Sachin Tendulkar bats for racist Ollie Robinson over England suspension for tweets

England's Ollie Robinson fields on the fifth day of the first Test cricket match against New Zealand at Lord's Cricket Ground in London

FILE - England's Ollie Robinson fields on the fifth day of the first Test cricket match against New Zealand at Lord's Cricket Ground in London. Photo: Adrian Dennis/AFP

Published Jun 15, 2021

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NEW DELHI – Cricket icon Sachin Tendulkar said Tuesday England should allow Ollie Robinson to start playing again, after the fast bowler apologised following his suspension for historic racist and sexist tweets.

Robinson, 27, was suspended from the England team after the posts resurfaced earlier this month when he made his Test debut against New Zealand.

He impressed with both bat and ball in the drawn game, but was then barred from international duty pending the outcome of an investigation by the England and Wales Cricket board.

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"We need to understand that he did that many, many years ago and he is sorry about it," Tendulkar told AFP.

"They left him out in the second Test in spite of doing well and he realises what he had done... he apologised and also said that this won't happen again," he said.

"We need to be fair to him and at some stage he should start playing," he added.

ALSO READ: England must 'face up to things' after Twitter racism row, says Joe Root

Robinson led England's attack with 4-75 in the first innings at Lord's and followed up with 3-26 in the second while in between making a useful 42 with the bat.

But he found himself making an apology after stumps on day one of the opening Test for tweets that included comments suggesting Muslim people were linked to terrorism and derogatory remarks about women and people of Asian heritage.

He took a short break and skipped two opening games last week for his county side Sussex to be with his family.

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Sussex have said Robinson "is a very different man from the one that wrote those tweets", and Tendulkar said he could not agree more.

"You have to move on. If the players apologise and are sorry about it, not as a formality, but from the bottom of their heart then we should move on," said Tendulkar.

"I am not saying don't reprimand them or whatever that penalty is. That has already happened. For an athlete, if you are left out of an event then that itself is a big blow."

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Robinson's suspension has divided opinion, with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden saying the ECB's decision was "over the top".

The ECB though has ordered a "social media review" to address player behaviour.

Since Robinson's posts emerged, the social media feeds of a number of international players have been under scrutiny, with an unnamed player found to have sent offensive tweets while under the age of 16.

AFP

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