures
since Steve Kirby's 7 for 50 in 2001, and
his boyish exuberance as he dashed in
from the boundary to begin each new
over won him a place in the hearts of
the Yorkshire crowd.
Speaking after his Scarborough
heroics, Rashid said: "I've had a lot of
calls from friends but that doesn't faze
me because it shows there is interest in
the Asian community. I'm happy to be a
role model for young Asians."
Rashid learned his cricket in the
Bradford League, where his elder
brothers Haroon and Amar both play,
and is keen to see other Asians follow
him into the Yorkshire set-up.
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The perception of a cricketing
apartheid, where Asians play in their
own leagues (such as the Quaid e
Azam league, founded in 1980) and
whites play in the traditional Yorkshire
leagues, looks outdated.
The Asian presence is strongest in
the Bradford, Huddersfield and Central
Yorkshire Leagues and corresponds to
the large Asian populations in those
areas. But it is also extending beyond
those areas.
Chris Gott is cricket chairman at
Pudsey St Lawrence, one of Yorkshire's
most venerable clubs which produced
Len Hutton among others. Situated
west of Leeds on the borders of
Bradford, Pudsey does not have a large
Asian population.
But, according to Gott, the club has
a disproportionate number of Asian
players. "I reckon between a quarter to
a third of our juniors are now Asian,"
he says. "There are fewer in the senior
sides but that will come. It is a matter
of numbers. We have a scheme which
targets a number of primary schools,
including one which is 90% Asian. The
take-up from that school has been
huge. We are swamped, to be honest.
It is an indication of how much young
Asians want to play cricket."
Inertia, rather than overt racism, on
the part of the county club may have
been a root cause in the past of a lack
of Asian recruitment - a sense of you
come to us rather than reaching out
into the Asian communities.
Lack of resources could play a part
too. The Yorkshire Cricket Board has
four development officers to cover
a county that, it is believed, contains
almost a fifth of all cricket played
in the country. Only one of those
development officers, Tony Bowry, who
is of Caribbean origin, has a specific
brief for ethnic minorities. Bowry is also
the chief development officer for the
board's Black and Ethnic Forum which
was formed at the start of the 1990s
"to raise racial awareness and advise
on policy".
Gott feels there are so many Asian
players in the Yorkshire leagues now
that it is only a matter of time before
the trickle of Rashids and Shahzads
becomes a steady stream.
This article was first published in the September issue of The Wisden Cricketer.
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