Special report As the county club try to repair their reputation in the wake of the Azeem Rafiq scandal, splits in the local leagues are more than skin deep

It’s five-to-one on a Saturday afternoon, and at Bowling Old Lane Cricket Club in inner city Bradford the second XI are about to play East Bierley. Mo Mistry wants to know if I’ve brought my white coat. Mistry, who has volunteered to stand for the home side at late notice, is a little disappointed when he realises I’m not the visiting umpire he’s been waiting on, but just a journalist. “You’re from the Guardian?” Mistry says. “You should just copy and paste the article your paper did when it came here 25 years ago,” he tells me. “Nothing’s bloody changed.”

Back then it was the reports of racism in the stands at Headingley that brought journalists to Bowling Old Lane. This time it was the reports of racism in Yorkshire’s committee and changing rooms. “We’ve been deluged,” says Haqueq Siddique, who does most of the day-to-day running of the club. Most of Siddique’s time is taken up with the same sort of stuff you’d find troubling any number of other clubs, the insurance claim from the neighbours, the broken roller and the missing Swiss rolls. But that’s not why three TV news crews came here last year.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Can ‘The Mandalorian’ Keep Star Wars Fans United in Season 2?

On one YouTube channel that analyzes all things Star Wars, the hosts…

For immunologists, 2020 has been a terrifying, incredible year | Zania Stamtaki

Science has shown how powerful it can be in the face of…

US lawmakers ask FBI to investigate Parler app’s role in Capitol attack

House oversight chair seeks inquiry into platform’s potential use to facilitate planning…

Johnson told to drive out ‘dinosaur mentality’ from Tory party after race row

James Gray mixing up Nadhim Zahawi and Sajid Javid ‘not an isolated…