The Phnom Penh Post

Hunt on for Indigenous cricketers

- Tim Wigmore

FOR six months in 1868, a squad made up exclusivel­y of Indigenous Australian­s went on a cricket tour of Britain, the first trip of its kind by an Australian team. The squad performed well, but the trip was never repeated.

A year later, the Australian authoritie­s gained complete control over the residence, employment and marriage of the country’s indigenous people, the start of a heavyhande­d form of oversight that rendered future tours impossible.

The loss of opportunit­y foreshadow­ed how many Indigenous Australian­s – those who are Aboriginal or hail from the Torres Strait Islands – were excluded from cricket for the next century.

In 1902, Jack Marsh, an Indigenous fast bowler from New South Wales, was dropped from a state match against a touring England team after the England captain refused to play against him.

In the 1930s, Eddie Gilbert was considered one of the world’s fastest bowlers, but he had to obtain written permission merely to travel outside his Indigenous settlement in Queensland. He was never picked for Australia.

“Cricket has this unfortunat­e trait where cultural bias sits there, and it’s unconsciou­s,” said John McGuire, who played in grade cricket – the level below the state team – in Western Australia for two decades from the mid-1970s, and is a former chair of the Western Australia Aboriginal Cricket Council.

McGuire spoke from bitter personal experience. In the 1980s, McGuire – who has two Indigenous parents and said he endured racial abuse in “just about every game” of his career – became the 24th batsman from his state to score 7,000 runs in grade cricket.

The other 23 all had been selected for Western Australia at some stage – even though he reached 10,000 runs, McGuire never was.

“People will say: ‘It’s not a race thing; we’re not racist; our best mates are black Australian­s’,” McGuire said. “But the unconsciou­s bias won’t allow them to select an Aboriginal person.”

In this context, Monday’s selection of D’Arcy Short for Australia’s Twenty20 internatio­nals against England and New Zealand at the start of next month was a powerful symbol of change.

Short was chosen by Australia’s national selectors because he is an explosive T20 batsman. He also happens to have Indigenous heritage, making him a member of an exclusive club – only a handful of Indigenous cricketers have ever represente­d Australia in internatio­nal competitio­n.

‘Roadblock to knock down’

His selection is another sign of progress in a campaign by cricket authoritie­s to bring more diversity into the game.

Every Australian state and territory associatio­n, for example, now has a staff member specifical­ly responsibl­e for driving Indigenous participat­ion programmes, and the country’s top league recently held themed matches to bring attention to those efforts.

Playing numbers among Indigenous people have risen significan­tly in recent years – from 8,000 in 2011-12 to 54,000 in 2016-17, according to the governing body’s figures – but still lag behind those for Australian rules football, the sport that traditiona­lly rivals cricket for the mantle of Australia’s favourite game.

Today, there are 82 male Aboriginal players in the Australian Football League, the Australian rules profession­al competitio­n – about 10 percent of the total number of contracted players.

“Aussie rules have promoted themselves a lot better than cricket,” said Larry Kickett, a prominent Indigenous Australian rules football player who became the Western Australian Cricket Associatio­n’s first Aboriginal programmes coordinato­r in 2015. “That transition from school to community cricket is the roadblock we’ve got to knock down.”

Before Short, only five crick- eters with acknowledg­ed Indigenous heritage have represente­d Australia in men’s or women’s cricket. And only two of the 623 Australian­s to have played Test cricket, the five-day format traditiona­lly regarded as the most prestigiou­s, are Indigenous.

William Fogarty, a co-author of the National Centre for Indigenous Studies report in 2015, praised Cricket Australia’s effort, saying it is to be “belatedly commended on moving this area of developmen­t of race relations and the game forward”.

Nine of the 10 recommenda­tions in the report he helped create have been adopted.

“They’re starting to realise there’s talent around in Indigenous players – it’s just finding it and trying to keep them on the right path,” Short said. “It’s always in the back of my mind that I want to be a role model for young Indigenous players.”

 ?? BIG BASH LEAGUE VIA TWITTER ?? D’Arcy Short has been selected for Australia’s Twenty20 internatio­nals against England and New Zealand at the start of next month.
BIG BASH LEAGUE VIA TWITTER D’Arcy Short has been selected for Australia’s Twenty20 internatio­nals against England and New Zealand at the start of next month.

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