Mercury (Hobart)

AN INDIGENOUS TALLY IN SERIOUS NEED OF AN INCREASE

- ROBERT CRADDOCK

CRICKET has always been a game defined by numbers and the sobering statistic with Australia’s Indigenous heritage is the loneliest number of all … one.

To be more specific, one out of 458.

As heartening as it was to see Australia’s cricketers form a barefoot circle to support the Black Lives Matter crusade and Australia’s Indigenous heritage at the SCG, nothing would enhance the cause and the culture more by seeing more Indigenous players at the game’s top level.

It really is extraordin­ary that in 143 years of Test cricket Jason Gillespie is the only Indigenous male Australian to play Test cricket among the 458 players to have worn the baggy green cap.

And Gillespie, a descendant of the Kamilaroi people who once populated northern NSW, played the first part of his career without anyone realising this fact, once saying “I wasn’t hiding it …. It was just that nobody asked.’’

A sprinkling of Indigenous players including Dan Christian and Scott Boland have worn coloured clothes for Australia.

D’Arcy Short is in camp with the Australian 50-over team and could don the newly minted Indigenous T20 shirt against India next month.

For 25 years Australia has conducted the Imparja Cup for Indigenous teams from around

Australia. In women’s cricket Ash Gardner joined Indigenous pioneer Faith Thomas as a baggy green cap owner and there are more than 100 male Indigenous players competing in Premier League competitio­ns around Australia. But just one at Test level. Australia cricket is well acquainted with this statistic and owns it. Australia is not proud of it, feeling bewildered and embarrasse­d in equal measure because the first ever team of Australian cricketers to England

was a ground of 14 Indigenous players from western Victoria in 1868.

Sadly, the momentum of the first tour vanished the year after the players returned home. Victoria passed legislatio­n that no Aborigines were allowed to leave the state without permission from the government and the interest of many of the players waned.

There has been a theory that Indigenous sportspeop­le prefer more fast moving games like AFL.

Supporters of this theory spotlight the day when a busload of Indigenous children were shipped in to watch the West Indies play in Alice Springs then sat in the grandstand for two overs before heading out back to play football.

But Ian Chappell believes it could all change if they had a role model to prove it could be done and an Indigenous Test star could inspire a fresh generation in the way that Shane Warne reinvigora­ted wrist spin.

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