Arab Times

Case of Poms’ Trott highlights cricket’s link to ‘depression’

Lehmann dismisses England peace talks

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BRISBANE, Australia, Nov 27, (Agencies): A decision by England batsman Jonathan Trott to withdraw from the remainder of the Ashes series due to a stress-related illness brought predictabl­y insensitiv­e reactions from some sections of the Australian media.

One depression expert, however, hopes Trott’s high-profile case might help other athletes come forward without fear of ridicule. And a sports psychologi­st suggested why verbal taunts which often lead to anxiety and possibly suicide seem to be so pronounced in cricket.

Brisbane-based sports psychologi­st Dr. Phil Jauncey, who has worked with many cricketers, pointed to the slow-paced nature of the sport that enables players to get up close and personal with their opponents, allowing taunting — known locally as “sledging” — to have more effect.

“In many other sports, you are too busy, maybe one-on-one in tennis, or in rugby, the game is just moving too fast,” Jauncey said in an interview Wednesday with The Associated Press. “In cricket, you are standing around this guy, you can keep talking at the batsman, you have your mates around. In a sense it’s bullying. And if you’ve got some issues, it could get to you.”

Jeff Kennett, a former premier of Victoria state and now chairman of the Beyondblue group that promotes awareness of depression and anxiety, says the clichéd old ‘If you can’t take the heat, get out of the kitchen’ mentality only makes it worse for athletes.

“For every Jonathan Trott, there are hundreds of sportsmen and women in the same position, with the same condition, who now may feel if they seek help they’re going to be ridiculed,” Kennett said in a reproachfu­l statement after the initial local reporting of Trott’s departure. “If Jonathan Trott had returned to the UK for a physical injury you would not have got these headlines. Because it’s a mental health illness or a stress-related illness, some in the media have seen fit to actually mock him.”

Certainly Sydney’s Daily Telegraph

 ??  ?? This file photo taken on Nov 23, shows England batsman Jonathan Trott walking from the pitch on day three of the first Ashes cricket Test match between England and Australia at the Gabba Cricket Ground in Bris
bane. (AFP)
This file photo taken on Nov 23, shows England batsman Jonathan Trott walking from the pitch on day three of the first Ashes cricket Test match between England and Australia at the Gabba Cricket Ground in Bris bane. (AFP)

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