
Condenado a nueve meses de prisiĂłn un aficionado por insultos racistas a Rashford
Condenan a un aficionado a 9 meses de prisiĂłn por insultos racistas a Rashford

Sajid Mahmood, a former England cricketer, is promoting cricket in state schools after retiring from professional play. He is involved with the Knight-Stokes Cup, a new competition aimed at providing opportunities for state-educated children in cricket.
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As a state school-educated international cricketer, the former England bowler Sajid Mahmood has always been in the minority. A report from the Sutton Trust charity last year found 59% of professional male cricketers in England went to independent schools, ranking the sport behind only the armed forces (63%) and senior judges (62%) as the countryâs most privately educated profession. Yet Mahmood has become even more of an outlier since his playing retirement.
While it is common for former professional cricketers to take up positions as private school coaches once they hang up their playing boots, Mahmood has spent the past eight years teaching the sport to state school students in west London. It is a path so uncommon that he is yet to encounter another England cricketer in the state system.
âIâm fully aware of state schools not really having cricket opportunities,â said Mahmood, who played 38 times for England between 2004 and 2009. âThatâs where I came from, so it was important for me to give those opportunities to people who canât necessarily access good coaching or get an insight into what it takes to play professionally.
âIâm quite passionate about passing on that knowledge to state school kids. I want to level that playing field, almost.â
That passion has seen Mahmood become an unofficial ambassador for a new national cricket competition launched last week solely for state-educated children. In a couple of days, Mahmoodâs school â William Perkin Church of England High School, in Greenford â will play their opening fixture in the Knight-Stokes Cup.
Named after two of Englandâs greatest state-educated cricketers, Ben Stokes and Heather Knight, the competition will culminate in a Finals Day on the main pitch at Lordâs in September. Open to all state schools in the United Kingdom, around one-fifth have signed up to take part, with approximately 1,100 boysâ and 400 girlsâ under-15 teams vying for a rare chance to play at the home of cricket.

Pupils from the Grey Coat Hospital school in Westminster practising their cricketing skills. Photograph: James Bailey/MCC
It is an admirable concept, launched as an attempt to counter-balance the longstanding elitist fixture between Eton and Harrow that still takes place at Lordâs each year in spite of growing opposition. And it is something the MCC Foundation, who are organising and delivering the competition, are taking seriously, with a new honours board installed in the pavilion for the winners.
The Knight-Stokes Cup is a new national cricket competition launched for state-educated children in England.
Sajid Mahmood teaches cricket to state school students and promotes opportunities for them to access quality coaching.
According to a report from the Sutton Trust, 59% of professional male cricketers in England went to independent schools.
William Perkin Church of England High School is located in Greenford, west London.

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âI love the fact that thereâs been some time, money and exposure being pushed towards specifically a state school competition,â said Stokes. âSometimes thatâs where you find the rogue, raw, rare, talented people.â
The extent of its ambition is realistic. In launching the tournament, the MCC president, Ed Smith, described it as âa catalystâ rather than âa complete answer on its ownâ. No one competition can shift an entire national landscape, especially when there are overwhelmingly large factors preventing the sportâs widespread growth.

Pupils at Lordâs for the Eton v Harrow cricket match at the ground. Photograph: James Boardman/Alamy
In news that will surprise no one, the main impediment to state school cricket up and down the country remains a pitiful lack of facilities â a fact that different governments over multiple decades are answerable for.
Mahmoodâs school is one of the fortunate ones. Thanks to a previous sport-loving headteacher who placed importance on physical activity, pupils there have access to an outdoor cricket pitch, four outdoor nets and four more indoors.
At Blythe Bridge High School, in Staffordshire, there are no playing or training facilities, although the schoolâs healthy local relationships mean they are able to play and train at a number of cricket clubs nearby. With a smattering of players on the cusp of county recognition and a hat-trick from star man Oliver Staten, they eased through their opening fixture last week and have high hopes.
âOur kids are excited about this,â said Cory Flint, Blythe Bridgeâs head of PE. âWeâre quite a strong state school so weâve said that we can go pretty far in the competition. But you never know.â
At the Winston Churchill School in Surrey, ambitions are somewhat lower. Matches are played on a worn artificial strip in the middle of the schoolâs running track. âThe players just wear their PE kit,â said PE teacher Jack Fuller. âWe donât ask them to wear full whites because we donât want to make students buy something if they are only going to play a few games.â

Pupils at the Knight-Stokes Cup launch event at Lordâs. Photograph: Jed Leicester/MCC
Playing regulations for the competition are intentionally loose to remove as many impediments as possible. Mahmood also points to the importance of private schools signing up for their state equivalents to use their facilities during the tournament. Collaboration is a key part of the vision.
âThereâs been close to 100 independent schools who have put their names forward, which I think is crucial,â said the former Lancashire bowler. âLiving as neighbours, itâs important that the independent schools allow state schools to use those facilities as well â thatâs one of the ways we can really use the competition to grow the sport. Independent schools are playing their part in this as well.â
The competitionâs primary aim is to broaden cricketâs reach â an ambition that is difficult to construe negatively, regardless of how shallow the impact of one competition might be. A secondary ambition is to potentially unearth some gems.
âHopefully in five or six yearsâ time, youâve got six or seven players who are professionally contracted that can say they were part of the Knight-Stokes Cup,â said Stokes.
Mahmood agreed: âTowards the latter end of the tournament, we might see some really good players. I wouldnât be surprised if we find some who havenât been involved in any pathway and actually get earmarked for county cricket.â
That is all for the future. Small seeds, humble beginnings and all that. As Mahmood says: âThe more we can get done, the more it goes from a box-ticking tournament to something that can actually make a real impact.â