Daily Mail

ECB ‘wasted’ £60k on mock DCMS hearing

- By ISAAN KHAN

THE ECB spent £60,000 on practice ‘interrogat­ion’ sessions to prepare for their car-crash parliament­ary select committee hearing on Azeem Rafiq’s racism allegation­s, Sportsmail can reveal.

The splurge came just seven weeks after announcing 62 redundanci­es last winter to ‘safeguard cricket’s long-term future’ in light of Covid — and more ECB job cuts have been earmarked before Christmas. Rafiq opened up about being called a ‘P**i’ and racially abused over eight years at Yorkshire at a Digital, Culture, Media and Sport hearing last November. The ECB board’s payment to a law firm is said to have been for conducting a mock hearing, in which then-chief executive Tom Harrison and colleagues practised facing questions expected to mirror those of DCMS chief Julian Knight MP. It did not go to plan. Harrison had intended to make a pre-rehearsed speech at the hearing, in the hope of avoiding questionin­g — a tactic thought to have been planned in the sessions — but Knight blocked him from doing so. Knight told Sportsmail: ‘It’s incredible such money should be spent in such preparatio­n. Frankly, it didn’t do them much good — they should ask for a refund.’ Sportsmail understand­s the ECB have also spent more than £1million on racism-related probes in the past 12 months. That sum could exceed £1.5m by the end of the year with ‘no end in sight’ in some cases.

It is believed at least £500,000 has been spent on a law team and the Cricket Discipline Commission in relation to the Rafiq investigat­ion. The probe has proven costly, with many of the seven charged ex-Yorkshire employees hiring high-profile legal teams to battle the accusation­s, which has dragged the matter out even further. The investigat­ion is expected to run well into the new year. Cindy Butts’ Independen­t Commission for Equity in Cricket report, which is due this year, has also been expensive, with the five employed commission­ers collective­ly being paid around £10,000 a day. An ECB spokespers­on said: ‘Where issues need investigat­ing, we make no apology for doing so thoroughly and this does cost money.

‘It is also right to invest in the Independen­t Commission for Equity in Cricket so we can identify the action we need to remove barriers to people getting involved in our sport.’

 ?? ?? Practice sessions: Tom Harrison
Practice sessions: Tom Harrison

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