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Shannon Gabriel charged by ICC

by Barbados Today
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Shannon Gabriel (third right) has been charged by the ICC for alleged homophobic comments.

Shannon Gabriel, the West Indies fast bowler, has been charged with an ICC Code of Conduct breach after making an apparently homophobic remark in an exchange with the England captain, Joe Root, during the St Lucia Test.

Stump mics caught an interaction on the third afternoon of the Test between Gabriel and two England batsmen, Root and Joe Denly, which ended with Root saying: โ€œDonโ€™t use it as an insult. Thereโ€™s nothing wrong with being gay.โ€

In a tweet, the ICC confirmed that Gabriel had been charged with a breach of Article 2.13 of the Code of Conduct.

Shannon Gabriel (third right) has been charged by the ICC for alleged homophobic comments.

Shannon Gabriel (third right) has been charged by the ICC for alleged homophobic comments.

โ€œThe charge, which was laid by match umpires, will now be dealt with by Match Referee Jeff Crowe. Until the proceedings have concluded, the ICC will not comment further.โ€

Although the mics did not catch Gabrielโ€™s earlier comments, it is understood the umpires spoke to him about them at the time. No action was taken at the time, but the incident attracted widespread media action, with Stonewall, the UK equality charity, praising Rootโ€™s stance on the issue.

Kirsty Clarke, director of sport at Stonewall, told Press Association Sport: โ€œLanguage is really influential and itโ€™s great if Joe Root was willing to challenge potentially abusive comments.

โ€œThe more players, fans, clubs and organisations that stand up for equality in sport, the sooner we kick discrimination out and make sport everyoneโ€™s game.

โ€œStonewall research shows more than half of British people (58 per cent) believe itโ€™s important anti-LGBT language is challenged at live sporting events.โ€

Root was reluctant to draw attention to Gabrielโ€™s remarks once play had finished. He seemed to accept the fast bowler may have said something inappropriate, but was not understood to have reported it to officials and suggested such exchanges should stay on the field.

โ€œSometimes people say things on the field that they might regret, but they should stay on the field,โ€ Root said.

โ€œItโ€™s Test cricket and heโ€™s an emotional guy trying to do everything he can to win a Test match. Heโ€™s a good guy who plays hard cricket and is proud to be in the position he is. The battle was a good contest, heโ€™s had a wonderful series and he should be proud.โ€

Nasser Hussain, the former England captain, said that Rootโ€™s actions had been hugely significant. โ€œI donโ€™t know who said what to whomโ€ฆbut boy do I applaud Joe Rootโ€™s reaction here,โ€ Hussain wrote on Twitter. โ€œFor me his twelve words as a role model will be in the end more important than a test hundred or possible victory.โ€

Richard Pybus, West Indiesโ€™ interim coach, said he was not aware of the comments but suggested that, if they were deemed โ€œuntowardโ€, it would be addressed.

โ€œNothing has been reported to me,โ€ he said. โ€œBut if a comment was made, weโ€™ll review it. And, if it was untoward, weโ€™ll be addressing it.โ€

The incident may speak of a culture clash as much as anything. Radio stations in some parts of the Caribbean regularly play music with lyrics that would be viewed as homophobic and unacceptable in the UK โ€“ or many other places โ€“ while some homosexual acts remain illegal across much of the region.

Article 2.13 of the ICCโ€™s code of conduct applies to use of โ€œlanguage of a personal, insulting, obscene and/or offensive natureโ€, with a range of charges covering different levels of seriousness.

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