Daily Mirror

TAKING A KNEE WAS JUST THE START

And that’s why Giants star Lawrence has joined an anti-discrimina­tion board to fight racism and inequality in his sport

- BY GARETH WALKER Rugby Lge Correspond­ent @garethwalk­er

MICHAEL LAWRENCE always knew that taking the knee would not be enough on its own to force positive change in sport.

The Huddersfie­ld forward was at the forefront of Sky’s Black Lives Matter coverage when Super League restarted last August, giving an insightful interview alongside Giants teammates Ash Golding and Jordan Turner.

Lawrence recounted how an opposition player was racially abused by one of his own supporters in an academy game, resulting in his coach leaving the club. Turner and Golding (inset, right) had experience­d their own forms of discrimina­tion.

It sparked conversati­on within rugby league – and Lawrence wanted that to be the start of long-standing change for the better. Now the 30-year-old (above) has been appointed to a new eightperso­n Inclusion Board that will oversee the progress of the sport’s own ‘Tackle It – Rugby League versus Discrimina­tion’ programme.

He explained: “The more diverse rugby league is the better.

“A lot of stuff went on 10 or 20 years ago that people would overlook and I don’t think they overlook them now which is the difference.

“People have now got a voice and that kind of stuff isn’t accepted, which is good. In rugby league there’s a fiveyear plan being put together now with some measurable goals.

“It’s a long process but we want to see stuff moving in the right direction, so that when I eventually do step down from the board the sport will be

in a better position.” Lawrence admits that the reaction to Black Lives Matter helped shaped his opinion on the best way to achieve progress in rugby league.

He said: “The response was a lot of positives but there were also a lot of negatives as well.

“It showed there’s still a lot of work to be done within the sport, and sport as a whole, to make it more inclusive and diverse.

“There was mixed reactions to the Black Lives Matter initiative and that’s one of the main reasons I wanted rugby league to push its own identity.

“A lot of people were opposing the political side of Black Lives Matter and

I wanted to step away from politics and focus on rugby league being inclusive and diverse and against any kind of discrimina­tion.

“I’m a big believer in seeing things through and I didn’t want taking the knee to be the end of it. I wanted to be part of an action plan and see some worthwhile change.”

Lawrence experience­d a positive response to sharing his own experience­s but says the abuse being suffered by footballer­s on social media illustrate­s the issues sport faces.

He added: “I’ve never had that, but there’s a lot of stuff going around which is pretty disturbing.

“I have never been racially abused by a fan or on social media but some of the stuff footballer­s have had, no person should have to deal with.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom