logo
#

Latest news with #TakeHerLead

Cricket must get on the front foot in helping women and girls to feel accepted
Cricket must get on the front foot in helping women and girls to feel accepted

The Guardian

time11-08-2025

  • Sport
  • The Guardian

Cricket must get on the front foot in helping women and girls to feel accepted

Nearly a quarter of a century has passed since myself and Ebony Rainford-Brent made our England cricket debuts. It was awesome for us to win World Cups together as the first two female internationals from ethnically diverse backgrounds. Since then there have been only four others, two with an Indian heritage. When you think of the interest shown in the game by the South Asian community, it is a staggering number. In 2022 I founded a charity, Take Her Lead, in honour of my mum, with the aim to increase the number of women and girls playing and staying in the game, and advance equity and diversity in cricket. We do this through connecting young players from under‑represented groups to aspirational role models through life-skills workshops, to build the mental and social skills required to stay in the sport (girls are 20% more likely to drop out of sport than boys). We also support women who work or volunteer in cricket and sports broadcasting, and fund research. While there is increased visibility and investment in the women's game, there is still a lot to be done at grassroots and community level. When Take Her Lead conducted a survey of 1,000 women and girls in 2022, we found that the majority didn't feel they belonged in the sport. Our mission is to make sure every woman and girl has the best possible experience of cricket whenever and however they are involved. One of our projects will be to give girls from South Asian backgrounds the support they need to stay in the sport. We have recently set up an advisory panel of current and former international and domestic cricketers, and experts in community and development, and the National Asian Cricket Council, and will be working with the South Asian Cricket Academy (Saca) to support 10 professional players. In the past few years I've reflected on my own personal journey, and asked myself why I've been one of the few from my background. At my first England Under-15s training camp, at 12, my first experience was someone joking about my spots. While being judged on your appearance is common for young people, its impact can be felt more when you look and feel different. For the rest of the weekend I segregated myself from everyone else and ended up getting told off by my coach. I was also very unfit and struggled to keep up. When the next training weekend came round, I told Mum I didn't want to go. Now, South Asian families are starting to realise cricket can be a viable career option and encouraging their daughters a lot more, but 25 years ago those attitudes were very different so I was grateful to my parents, who encouraged me to keep going. Mum gave me the advice and strength to go back and do the talking with my cricket. I also forced myself to get better at running: in the evenings, after school, Dad would drop me off a certain distance from home and I would have to run back with him following me in the car. I eventually got to the standards I needed! Asian parents at that time were rarely so supportive of young girls who let sport take focus away from their studies, more so than boys, but with the help of mine I could do both. When I first played for England the media celebrated the fact I was the first woman of Indian heritage to make the team. At the time I didn't want the added attention but I soon realised how important representation is. I also became more conscious of how people viewed British South Asian cricketers, both male and female – I think there was a feeling we were bad at fielding, lacked fitness and weren't as resilient, so I tried so hard to prove we weren't like that and I never wanted to be dropped for those reasons. It's fair to say, with more visibility of South Asian female role models around the world, that tag has shifted. In the England dressing room I didn't talk about my culture too much. Not because I didn't feel like I could, I just wanted to keep those parts of my life separate. In 2002, the year after my debut, I won the BBC Asian Sports Personality of the Year award, and the whole team came to the ceremony to support me. That really helped me feel part of the set-up. Sign up to The Spin Subscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week's action after newsletter promotion I went on to have a decade-long international career, but so many other South Asian girls have left the game or not taken it up at all. Earlier this year Hina Shafi, a PhD researcher at Birmingham City University, joint‑funded by Take Her Lead, the England and Wales Cricket Board, Saca and the Ace Programme, published a study highlighting the lack of representation of diverse backgrounds on the ECB's talent pathway. She found that while South Asian women and girls make up 11.6% of participants at youth level, that drops to only 3.3% of the country's professional female cricketers. Two of those 150 professionals are black. Of all parts of British society, South Asian women and girls are the least likely to take part in recommended levels of physical activity. It is not just about fitness, there are also issues with nutrition – to support me, Mum had to completely change the way she cooked at home. Period dignity historically for South Asian girls was also not talked about, and I relied on friends and teammates. Coaches also need an understanding that if a player prioritises their studies or a family event, it doesn't mean they are not committed. I said no to an Ashes tour because of my A-levels! Thankfully it didn't set me too far back in the pecking order. It is also important not to clump South Asian communities into one big group: the challenges for a Muslim girl might be different to one from the Indian Hindu community, and even within that group there'll be lots of different cultures. I picked up a quote from the former Australian international footballer Moya Dodd: 'Boys need to be competitive to feel accepted, but girls need to feel accepted to be competitive.' That acceptance is exactly what we are trying to achieve.

MCC axes plans for trans women to enter female broadcaster competition
MCC axes plans for trans women to enter female broadcaster competition

Telegraph

time27-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Telegraph

MCC axes plans for trans women to enter female broadcaster competition

Marylebone Cricket Club has scrapped a plan to allow anyone who identifies as female to enter its young female broadcaster of the year competition. MCC, in partnership with Sky Sports and Take Her Lead, a women's cricket charity, has announced the return of the competition, which hopes to 'uncover the next generation of female broadcasting talent'. According to the website, those applying must be 'females between the age of 18-24', although until Wednesday, it had stated that 'anyone identifying as female' could apply. The winner of the competition will take part in the Sky Sports Cricket coverage of The Hundred Final at Lord's, MCC's home, in August. A judging panel made up of broadcasters and representatives of the MCC and Sky Sports, chaired by Isa Guha on behalf of Take Her Lead, will select the winner. MCC said the initiative was aiming 'to increase opportunities for young women looking to forge a career in the cricket media, specifically in broadcasting'. Applications must include a showreel of the candidate presenting, which could be match commentary, a match report, a video blog or an interview. Five shortlisted runners-up will then be invited to Lord's for England Women's One-Day International against India on July 19. It is understood that legacy copy from last year's competition was used for the application page, wrongly suggesting that trans people could take part. This has now been updated to reflect the Supreme Court ruling in April this year that the legal definition of a woman is based on biological sex. A Government spokesman welcomed the Supreme Court ruling for bringing 'clarity and confidence for women, and services such as hospitals, refuges, and sports clubs'. Katie Maier, the chief marketing and communications officer at MCC, said: 'MCC is committed to improving opportunities for females at all levels and areas of the game and we hope this campaign has opened up opportunities for more young females, who we know are still under-represented in the industry.' The England and Wales Cricket Board banned transgender women from playing women's cricket at all levels in May. It said: 'With immediate effect, only those whose biological sex is female will be eligible to play in women's cricket and girls' cricket matches. Transgender women and girls can continue playing in open and mixed cricket.' MCC voted to allow women to join the club in 1998 after more than two centuries of being an all-male club. As of May this year, less than three per cent of its 18,350 members were women, but there was a 77 per cent increase in women applying to qualify as player members last year. In 2021, MCC officially amended the laws of the game to remove the word batsman and replace it with the gender-neutral term 'batter'.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store