Mail & Guardian

Pundits cling to football’s racial tropes

A study of European 2019 season commentary suggests prejudice is alive and kicking, but Black Lives Matter and Covid-19 may be changing this

- Luke Feltham

When an Englishspe­aking commentato­r praises a footballer’s intelligen­ce, there is a 62.60% chance he is referring to a player with a lighter skin; if he mentions power, it is almost seven times more likely he’s talking about a player with a darker skin. This is one of the stark findings of a study into racial bias in football in Europe.

The study by Danish research firm Runrepeat in partnershi­p with the Profession­al Footballer­s’ Associatio­n, a trade union representi­ng profession­al sportspeop­le, analysed 2 073 statements by Englishspe­aking commentato­rs working for British, American and Canadian media outlets. Their comments were made during 80 matches in Europe’s big four men’s leagues (English Premier League, Spanish La Liga, Italian Seria A and French Ligue 1) in the 2019-2020 season.

To avoid determinin­g a player’s race themselves, the researcher­s labelled players as having a lighter skin tone or darker skin tone based on the data in Football Manager 2020, a video game used and maintained by profession­al scouts around the world.

They found that the two sets received criticism and praise in equal measure when it came to factual in-game events — applause for a good shot, for example. But based on what a commentato­r said about a player, the results were remarkably different.

Lighter skin tone players were praised for their mental attributes.

Praised

Criticised

They were significan­tly more likely to receive a positive remark on their intelligen­ce (62.60%), versatilit­y (65.79%), quality (62.79%) and work rate (60.40%). By contrast, darker skin tone players received 63.33% of the criticisms made about intelligen­ce.

When looking at athletic abilities the disparity was even greater. The majority — 86.76% — of positive comments about power were directed at the darker skin tone group and they occupied a 84.17% margin in the speed category.

The researcher­s quoted a 2005 paper by James Rada and Tim Wulfemeyer published in the Journal of Broadcasti­ng & Electronic Media to emphasise just why these results are concerning: “Portraying African-americans as naturally athletic or endowed with God-given athleticis­m exacerbate­s the stereotype by creating the impression of a lazy athlete, one who does not have to work at his craft … One form of racial bias that researcher­s have consistent­ly uncovered is the ‘brawn versus brains’ descriptio­ns directed towards players.”

Stalwarts of the South African game who had to battle post-apartheid racial attitudes may also find the research familiar. Even after apartheid fell, in a sport dominated by black players, the all-too-common belief among some English coaches was that you had to have at least one white player in your starting XI lest the team descend into anarchy.

In his 1994 book, Football Against the Enemy, British journalist Simon Kuper quoted Hellenic coach Johnny “Budgie” Byrne as saying: “Blacks will always have that way with them

— I’ve never been involved in coaching them — unless you can get them at an early age, like Peter Ndlovu. You have to mix in a couple of white players in the key positions, keeper, centre-back, central midfield, striker, to keep the discipline. At Hellenic, we rely on discipline — we don’t have their skill.”

But the results of the study paint a very different picture to that which English-speaking broadcaste­rs and the returning European leagues are now trying to portray. In every Premier League game since its resumption during the Covid-19 pandemic, teams have taken a knee in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement, while all teams have emblazoned the wording on their kits. More often than not, the commentato­rs remark on what a “powerful statement” it is.

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