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The India-Australia cricket conflict: sport, profits and nationalism
By Mike Head
10 January 2008
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Cricket, the archetypal sport of the British Empire, was once
regarded as a gentlemans game to be played in
the polite spirit of sportsmanship. But a bitter conflict over
whether the Indian cricket team would pull out of its current
tour of Australia highlights how this sport, like many others,
has become dominated by a toxic mix of nationalism and the drive
for profit.
For now it appears that the tour will proceed, but only after
the International Cricket Council (ICC) accepted Indian demands
for the replacement of an umpire involved in the scheduled four-Test
series and for an appeal to be heard against the suspension of
champion spin bowler, Harbhajan Singh, for alleged racist remarks.
The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) said the tour
can proceed on an interim basis, pending the outcome
of Harbhajans appeal.
Behind the media furore and incessant commentary, a lot of
money is riding on the outcome. The Australian Financial Review
estimates that Cricket Australia (CA) stands to lose $145 million
if the tour is called off. Australias Nine Network, which
bought the rights to televise the matches, could forfeit $85 million
in advertising revenue. If the BCCI abandons the tour, it could
be liable to reimburse CA for losses of broadcasting, sponsorship
and ticket revenues, as well as facing a fine by the ICC of up
to $2.3 million.
Long-simmering tensions between the cricketing establishments
of the two countries were ignited by a series of incidents during
the Second Test match between the sides in Sydney on January 2-6.
When Australia narrowly won the match at the very last minute,
with the help of two crucial umpiring mistakes, its team celebrated
with what has become its customary arrogance. Players leaped in
the air, screamed in delight and hugged each other interminably,
ignoring offers of handshakes from the Indian side.
Although it may have been dubiously obtained, the victory equalled
a previous Australian teams world record of 16 consecutive
Test match wins. The triumphalism was reminiscent of the boorish
display after the final of the 2006 ICC Champions Trophy, a world
series of one-day matches, when Australian captain Ricky Ponting
asked BCCI president Sharad Pawar to leave the podium
so his team could begin celebrating.
The immediate trigger for the BCCIs move to recall its
team was a decision by the ICCs match referee, former South
African player Mike Procter, to suspend Harbhajan for three Test
matches for allegedly taunting Australian player Andrew Symonds
with the term monkey. Ponting lodged the complaint
against Harbhajan in the middle of the match, so that the charge
lay over the Indian cricketers heads throughout the game.
Then, without any report from the two match umpireswho said
they did not hear the remarkProctor ignored the denials
of Harbhajan and his teammate, renowned batsman Sachin Tendulkar,
that the racist taunt ever took place. There was no television
or sound recording of the alleged remark. Instead of ruling that
he had no independent evidence to rely upon, Proctor accepted
the word of five Australian players over that of their Indian
counterparts.
Rubbing salt into the wounds was the fact that the Australian
team has become notorious in cricket-playing countries for a practice
known as sledgingtrying to upset opposing batsman
and bowlers with foul, insulting or disgusting remarks. A Sydney
Morning Herald editorial warned of the bad aura
around the Australian team: Apparently its fine for
Australian players to question the masculinity of opposing players,
the legitimacy of their birth, or the faithfulness of their wives,
and for those who played in apartheid-era South Africa not to
feel any embarrassment, but now Australia goes to the cricket
court at the drop of a racist jibe.
Throughout the match, the Australians applied visible pressure
on the two umpires, Steve Bucknor from Jamaica and Mark Benson
from England. The mistakes Bucknor made benefited the Australian
team and may well have cost the Indians the match. The errors
were instantly recognised by the Australians, who all, nevertheless,
kept silent.
Umpiring mistakes and refereeing disputes are nothing new in
cricket. In the past, they have been accepted as part of
the game. It is distinctly possible that, had India drawn
the Test, nothing would have been said about them. But today so
much hinges financiallyfor the rival national-based cricket
bodies, the competing media conglomerates and the individual playerson
winning or losing, that every controversial decision has the potential
to become a flashpoint.
Media witch-hunting
Some sections of the Australian media, notably the Murdoch
outlets, have sought to whip up hostility toward the Indian players,
who insisted they would not continue the tour until Harbhajans
suspension was reversed. The Sydney Daily Telegraph declared:
India dramatically held world cricket to ransom last night
after threatening to abandon its multi-million dollar tour of
Australia.
The newspapers own readers, however, opposed the Australian
teams obnoxious display. About 80 percent of respondents
to its website poll supported Indian captain Anil Kumbles
post-match remarks that Australia did not play in the spirit
of cricket and agreed that Ponting was not a good
ambassador for the sport.
This response provoked the ire of Telegraph columnist
Garry Linnell, who ridiculed all those who pined for a lost era
in which cricket was played in a rarefied atmosphere where
fairness and good manners rule. He suggested that the readers
should wake up to modern sport ... and to life too.
Cricket was trying to uphold its self-created mythology
as the noble sport played by decent gentlemen while greedily
plung[ing] head-first into the deep money pit of commercialism.
Other media commentators sought to make scapegoats out of Ponting
and individual members of the Australian team. Sydney Morning
Herald columnist Peter Roebuck called for Ponting to be sacked.
If Cricket Australia cares a fig for the tattered reputation
of our national team in our national sport, it will not for a
moment longer tolerate the sort of arrogant and abrasive conduct
seen from the captain and his senior players over the past few
days. Beyond comparison it was the ugliest performance put up
by an Australian side for 20 years.
Cricket Australia soon made clear its commitment to the win-at-all-costs
attitude of the players, unconditionally defending Ponting and
his team mates. It has always been the Australian way to
play the game hard but fair, CA chief executive James Sutherland
said. Tough and uncompromising is certainly the way all
Australian teams have played. It does not matter who is the captain.
As Sutherlands comments indicate, the Australian teams
conduct cannot be explained as a product of the personalities
or weaknesses of individual players. Cricket, like other professional
sports, has become a corporate circus. Relentless pressure is
constantly applied to players to perform in a hectic, all-year
schedule. Winning has become the paramount concern, because it
is necessary for attracting big business sponsorship, selling
broadcasting rights and filling stadiums. Traditional Test matches,
played over five days, have been increasingly overshadowed by
constant rounds of one-day and, more recently, 20-20 (half day)
matches.
The players themselves have become highly marketable commodities,
with their personal fortunes tied completely to on-field success.
According to the latest Business Review Weekly top 50 sports
earners rich list, issued on December 13, six members of the cricket
team joined Australias highest paid stars in 2007. Ponting
and vice-captain Adam Gilchrist led the way, with estimated annual
earnings of more than $2 million each from salaries, prize money,
sponsorships and endorsements. One cannot turn on Australian television
without seeing cricket stars peddling merchandise. Pontings
promotional advertisements include KFC (Kentucky Fried Chicken),
Victoria Bitter (VB) beer, Pura Milk, Rexona, Medibank Private,
Valvoline, Swisse and Weet-Bix.
So much money is involved in the sporting business that the
cricketers earnings still remain way down the list compared
to those of golf, soccer, motor sport, basketball and tennis identities.
Gilchrist came 21st and Ponting 24th. The record-breaking run
of 16 Test victories, however, is likely to boost their positions
considerably. Last month, the Sweeney Sports Report, which rates
the values of sports stars for sponsorship deals, announced that
Ponting and Gilchrist had become Australias most marketable
sports stars, with members of the cricket team taking five
of the top 10 positions.
Commercialism and nationalism
Some of the Australian media commentary pointed to the commercial
considerations underlying the India-Australia rift, and wider
tensions within the international cricket establishment. Sydney
Daily Telegraph columnist Robert Craddock urged the ICC
not to crumble in the face of a subcontinental blackmail
from the worlds most powerful cricket nation... Indias
cricketing wealth may be 50 times that of any rival but that does
not give them the right to run the game.
Like all forms of big business, cricket is wracked by mounting
nation-state and corporate rivalries. Each national body controls
the revenues generated from games played on its soil. The international
body, the ICC (which began its life as the Imperial Cricket Conference
in 1909) is desperately trying to bolster its own position by
hosting incessant ICC one-day and 20-20 series. It sold television
and sponsorship rights for the 2007 to 2015 World Cup for more
than $US1.1 billion (to a joint venture involving Rupert Murdochs
Star network). In 2005, the ICC moved its offices from Lords
Cricket Ground in London to Dubai, partly to enjoy tax-free status
and partly to alleviate the demands of the discontented new commercial
powerhouses of cricket in South AsiaIndia, and to a lesser
extent, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.
Wikipedia estimates that the BCCI is overtaking the English
Cricket Board (ECB) as the richest national cricket board, with
an income set to exceed the ECBs 2006 revenue of £77
million. Global media rights for international cricket played
in India between 2006 and 2010 were awarded to production house
Nimbus for $US612 million; official kit rights went to Nike for
$US43 million; sponsorship rights went to Air Sahara for $US70
million; domestic one-day media rights were sold for $US219 million;
and another $US450 million was raised from hotel, ground and travel
sponsorships. The BCCI hopes for even bigger proceeds from its
planned inter-city one-day and 20-20 competition, for which leading
overseas cricketers, including Australian stars, are being recruited.
The competition, due to commence later this year, has been launched
to counter a new privately-run Indian Cricket League, sponsored
by Zee Telefilm sports channels.
To boost its stocks, the BCCI needs victories too, both on
and off the field. In the current clash with Australia, it is
openly playing to its big business and popular constituencies,
with hefty appeals to Indian nationalism. Sharad Pawar, the boards
president, insisted that the allegation of racism against Harbhajan
was wholly unacceptable ... the game of cricket is paramount
but so too is the honour of Indias cricket team and every
Indian. Echoing the BCCIs efforts, an opinion poll
conducted for the Delhi newspaper Hindustan Times reported
that 86 percent of respondents believed Indias national
pride had been hurt. Media outlets featured pictures of people
burning effigies of umpires and Australian players.
The intersection of corporate profit and patriotic tub-thumping
was also on display in Australia. A Daily Telegraph editorial
accused India of intimidating and bullying the ICC,
while lacking the fortitude to win Tests. Doing their
utmost to stir up anti-Indian sentiment, the editorial writers
mockingly declared: All hail India the powerful new rajahs
of world cricketat least behind closed doors.
In both India and Australia, cricket, despite its peculiar
imperial history, has long been promoted by the media and political
establishments as the national sport. One Indian commentator
even referred to cricket as the national religion.
Together with other sports such as football, cricket is used as
a means to distract masses of ordinary working people from the
problems of daily life and to channel mounting anger and disaffection
into socially regressive channels. In the process, cricketers
are in turn elevated to the status of super-heroes, or dropped
like hotcakes and condemned when it suits the immediate political
and/or commercial interests.
Indian captain Kumbles comment that only one side was
playing in the spirit of the game was a pointed reference
to the England-Australia bodyline series of 1932-33,
when the Australians accused their English rivals of betraying
the spirit of game by bowling directly at batsmens bodies.
In the resulting uproar, the English team threatened to halt the
series unless the Australian authorities withdrew their accusations.
As in the 1930s Depression, when millions were thrown out of work
and a second world war loomed large, the present cricket warfare
is yet another sign of escalating economic and social tensions.
See Also:
US: Baseball steroid
reportreflection of a diseased social order
[15 December 2007]
Hypocrisy
surrounds international cricket scandal
[12 December 1998]
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