Stabroek News

Holder wants BLM issues kept in spotlight as Windies honoured with award

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DUBAI, United Arab Emirates, CMC – Test captain Jason Holder has urged authoritie­s to keep the issues surroundin­g racial justice at the forefront of sport, after he and West Indies were this week honoured with the Peter Smith Award by the Cricket Writers Club for their “trailblazi­ng” tour of England last July.

The three- match series marked the resumption of internatio­nal cricket following the global lockdown because of the COVID-19 pandemic, and also came at the height of global Black Lives Matter protests sparked by the killing of American George Floyd by a white police officer in the United States earlier in the year.

Throughout the series, both teams kneeled before the start of each Test as a mark of support for BLM but Holder said he had been disappoint­ed to see the practice discontinu­ed for England’s subsequent series against Pakistan and Australia.

“I was following a bit of what Mikey Holding was saying,” Holder said in reference to Holding’s recent criticism of England for abandoning the on-field support for the BLM movement.

“It’s difficult to get people to see the importance of it and that’s where the education has

to continue to filter through.

“I personally was a bit disappoint­ed to see how the Pakistan and Australia tours that went on after ours, that they were not showing their solidarity afterwards.

“It’s a hard challenge and a long hard road. It’s not an overnight fix but the most important thing is we need to come together and see each other as equal human beings.”

Holding, a legendary former West Indies fast bowler who is now a well-respected internatio­nal television analyst, criticised the England and Wales Cricket Board over the decision not to continue the practice of kneeling.

He said even though the

West Indies tour had finished “that doesn’t mean that you still shouldn’t be respecting the message and exactly what it stands for.”

Holder, a late call-up to represent Sunrisers Hyderabad in the ongoing Indian Premier League, said there had also been little mention of the Black Lives Matter movement in the cash-rich tournament in the United Arab Emirates.

“I haven’t had one conversati­on [in the IPL] around it,” said the world’s top- ranked Test all-rounder.

“Sometimes it seems it has gone unnoticed, which is a sad thing. I guess it’s for us to rehighligh­t the importance of it.”

Holder and West Indies received the award from the United Kingdom-based entity for their “outstandin­g contributi­on to the presentati­on of cricket to the public”.

The Cricket Writers Club said not only had the Caribbean side engaged in an historic tour at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic but had also added their voices to the global discourse on racial inequality.

“Holder led a trailblazi­ng tour party that flew into the unknown at the height of the COVID-crisis in the UK, from the relative safety of the Caribbean,” the body said.

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Jason Holder
West Indies Test captain Jason Holder

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