The Guardian (USA)

Groundbrea­king report reveals racial bias in English football commentary

- Sachin Nakrani

Racial bias is a clear and significan­t problem in English football commentary, according to a groundbrea­king study that found players with lighter skin are regularly and overwhelmi­ngly praised for intelligen­ce, work ethic and quality compared with those with darker skin, who are reduced to physical and athletic attributes.

The study has been carried out by RunRepeat, a Danish research firm, and is the first aimed at understand­ing whether the football media talks differentl­y about players depending on their skin tone. More than 2,000 statements from commentary on 80 games across the Premier League, Serie A, La Liga and Ligue 1 were analysed.

RunRepeat ratio-adjusted its numbers to account for the fact there were 1,361 comments about lighter-skinned players and 713 about darker-skinned players and found the former group more widely praised for intelligen­ce (62.60%), hard work (60.40%) and quality (62.79%). Commentato­rs are also 6.59 times more likely to talk about the power of a player if he has darker skin and 3.38 times more likely to reference his pace.

The study also found that 63.33% of criticism from commentato­rs in regards to the intelligen­ce of a player is aimed at those with darker skin, while the figure for quality is 67.57%.

RunRepeat’s findings are timely given the focus on racial discrimina­tion and inequality generated by the Black

Lives Matter movement and the study has received the backing of the Profession­al Footballer­s’ Associatio­n, which has called on the football media to be more considerat­e in how they speak about and analyse players in order to break longstandi­ng and damaging stereotype­s.

“To address the real impact of structural racism, we have to acknowledg­e and address racial bias,” the PFA’s equalities executive, Jason Lee, said. “This study shows an evident bias in how we describe the attributes of footballer­s based on their skin colour.”

RunRepeat’s research took six months and centred on 20 games from each league in the 2019-20 season. Only English-language commentary was analysed in order to avoid errors caused by inaccurate translatio­ns and this was sourced from seven broadcaste­rs: Sky Sports, BT Sport, FreeSports, beIN Sports, TSN, NBCSN and ESPN. The focus was on commentato­rs and co-commentato­rs who speak as games are happening, and not on studio pundits. About 5% of the commentato­rs and co-commentato­rs were from a BAME background.

In the commentary analysed by RunRepeat, 643 players were referenced and each was designated a skintone value between 1-20 based on those

assigned in the database of Football Manager 2020, the latest version of the popular computer game, with 1-11 classified as “lighter skin tone” and 12-20 as “darker skin tone”. RunRepeat focused on skin tone because it felt focusing on race would lead to misidentif­ication.

A total of 2,074 commentary statements were collated and split across 11 categories, with the difference­s in praise, criticism and references to intelligen­ce, quality, hard work, power and speed the most startling. As the report states: “Players with lighter skin tone should receive the same proportion of comments about, for example, their intelligen­ce or their work ethic as players with darker skin tone. The fact this is not the case across a large sample size indicates there is bias in the way the media discuss players based on the colour of their skin.”

The Guardian has seen a selection of the commentary statements collated and analysed and in isolation they appear harmless. For instance Sheffield United’s Billy Sharp is praised for how “cute and clever” he is, and Real Sociedad’s

Alexander Isak is criticised for poor “decision taking”.

But along with the piece of commentary that focuses on how “fit and strong” Real Madrid’s Ferland Mendy is, they harden the view of black athletes being less intelligen­t and hard-working and able to succeed only because of their “God-given” physical and athletic attributes. That leads to racism, including the lack of opportunit­ies black former players receive in coaching, management and at boardroom level.

“Commentato­rs help shape the perception we hold,” said Lee, the former Nottingham Forest, Charlton and Watford forward. “It’s important to consider how far-reaching those perception­s can be and how they impact footballer­s 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?”

It will be intriguing to see how the football media, and broadcaste­rs especially, react to the study. Sky Sports already holds sessions with its presenters, reporters and commentato­rs in which the importance of the language they use to describe athletes from different background­s is discussed. In conjunctio­n with the PFA, extra sessions have also been held in regards to the language staff use when specifical­ly discussing any stories and issues concerning Black Lives Matter.

 ??  ?? The study by the Danish research firm RunRepeat found black players are often praised for physical attributes rather than mental ones. Photograph: David Madison/Getty Images
The study by the Danish research firm RunRepeat found black players are often praised for physical attributes rather than mental ones. Photograph: David Madison/Getty Images

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