Racism in English cricket (5 April 1999)
LONDON: Racism at the grass root of English cricket does exist, admits Matthew Engel, the editor of 'Wisden', the bible of the game as it is known
05-Apr-1999
5 April 1999
Racism in English cricket
Qamar Ahmed
LONDON: Racism at the grass root of English cricket does exist,
admits Matthew Engel, the editor of 'Wisden', the bible of the game
as it is known. Engel courageously writes about it in the editorial
notes of the 136th edition that was launched at the prestigious East
India Club at a dinner which was attended by nearly hundred guests
and included luminaries like Colin Cowdrey, now Lord Cowdrey, Derek
Underwood, Tony Lewis, now the president of the MCC and many more
former cricketers and writers on the game and the guest speaker Lord
Taylor of Warwick whose father Derryf Taylor, a West Indian coached
Warwickshire county for 30 years.
Engel candidly condemned an informal 'apartheid' at club level and
named two leading counties like Yorkshire and Essex as the main
culprits. Some local clubs in those counties, he also writes in his
editorial notes are being 'passively racist'. 'In an unspoken, very
English way, cricketing apartheid has become accepted practice in
England.'
'It has become normal for ethnic minority players to gravitate
towards their own clubs, and there is now clear cut evidence of
segregation operating, informally, in both Yorkshire and Essex.'
Writes Engel.
Adding that there is a 'refusal to go the extra inch and welcome
outsiders into a club's often clannish atmosphere', the impact of
this, Engel says, is that many people from the ethnic minorities are
kept out. Whites on the other hand regard Pakistanis in particular,
as standoffish (aloof) because so few of them drink. Black and Asian
players are operating outside the official structure. They have
become second class in all kinds of little ways.' Engel points out.
"Every week in summer," 'The Yorkshire Post', reports the score from
about 50 leagues around the county, but the Bradford based
Quaid-e-Azam league is not one of them.' The paper's spokesman says,
the result of the league is not sent to us in time for Monday's
report.'
Chris Hassell, the chief executive of the Yorkshire county reacting
to Engel's attack in Wisden, says, 'Engel's claim of racism is
rubbish. There is only one criteria and that is ability, if players
have the necessary ability then it does not matter if they are black,
blue, green or yellow', he says. 'We are positively and actively
working with ethnic communities. We would vigorously refute Wisden's
allegations.
Lord Taylor, a barrister in his speech at the Wisden annual dinner
said that, 'it was in cricket's own interest to be more inconclusive,
because they brought character into the game, while too few players
from ethnic minorities were coming through into the England team.'
The English Cricket Board (ECB) challenging Engel's suggestion of
racism and said, "While we would never seek to be complacent about
the dangers of racism, current evidence does not suggest that a
system of discrimination operates within the game."
Criticising the ICC and its president Mr Jagmohan Dalmiya, Engel
demands the resignation of Dalmiya for ignoring the match fixing and
bribery scandal which he describes as the worst crisis to hit the
game since the Bodyline controversy. Writes Engel, "Dalmiya almost
split world cricket trying to take charge of ICC. Having succeeded he
has given the game no leadership whatever. He should resign and be
replaced by someone capable of providing that leadership."
Mark Taylor, the former Australian captain has been praised in the
editor's note for his solid contribution to the revival of Australian
cricket. "No captain since Mike Brearley has left the game with a
higher reputation." Says Engel.
The five Wisden cricketers of the year are Darren Gough, Ian Austin,
Jonty Rhodes, Arjuna Ranatunga and Muttiah Muralitharan.
Source :: Dawn (https://dawn.com/)