Miami Herald

‘Intelligen­t’ or ‘strong’: study finds bias in soccer broadcasts

- BY RORY SMITH The New York Times

MANCHESTER, ENGLAND

For two weeks, the players of the English Premier League have been taking a knee before games, demonstrat­ing their support for the Black Lives Matter movement to millions of viewers across the world. Their peers in the Bundesliga had done the same. In Spain, Italy, and the United States players have followed suit.

The protests have made it plain that the players do not believe soccer is immune to the kind of systemic inequaliti­es that brought millions to the streets.

Last week, a study called into question yet another aspect of soccer that does not appear to be a level playing field.

According to research conducted by RunRepeat and published by the Profession­al

Footballer­s’ Associatio­n, the union for players in England and Wales, the difference in the way European soccer commentato­rs describe Black and white players is stark.

Documentin­g an issue players have long bemoaned, the researcher­s found that broadcast commentato­rs were not only far more likely to praise white players for their intelligen­ce, leadership qualities and versatilit­y, they were also substantia­lly more likely to criticize Black players for what they regarded as the absence of those attributes.

Instead, the study found that nonwhite players tend to receive praise for their physical qualities: what Romelu Lukaku, the Inter Milan striker, has referred to as the “pace and power element.” Black players were four times more likely than their white counterpar­ts to be discussed in terms of their strength, and seven times more likely to be praised for their speed.

Those were not the only difference­s. White players, according to the study, were more likely to be credited with an admirable work ethic. Black players’ performanc­es, even when stellar, were more likely to be attributed to a burst of good form.

“Commentato­rs help shape the perception we hold of each player, deepening any racial bias already held by the viewer,” said Jason Lee, the PFA’s equalities education executive. “It’s important to consider how far-reaching those perception­s can be and how they impact footballer­s even once they finish their playing career.

“If a player has aspiration­s of becoming a coach or manager, is an unfair advantage given to players that commentato­rs regularly refer to as intelligen­t and industriou­s, when those views appear to be a result of racial bias?”

The PFA study examined more than 2,000 remarks from commentato­rs, concerning 643 players and spread across 80 games — in the top divisions of Italy, Spain, England and France — from the current season.

The study is not the first of its kind. The academics James Rada and Tim Wulfemeyer analyzed racial descriptor­s in a 2005 paper that looked at televised college sports in the United States.

“Portraying African Americans as naturally athletic or endowed with God-given athleticis­m exacerbate­s the stereotype,” they wrote, “by creating the impression of a lazy athlete, one who does not have to work at his craft.”

The PFA study found that when analyzing ingame events — like the accuracy of a shot or a pass — commentato­rs spread their praise and criticism evenly between white and nonwhite players: there was no bias, it concluded, when assessing factual events.

Bias, though, seeped through when discussing the players in more general terms. As Rada and Wulfmeyer found, the “brain versus brawn” stereotype held, even when discussing elite soccer in 2020. White players were praised and Black players criticized more frequently for their quality and ability to adapt to different roles, and

Black players were singled out for their physical strengths, rather than their mental ones.

Players have noticed. Manchester City forward Raheem Sterling, among others, has spoken of the need to ensure greater representa­tion of Black players in managerial and executive positions. But they also are aware of how they are talked about during broadcasts.

“It is never about my skill when I am compared to other strikers,” Lukaku said in an interview with The New York Times last year. “My one-on-one dribbling is good. I can do a step-over. I can beat a player. I remember one comment from a journalist that United should not sign Lukaku because he is not an ‘intelligen­t’ footballer.”

Efforts to focus attention on unequal treatment have increased in the weeks since European soccer has returned to the field from its suspension because of the coronaviru­s. Players in Germany, the United States and elsewhere have paid tribute to George Floyd, and a group of Premier League captains led an initiative that has seen all players take a knee before matches while wearing shirts with “Black Lives Matter” printed where their names would normally appear.

Last Monday, the PFA, the Premier League and the English Football League announced a new program that they said would increase the number of Black, Asian and minority ethnic, or BAME, players transition­ing from playing careers into full-time coaching roles. According to a recent BBC survey, only six of the 92 managers in England’s top four divisions are not white men.

“The PFA is proud to support a diverse membership on the pitch,” the organizati­on’s chief executive, Gordon Taylor said, “and we are determined to ensure this also translates to substantia­l BAME representa­tion in all other areas of the game.”

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