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Azeem Rafiq and racism in English cricket

Azeem Rafiq’s testimony goes beyond racism in cricket and highlights fragile equations in British elite circles.

November 21, 2021 / 11:51 IST
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Azeem Rafiq (extreme right) playing for the Yorkshire County Cricket Club in 2017. (Image: Dave Morton via Wikimedia Commons)

Mike Marqusee writes in his celebrated book Anyone But England that the superb performance by the visiting West Indies cricket team in the summer of 1976 caused much anguish to English commentators. The refined English commentary could hardly hide the shock decimation England faced. In the 1970s and '80s, a generation with fairly good memory of the crumbling of the British Empire was now witnessing the extraordinary rise of new cricketing powers from the former colonies.

The first three cricket world cups were held in England and none were won by it. West Indies took the first two and the third one in 1983 was bagged by India. It took an extraordinary 36 years for England to win their first cricket World Cup in 2019 after almost all the major cricket playing countries had lifted the trophy. But before the onset of the one-day format in the 1960s and indeed the cricket world cup bringing some much needed excitement, football had already captured the English imagination.

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When Azeem Rafiq’s case burst out in full force on Tuesday (November 16, 2021), it signified that a key section – South Asians – disproportionately engaged in serving the game in England has still some distance to go before it sits comfortably in the English cricket hierarchy. For decades now, South Asians have enriched cricket in England, providing a steady flow of players, coaches, support staff, and youngsters who prefer to wield the bat instead of donning football boots.

Rafiq, the former England under-19 captain, was told by Michael Vaughan, referring to the Asian players, that there were “too many of you lot, we need to do something about it”. Vaughan has denied Rafiq’s allegations, but it does point out how the presence of Asians, in what has always been a preferred game of the elite, has been problematic. It stems from the fact that South Asians have occupied a key, but also an interesting spot, in the English cricketing fraternity.