The Guardian (USA)

Edgbaston to investigat­e racist abuse of Indian supporters during England Test

- Simon Burnton at Edgbaston

An investigat­ion will be launched into allegation­s of racist abuse aimed at spectators during the fourth day of the Test match between England and India at Edgbaston, with fans of the visiting side reported to have been “literally in tears” and stewards said to have told those who experience­d problems to “sit down”.

Azeem Rafiq, the former Yorkshire cricketer who has become a campaigner against discrimina­tion in cricket, highlighte­d some posts on social media describing the racist behaviour experience­d at the ground.

“I’m all for some good banter between fans but today was some of the worst abuse we’ve ever experience­d at a match,” read one. “Some disgusting racism. The stewards actually told the India fans to sit down whilst allowing the abuse to go ahead.” Another fan described being abused in the Hollies Stand: “We reported it to the stewards and showed them the culprits but no response and all we were told is to sit in our seats.”

Responding to the allegation­s, a post on Edgbaston’s official Twitter account said: “We’re incredible sorry to read this and do not condone this behaviour in any way. We’ll be investigat­ing this ASAP.” The England and Wales Cricket Board said: “We are very concerned to hear reports of racist abuse at today’s Test match. We are in contact with colleagues at Edgbaston who will investigat­e. There is no place for racism in cricket.”

The allegation­s cast a depressing­ly familiar shadow over what had otherwise been an overwhelmi­ngly positive day for English cricket, which ended with England three wickets down and requiring an apparently trivial 119 more runs to complete the biggest run chase in their history.

But for a wild period either side of tea when three wickets fell for two runs England’s pursuit of their apparently daunting target of 378 was largely serene. At stumps Joe Root was on 76 and Jonny Bairstow on 72, their partnershi­p already worth 150. “In Test cricket there’s always a chance for both sides but, if we bat well for the first 30 or 40 minutes, I can’t see there being any other result [than a win],” said Alex Lees.

Having successful­ly chased scores in excess of 250 in each of their three recent Tests against New Zealand, England appeared undaunted even by this much meatier order. “We had some good experience­s over the last series and I think there’s ultimate belief from one to 11 that we can do it,” Lees said. “Everybody’s pretty confident. The target, you know it’s there but it’s not something we spoke about. Within the dressing room nobody even thought about it.

“We think it’s a pretty good wicket, there’s a tiny bit of variable bounce but it shouldn’t really cause any issues, it’s quite a good outfield and as a unit our batters are getting runs. It could have been more and I think the psychology, the approach wouldn’t be too different.”

If England need a reality check as they go into the final day apparently in control of the game, with three wickets down and needing 119, India came into the penultimat­e day apparently in control, with three wickets down and scored another 120. They lost their final six wickets for 55 runs as Shreyas Iyer, Shardul Thakur, Mohammed Shami and Jasprit Bumrah were all caught off short balls.

“The thing that actually brought us back into the game was our bowling,” said Lees. “We could easily have been chasing 450 or 500.”

Vikram Rathour, India’s batting coach, described it as “a pretty ordinary day as far as batting is concerned”, with his side’s fallibilit­y against short deliveries particular­ly disappoint­ing. “We were ahead, we should have batted better and put them out of the game,” he said. “Unfortunat­ely it didn’t happen. People have been using the short ball against us for quite some time. We could have handled it slightly differentl­y – unfortunat­ely today we didn’t execute whatever plans we had.”

 ?? Cairnduff/Action Images/Reuters ?? Edgbaston on the fourth day of the Test between England and India. Photograph: Jason
Cairnduff/Action Images/Reuters Edgbaston on the fourth day of the Test between England and India. Photograph: Jason
 ?? Cairnduff/Action Images/Reuters ?? Zak Crawley and Alex Lees celebrate their 100 partnershi­p. Photograph: Jason
Cairnduff/Action Images/Reuters Zak Crawley and Alex Lees celebrate their 100 partnershi­p. Photograph: Jason

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