Jdz said:
Haven't read the whole thread but I'll comment and say
"They're sporting stars and should learn to deal with crap like that."
:/
Which, ultimately, is what they and others before them have done. Doesn't make it right that they should have to put up with it, though.
Interesting to see history repeating itself. In England, we had huge problems with racist abuse aimed at black footballers in the 70's and 80's. Less so in cricket, although sections of Headingley were notoriously bad.
At the time, we were told various combinations of:
a) it was only a minority
b) it was society's problem, not football's
c) actually it wasn't happening.
Of course, given that sort of approach, the problem didn't go away at all and things didn't improve until clubs accepted that actually they did have a responsibility for what went on in their grounds and started to give these morons a hard time. Nowadays, of course, this is more of a problem in the Spanish and Italian leagues, and once again we have the same heads-in-the-sand attitude from their authorities that we used to get in England.
At least the Aus cricket authorities are saying the right things. It really shouldn't be hard to identify the culprits, and it remains to be seen what will actually be done about them.
Sport cannot just blame "society" for what some of its followers get up to. On the contrary, it is an immensely powerful institution, and, if it chooses to, it can play a big part in shaping people's attitudes. In England, for far too long, we were worried about upsetting what we knew full well were rather a lot of our paying customers, so we did nothing. Regrettably, things seem no better in mainland Europe. Hopefully the Australians will actually o the right thing and send a clear message that this sort of behaviour will not be tolerated in civilise society.