cricinfo.com About cricinfoblogs
Blogs home
Beyond The Test World Blues Brothers Different Strokes Fantasy Post First Class, First Person Girls Aloud Inbox
It Figures On The Circuit Pak Spin Rob's Lobs The Surfer Tour Diaries What's New

Cricinfo Blogs Home

« Ponting’s plea for no Symonds repeat | | Captain Bradman ‘resented’ by team-mates »

Cricket, crowds and racism

Posted on 10/20/2007 in Australian cricket





Andrew Symonds © AFP

Peter Roebuck writes about the treatment of Andrew Symonds in the Sydney Morning Herald, offering insight into India and examining racism in cricket.

It has in some quarters been argued that Symonds and company are being precious and that, weary of accusation and bemused by their unpopularity, Australians are trying to show they are also sometimes victims. Darrell Hair's collapsed case against wrongful dismissal depended on racial prejudice. But is not the law open to all-comers? If Symonds, Hair or anyone else feels they have been mistreated owing to the colour of their skin then let the matter be investigated. Symonds has not railed against every provocation. Just this one.

In the same paper Andrew Webster writes a moving piece about the Western Suburbs club in Sydney and Soumya Bhattacharya says lunatic fringes should not define countries.

The Australian’s Peter Lalor, who has been criticised in India for his reporting of the monkey chants, takes an in-depth look at the past week.

Pity Andrew Symonds. Not that he wants your pity. Or, for that matter, attention. He is a man who has never courted publicity or plaudits. Yet here he sits, blinking and bewildered, in the middle of a storm that is not of his making or his liking. Symonds loves a scrap and can go as hard in a obscenity-laden exchange as anyone in cricket, but this sort of fight and this sort of debate sits as comfortably with him as a necktie.

In the reality show that is India today, there is every danger that the new, aggressive, young "superior" India could end up as a farcical entity, doing no good to itself and to those who wish it well, writes Pradeep Magazine in the Hindustan Times.

Antara Dev Sen, writing in the sify website, explores the inherent rasicm in Indian society.

We disrespect dark skin, of course, even though we are primarily dark-skinned ourselves. Our attempts at whitening our faces have continued for centuries – through grandma’s remedies to today’s fairness creams. We even have fairness creams for men, a new trend in men’s style. But a lighter skin colour does not always protect you from taunts. We are downright racist and rude to the people we call ‘chinks’ – even if they are rich or powerful like the Japanese or Chinese. And it doesn’t stop with foreigners.

Also read Siddharth Saxena in the Times of India and Srinivasan Ramani in the Post.

Meanwhile Kaushik Sunder Rajan reviews the series on his DailyCric blog where he says India's solution lies not in youth, but in depth.

Categories
Ashes (173) Australia in India, 2008-09 (1) Australian cricket (593) Bangladesh cricket (16) Betting/Corruption (1) Bob Woolmer (8) Books (1) Bowling actions (3) Champions Trophy (30) Charity (4) Commentary (58) Corruption (1) Cricinfo (2) Cricket books (4) DLF Cup (2) English cricket (578) Falkland Islands (1) France (1) ICC (65) ICC World Twenty20 (18) IPL (7) India in Australia, 2007-08 (64) India in Sri Lanka 2008 (18) Indian Cricket (394) Indian Cricket League (14) Indian Premier League (108) Irish cricket (3) Miscellaneous (136) New Zealand cricket (145) Obituaries (13) Offbeat (105) Olympics (1) Pakistan cricket (72) Pakistan in England (56) Racism (1) South Africa in England 2008 (49) South African cricket (66) Sri Lankan cricket (48) Stats (2) Technology (10) Television (19) Twenty20 (41) Umpires (40) West Indies cricket (88) Women's cricket (8) World Cup 2007 (133) Zimbabwe cricket (37)
Recent Posts
A tale of two umpires Making the A grade Dave English and the next generation of cricketers India and Australia on shaky ground England settle after summer of storms A decision must be made on Champions Trophy Another century for Claire Taylor The leader has to walk the talk Do selectors ever receive praise? A joyless tale
Archives
September 2008August 2008July 2008June 2008May 2008April 2008March 2008February 2008January 2008December 2007November 2007October 2007September 2007August 2007July 2007June 2007May 2007April 2007March 2007February 2007January 2007December 2006November 2006October 2006September 2006August 2006July 2006June 2006May 2006April 2006March 2006February 2006January 2006December 2005November 2005October 2005September 2005
cricinfo picks

'Cricket should talk'

Anil Kumble on what it's like to be India's Test captain


'I didn't go out and bat as captain'

Talking Cricket - 2: Mark Taylor on Allan Border's legacy


Beware the football threat

Jayaditya Gupta on the IPL v EPL battle


'Why would you want to play five days for a draw?'

Talking Cricket: Mark Taylor on the art of captaincy


Rearguard to the rescue

The Numbers Game looks at the best lower-order pairs



cricket links
The Guardian The Daily Telegraph The Times The Independent The Age Sydney Morning Herald The Australian NZ Herald SuperSport BBC Rediff
© Cricinfo 2008
website stats