David Lloyd apologises for comments on Asian players

Cricket commentator David Lloyd apologises after Azeem Rafiq told a British parliamentary committee that Lloyd had made disparaging comments about Asian cricketers.

Published : Nov 17, 2021 11:11 IST

David Lloyd, the then England coach, at a practice session in Nottingham, England, during the Cricket World Cup 1999. Lloyd has been a commentator with Sky Sports for many years.
David Lloyd, the then England coach, at a practice session in Nottingham, England, during the Cricket World Cup 1999. Lloyd has been a commentator with Sky Sports for many years.
lightbox-info

David Lloyd, the then England coach, at a practice session in Nottingham, England, during the Cricket World Cup 1999. Lloyd has been a commentator with Sky Sports for many years.

Cricket commentator David Lloyd has apologised after Azeem Rafiq told a British parliamentary committee that the former England coach had made disparaging comments about Asian cricketers.

In Tuesday’s distressing testimony, Rafiq, 30, catalogued a culture of widespread racism at his county club Yorkshire, describing the “inhuman” treatment he had received. He also said the sport in England was riddled with racism.

Rafiq testified that members of the media was also guilty of racism and identified Lloyd, now a Sky Sports pundit, as messaging others in the media and saying: “a clubhouse is the lifeblood of a club and Asian players don’t go in there.”

“In October 2020, I had a private message exchange with a third party involved in cricket, about a number of topics,” Lloyd said in a statement on Twitter on Tuesday.

RELATED - Rafiq calls Root ‘good man’ but criticises him for pleading ignorance to institutional racism

“In these messages, I referred to allegations about Azeem Rafiq which I had heard from within the game. I also made some comments about the Asian cricket community. I deeply regret my actions, and I apologise most sincerely to Azeem and to the Asian cricket community for doing this, and for any offence caused.

 

“I am strongly committed to making cricket a more inclusive sport. It is very obvious now that more work needs to be done and I will do everything I can to remove discrimination from the sport I love, and the sport that has been my life for over 50 years.”

In his testimony, Rafiq said he found Lloyd’s comments “disturbing” as his employer Sky was doing “amazing work on bringing racism to the front,” describing the 74-year-old as “closet racist.”

Sky said it would be investigating Lloyd’s comments.

Sky is committed to actively championing inclusion in cricket - and in all sports - and opposing all forms of discrimination,” it said in a statement.

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment