South Africa scrutinise 'racial' terms
By Charles Randall in Johannesburg
THE possibility that some ordinary cricket terminology could be
deemed offensive is being investigated in South Africa as a
result of two cases of on-field misbehaviour punished by the
cricket authorities yesterday.
The United Cricket Board of South Africa have asked Brian
McMillan, the former Test all-rounder, to make a public apology
for using the words "coolie creeper" during a match - meaning a
ball bowled along the ground - and they banned Alan Badenhorst,
the Eastern Province B captain, for almost two years for calling
an opponent a "half-bred kaffir".
In addition, the board confirmed yesterday they had discussed the
potential problem raised by general cricket expressions, saying
they had a duty to ensure terminology was not offensive to any
community in South Africa.
The UCB did not identify specific words, though Brian Basson,
director of umpiring and playing affairs, agreed that 'chinaman',
the left-armer's wrist-spun off-break, and 'chinese cut', an
inside edge through the legs, could be examples, but he added: "I
don't think there are any people in South Africa of Chinese
origin playing cricket." Basson said: "We shall have to be
careful about other terms like 'whitewash' [a one-sided victory]
and many others."
The expression coolie creeper - 'grubber' in England - is not
totally accepted as part of cricket. For example, Goolam Bodi,
20, Gauteng's India-born chinaman bowler, dislikes it. "It does
sound offensive to me," he said.
"Chinaman is different because that's the name given to the
left-armer's wrist spin everywhere."
McMillan said: "It is a load of crap. Does this mean that a
'chinaman' is no longer a left-arm spinner's googly but a racial
slur?" He claimed initially he was not prepared to apologise but
the UCB said yesterday he would escape with a severe reprimand
only if he made a public apology after the current Western
Province match on Sunday.
Badenhorst, for his "crude and abusive" language to Mario Arthur,
a Griqualand West batsman, was ruled out of all cricket until Jan
1, 2000.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)