The Star Early Edition

Black players take a stand

Black cricketers in South Africa are still not being heard, respected

- STUART HESS

Comment

CRICKET South Africa has held three transforma­tion indabas – the first in 2000, the most recent in 2018 – where it has discussed strategies.

In 2016 there was an inquiry about concerns expressed by Black African cricketers regarding selection for the national team.

On the surface those indabas look good, all the right things are said. Cricket SA’s president Chris Nenzani said 2018 provided “a platform for an honest and a robust assessment of what has been achieved and what could have been achieved since the last indaba in 2013”. Does it feel like that now?

Having Norman Arendse, then the Lead Independen­t Director on the Board, chair a task team to investigat­e the concerns raised by Black cricketers in 2016, was again, good, on the surface, but Arendse’s team’s report is gathering dust in a cupboard somewhere.

The actual human impact of decisions taken or – most often – not taken and policies and plans not implemente­d is now coming to the fore.

That 2013 Indaba is significan­t in its timing – coming just months after Thami Tsolekile, one of the 36 signatorie­s who came out in support of Lungi Ngidi yesterday, had publicly expressed his distrust of the then panel of national team selectors.

“The explanatio­ns I’ve got from different selectors, you wonder if they’ve been in the same meetings. I find it very hard to trust some of the selectors,” Tsolekile told The Star in December 2012, about the mixed messages he’d received concerning his non-selection for the Test series’ against New Zealand and Australia, earlier that year.

Three years later, in that letter written and signed by a number of Black African cricketers, again the issue was about selection.

What is clear from the past few days, is the human damage that has been done as a result – something Cricket SA, its indabas and reports never properly addressed.

The resolution­s published following CSA’s 2013 Transforma­tion Indaba cover a variety of areas from governance, to profession­al and amateur cricket, to funding.

What is clear from the words of the administra­tors and the experience­s of the players, is that little filtered down the system, from the suits, to those strapping on pads, gloves and boots.

Ashwell Prince’s tears as he explains to criccbuzz.com how his brother, Lloyd, missed out on opportunit­ies to display his talent at Eastern Province speak volumes. It suggests administra­tors have paid mere lip service to their transforma­tion strategies, discussed and mulled over at three indabas.

And what of the country’s white players? We know where ex-players like Boeta Dippenaar, Brian McMillan, Pat Symcox and Rudi Steyn stand – they made that very clear last week. But what of the others who shared dressing rooms with many of the signatorie­s showing support for Black Lives Matter and Ngidi? Where are they? How will they support young black players in this country so that the pain felt by so many black players in the post-isolation era, isn’t revisited upon future generation­s. Their support right now is critical.

There is an onus on the leadership of Cricket SA to take a much firmer stand on this issue too. Be it Nenzani in the few weeks he has left as the organisati­on’s president, Dr Jacques Faul for however long he remains acting

CEO role and the Director of Cricket, Graeme Smith, who shared dressing rooms and toured with a number of the signatorie­s.

There is a responsibi­lity too on Cricket SA’s sponsors, from SuperSport, to New Balance, Momentum, KFC, SABC Sport, CocaCola, SA Breweries, ticketpro, Ram, Betway and a few others to show their support for Ngidi and this country’s black cricketers and to hold Cricket SA accountabl­e for ensuring the sport is genuinely one for all South Africa’s people because right now, it doesn’t feel that way.

 ?? | Source: AP, EPA, BackpagePi­x ?? Makhaya Ntini, Vernon Philander and Herschelle Gibbs. | Graphic: MATTHYS MOSS
| Source: AP, EPA, BackpagePi­x Makhaya Ntini, Vernon Philander and Herschelle Gibbs. | Graphic: MATTHYS MOSS
 ??  ?? Chris Nenzani
Chris Nenzani

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