English ‘drinking culture’ affected asian and black players: best tino – News2IN
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English ‘drinking culture’ affected asian and black players: best tino

English 'drinking culture' affected asian and black players: best tino
Written by news2in

“Culture of Drinking” on the County team is partly responsible for Asian players and blacks who do not get enough opportunities in the UK Cricket, former Indian International Tino Best has said.
The former testimony of the former Cricketer Azeem Rafiq to the British Parliament Committee on Tuesday has thrown the spotlight on racism in sports in the UK, and the culture of drinking.
Read also Meet racist comments as commentators in the UK: Farokh Engineeron Wednesday, EX-India Wicketkeeper Farokh Engineer, who played for a long time for Lancashire in the 70s and then lived in England for the rest of his life, revealed to the toi.
Years ago, he experienced “racial discrimination” while starting as a commentator in England who played for Yorkshire and Hampshire.
This scandal has shaken English sports, the cost of the Yorkshire sponsor and the right to entertain England Internationals, see the Top Club Brass stop, and get involved in the biggest names in British cricket.
Best, who played with Rafiq in Yorkshire, told BBC Sport: “The culture around the cricket is a drink.
That’s a big problem.
People shouldn’t be pressed to go to Clubhouse and drink eight or nine pints to be part of the team.” “If you are not part of a drinking culture, if you are not part of a boy club, you will not get a chance after cricket,” he said.
“It is something that inhibits colored skin and ethnic Asia.” Best, 40, said he remembered how players with Asian heritage such as Rafiq, Fair Rashid and Ajmal Shahzad were treated in Yorkshire in 2010 and how they feared retaliation if they went public with their complaints.
“I also become colored skin, I will always be with them too.” He said they would complain every day about what they were through.
“I’ll be like ‘wow’,” he said.
“It was only surprising to hear what the people said in 2010.
And there was no platform for them to truly open, because people might lose a contract, maybe kicked out of the club.”

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