Cricketer's suspension over the top - Dowden
Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden says the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) "has gone over the top" in suspending bowler Ollie Robinson for historical racist and sexist tweets.
The posts from 2012 and 2013 were revealed while Robinson was making his England debut during the drawn first Test against New Zealand at Lord's.
Robinson, 27, has been dropped for the second Test, which begins at Edgbaston on Thursday, pending an investigation.
Dowden asked the ECB to "think again".
Dowden said the tweets were "offensive and wrong" but "also a decade old and written by a teenager".
The tweets, posted when Robinson was aged 18 and 19, came to light on Wednesday afternoon, while he was on the field.
After play, he apologised, saying he was "embarrassed" and "ashamed".
"I am sorry, and I have certainly learned my lesson today," he said. "I want to make it clear that I'm not racist and I'm not sexist."
The ECB must determine whether Robinson was contracted at the time of the tweets, which cover a period when he left Kent and joined Yorkshire.
If he did not have a contract, the investigation will be carried out by the ECB. If Robinson had a county contract at the time, the Cricket Discipline Commission, which is independent of the ECB, will carry out the investigation.
At the conclusion of the match on Sunday, England captain Joe Root said the tweets were "not acceptable".
"Ollie has made a huge mistake," Root told BBC Test Match Special. "He fronted up to the dressing room and the rest of the world, and he's very remorseful."
Robinson returned match figures of 7-101 and scored 42 in his only innings against New Zealand.
Former England captain Michael Vaughan told BBC Sport: "He has got to go away, learn and educate himself - and become a better person for it.
"In terms of what he has delivered on the cricket field, he is a Test-match player. He will certainly be back playing Test cricket."
On the morning his tweets were shared online, England shared a 'moment of unity' with the tourists, with Root's side wearing T-shirts carrying messages of anti-discrimination.
"It's a lesson to everyone in the game," added Root. "More has to be done, that continued education and learning about how to behave in society and within our sport.
"We've started doing a lot of good work as a team and we'll continue to do that. We want to make the game as inclusive and diverse as we possibly can and we'll continue to keep looking at finding ways to make that possible."
June 07, 2021 at 10:39PM
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cricket/57383097
Labels: BBC News
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