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'Eradicate this from our sport': Maro Itoje on racism in rugby after damning report

By PA
(Photo by Visionhaus/Getty Images)

Maro Itoje says he has experienced moments that have been “below standard” as rugby confronts the findings of a damming report stating racism exists at all levels of the professional game in England.

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Independent research jointly commissioned by three governing bodies in the wake of the racial abuse faced by Luther Burrell while a player at Newcastle produced a number of alarming revelations.

Interviews with players, staff and parents of academy players found “experiences of racism in every area of elite rugby covered – men’s and women’s game, national team, clubs and academies”.

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The report continued: “Very often these took the form of inappropriate or discriminatory comments and jokes from team-mates, opposition players and coaches.

“In the majority of experiences, these were described as repeated occurrences rather than one-off incidents.”

England lock Itoje is concerned by the picture emerging from around 500 interviews conducted as part of the ‘Purpose Union’ and ‘Inclusion and Diversity Survey’ projects, while touching on moments of racism endured during his own rugby career.

“Obviously that’s not a great place to be, that’s not what we want in our sport,” Itoje said.

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“As always, we need to be actively trying to be anti-racist and try to eradicate this from our sport, our game, and our lives.

“I guess I’ve had a few experiences where things weren’t exactly what I’d have liked. I’ve never felt my skin colour has held me back in terms of selection, in terms of playing, of how the coaches have perceived me.

“But I guess there’s been occasions with individuals throughout my time that have been below standard.

“You challenge the situation. Most people don’t realise what they are saying or doing is racist until you actually explain it to them.

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“Often when you explain to them ‘this is what you said and it means this when you said it me’, once they understand the connotation and context behind it, more often than not they realise and learn from the situation. That’s how I’ve seen it so far.

“As a society, this is something we wrestle with from time to time. I do think there have been improvements. I do think that if you compare society today to 50 years ago, my experience growing up is a lot different from my father’s experience of the time he spent in London growing up.

“There has been improvements, but this is a further reminder that we need to continue to challenge this, to make sure we’re holding each other to account.”

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SK 14 minutes ago
The Reds' 'whimpering' exit shows Super Rugby scrums still matter

The Scrum remains a key platform in the game. There may be fewer set in SR Pacific and fewer penalties given but you cannot escape its importance and that is how it should be. The scrum cannot become an irrelevant thing in Rugby. It deserves its own space in the game however too much time is spent setting a scrum and thats where the refs need to be more strict. They need to demand effort from players and award 10metres or penalties if the scrums are not set fast enough by one team or the other. The sixty seconds to set will only help if its enforced strictly. The Refs in the Top 14, URC, Champs Cup and Prem have been too slack in adequately policing the times setting scrums. Too many teams simply dawdle at scrum time because they are on the back foot. Theres nothing more frustrating than watching a clock count down and players having a chat with the ref at scrum time or stand up because they packed in badly. Refs need to get serious on it. In 1995 scrums were set in seconds. The laws came in to make them safer but now its way too time consuming. I feel like too often refereeing is done according to feeling and not mandate. There needs to be consistent standards across the game. While SR referees will penalise a 9 for not using it in the 5 seconds it rarely happens in Europe. Andrew Brace did it this weekend to Embrose Papier but that was after like 10 seconds. The Refs need to get more assertive about time wasting and following the time limit guidelines and this needs to happen across all leagues at once. Only then will we have a game for all refereed at the same standard.

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