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Opinion

The Ashes defeat is just the start of English cricket’s shame

Players such as Percy Fender denied having a Jewish background, but he was regarded as not fitting the mould of a captain

December 30, 2021 10:34
Susskind dropped by Fender - Surrey v South Africa 1924
5 min read

The predictably abysmal performance of the England cricket team in Australia over the last three weeks currently dominates discussion of what’s wrong with English cricket. A more insidious malaise has prompted the England and Wales Cricket Board to set up an Independent Commission for Equity to “examine questions of equity in relation to race, gender and class within cricket — including access and barriers to the sport and progression towards professional level cricket”.

The Commission was established following allegations of rampant and deep-seated racism at Yorkshire County Cricket Club (YCCC). Former Yorkshire spinner Azeem Rafiq told the Parliamentary Digital, Culture, Media & Sport Select Committee that he had faced repeated racist comments from senior players, which the club had done nothing to stop. Asked whether the club was institutionally racist, former YCCC chairman Roger Hutton replied: “I fear it falls into that definition”.

The spotlight on YCCC revealed past antisemitic remarks by two players at the centre of the racism storm. Former Yorkshire captain Andrew Gale was suspended as head coach for having sent a tweet in which he stated: “button it, yid”. He has since been sacked, as part of a clear-out of all 16 of the coaching staff. And racism whistle-blower Rafiq himself labelled a fellow cricketer as a “Jew” in a Facebook message for being reluctant to contribute towards the cost of a team dinner, adding: “‘How wrong is that? Only Jews do tht sort of shit ha”.

It is difficult to tell how widespread antisemitism is in the world of professional cricket. As Jack Williams noted in his book Cricket and Race, “The difficulties of defining Jewishness and the tiny number of those calling themselves Jews who have played county cricket complicates the task of gauging the extent of antisemitism in first-class cricket.”