Stupid Dean Jones

Jones sacked after remark
07/08/2006 18:47 - (SA)

SuperSport condemns remark

Jones calls Amla a ‘terrorist’

Durban - Former Australian Test player Dean Jones was sacked from his job as a commentator on Monday after referring to South African Muslim batsman Hashim Amla as a “terrorist”.

Jones, who admitted making the comment and apologised, was on a TV commentary team covering the second Test between Sri Lanka and South Africa in Colombo.

According to a statement issued by Cricket South Africa on Monday, viewers heard Jones say, “the terrorist has got another wicket” when Amla took the catch that dismissed Kumar Sangakkara.

Amla is a devout Muslim who wears a beard for religious reasons and has successfully negotiated with the South African team’s main sponsors, SA Breweries, not to wear the Castle Lager logo on his playing and practice gear.

“We take the strongest exception to this comment, and we will lodge an official complaint with the host broadcaster, Ten Sports, that employs him,” CSA chief executive Gerald Majola was quoted as saying.

“We will be asking for his immediate suspension and a full apology.”

The match is being broadcast live in South Africa, which has a significant Muslim community.

Jammed switchboards

“The switchboards of both CSA and SuperSport, that takes a feed of the broadcast to South African audiences, have been jammed with calls from some very angry people,” Majola was quoted as saying.

“I’m gone, I’m on the 1am flight,” Jones told reporters in Colombo where he issued a statement apologising for his comment.

“It was a silly and completely insensitive thing to say and, obviously, it was never supposed to be heard over the air,” Jones said.

"I am truly sorry to have caused offence to anybody and the last thing I intended was to be disrespectful.

"Everyone needs to get away from perpetuating the myth, publicly and privately, that beards associated with the Muslim faith are somehow suspicious, and I intend to do exactly that.

"The irony is that I am great friends with most of the Pakistan team and they are all Muslims.

"I have no end of respect for the Muslim faith - that’s why I’m so sorry at making such a stupid comment.

"It does not represent who I am, how I think or what I believe.

“I will be the first person to apologise to Hashim as soon as I get the chance, and I will assure him that prejudice against anybody, on any basis, is unacceptable and not something I will ever condone.”

The CSA statement said the incident would be reported to the International Cricket Council (ICC).

“The ICC has strongly condemned racism and we will be discussing the matter with them,” Majola was quoted as saying.

Jones, 45, played 52 Tests for Australia between 1984 and 1992 with a batting average of 46.55.

In April 2004, former Manchester United soccer manager Ron Atkinson resigned from his analyst’s job with ITV after a racist comment he made about Chelsea’s black French international defender Marcel Desailly was inadvertently broadcast.

http://www.news24.com/News24/Sport/Cricket/0,2-9-839_1979639,00.html

what is i am trying to say here is that people all around the world must stop relating mulims to terrorists, i agree that there is some extremenists but why dont they say at anyone who do a terrorist act a terrorist its racisim if u link terror with muslims cause the only place u can find peace is between muslims

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.cfm?c_id=4&ObjectID=10395462

Cricket: ‘Terrorist’ slur raises racism issue again

Thursday August 10, 2006
By Mark Geenty

SYDNEY - Dean Jones was once virtually carried off the pitch an exhausted hero after scoring a test cricket double-century in blistering Indian heat.

His brash batsmanship thrilled Australian crowds and destroyed opposition bowling attacks during a 52-test career.

He was even called on by New Zealand as an adviser for their 2003 World Cup campaign.

But yesterday his photo adorned the front pages for all the wrong reasons, after he joined names such as Lleyton Hewitt, Justin Harrison and Darren Lehmann on the list of Australian sporting quotes of shame.

It’s cost him his US$2000-a-day ($3235) job with Dubai-based television company Ten Sports, thrown his future commentary prospects into serious doubt and again highlighted the ugly issue of racism in Australian sport.

It was a throwaway line, delivered from the back of a sweltering Colombo commentary box during the Sri Lanka-South Africa test this week, when Jones thought viewers were watching advertisements.

“The terrorist has got another wicket,” Jones said, in reference to a catch taken by bearded South African batsman Hashim Amla, a devout Muslim.

To Jones’ horror, he discovered that while Sri Lankan viewers were watching ads, the cricket was still being viewed live in South Africa, where the comment was clearly heard.

There was an outcry from around the cricketing world. A furious Cricket South Africa chief executive Gerald Majola called for Jones’ immediate sacking, Jones’ employer dismissed him and the International Cricket Council called the comment “completely unacceptable”.

Arriving home in Melbourne, a contrite Jones, 45, faced the media and said he was “so sorry for making such a stupid comment”.

Amla had accepted his telephone apology and Jones insisted he was friends with several Muslim Pakistani players.

But the damage was done, joining other entries in the hall of shame:

  • Waratahs forward Justin Harrison, suspended for three Super 12 matches for calling Cats winger Chumani Booi a "black c … " in 2005.

  • Australian cricketer Darren Lehmann, given a five-match ban for exactly the same two words at Sri Lankan players after being dismissed in 2003.

  • Tennis player Lleyton Hewitt, who attempted to have a black line umpire removed during a US Open match against American James Blake in 2001, with the comment: “look at him and you tell me what the similarity is” (with Blake).

Racism in Australian sport has never been far from the headlines. Former Kiwis league player Olsen Filipaina this year recalled often being racially abused on the field in Sydney in the 1980s.

Also this year there were the Cronulla race riots, and claims from South African cricketers that they were racially abused by Australian crowds.

The Sydney Morning Herald took a dim view of Jones’ comment yesterday, devoting front and back page stories to it. Journalist Alex Brown said racial insensitivity was “a real and serious issue in Australian sport”.

“From Lehmann to Justin Harrison to Lleyton Hewitt - and the numerous controversies surrounding many Aboriginal athletes - our reputation as a fair and tolerant sporting nation has taken a battering in recent years,” Brown wrote in the Herald.

"Yet the biggest problem is not how we are perceived outside our borders but rather how we perceive ourselves.

“If, after the Jones controversy, we tolerate the outburst and roll our collective eyes at the whistleblower, we have a problem far more serious than the overseas perception.”

  • NZPA