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Windrush and the rise of wandering Caribbean cricket clubs that fuelled talent in English game

about 14 hours ago
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In the early 1980s there were scores of “Caribbean” cricket clubs playing across England, many of them bearing evocative names such as New Calypsonians, Island Taverners, Paragon, Starlight and Carib United.Mostly these clubs operated under the radar – as wandering sides renting pitches on municipal grounds that were outside the traditional league structures.With few physical records of their existence, their history has been in danger of being lost as numbers have plummeted since the late 1990s.Thankfully, though, there are at least a few people dedicated to documenting the players and personalities who made up such a vibrant part of the domestic game from the late 1940s.And now there’s a new book, Windrush Cricket, by the University College London associate professor of history Michael Collins, setting out their origins and impact.

Collins’ writings have emerged out of the UCL-sponsored Windrush Cricket Project, which has in turn spawned the Caribbean Cricket Archive, a database recording all the Caribbean clubs that have existed in the UK since the creation of the first recognisably West Indian team, Leeds Caribbean CC, in 1948.So far the archive has logged 130 clubs, from Cowley West Indians in Oxford and Brixton Beehives in London to Mead Brooke Cavaliers in High Wycombe and West Indian Carib in Nottingham.They’re all in England, but there are more to be mapped, and others may emerge in different parts of the United Kingdom.Collins is not sure if the project will ever log all the clubs that existed, but his research suggests the figure on the database may rise to 150 or more, and he adds that “what we can say with certainty is that by the 1980s the Windrush generation had evolved a vast structure of black cricket clubs and black Caribbean cricketing talent”.It was this framework that fed into the emergence of many of the first black cricketers to play for England – among them Devon Malcolm from Sheffield Caribbean, David Lawrence from Bristol West Indians and Michael Carberry from Old Castletonians in south London.

Collins argues that West Indian cricket clubs were, in fact, one of the main vehicles that allowed people of Caribbean origin to try to win themselves a foothold in British society from the 1950s to the late 1990s.Formed partly as a response to the hostile environment of existing teams throughout the land, he says that for new arrivals to the country they acted not just as a safe space to play the game but as hubs for “self-help, support services and the development of social capital”, while for subsequent generations, born in the UK, they were often a refuge from racism in multiple spheres.Since the late 1990s, however, the number of Caribbean clubs has dwindled dramatically, partly due to societal factors but also thanks to the decline in prowess of the West Indies Test team, which once drove interest in the game among young black Britons.Sadly, Collins concludes that there’s no way back, and that the numbers are unlikely to rise again.But at least he and others have begun to put together a historical record that helps us gain a better appreciation of the contribution such clubs made to the game.

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UK government rolls back key part of digital ID plans

Ministers have rolled back plans for a central element of the proposed digital ID plans, leaving open the possibility that people will be able to use other forms of identification to prove their right to work.This will mean that the IDs, announced to some controversy in September, will no longer be mandatory for working-age people, given that the only planned obligatory element was to prove the right to work in the UK.While officials said this was not a U-turn, just a tweak before a detailed consultation on how the system will function, it will be viewed as the latest in a series of policy changes, including on business rates and inheritance tax for farmers.When Keir Starmer announced the proposal for digital IDs by 2029 they were billed as voluntary, with the exception that they would be mandatory for people to show they were legally allowed to work.This was portrayed by the prime minister as a main benefit of the plan

1 day ago
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‘I’ve had vets chasing lorries down the motorway’: The ‘hell’ of post-Brexit paperwork

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1 day ago
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Wes Streeting attacks centre-left for ‘excuses culture’ of blaming civil service

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1 day ago
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China’s London super-embassy almost certain to get go-ahead next week

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1 day ago
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UK politics: Tories call for block on Chinese super-embassy amid claims of hidden chamber near sensitive cables – as it happened

Responding to Pennycook, Alicia Kearns, a shadow Home Office minister, said she was disappointed by the fact that she just got a “technocratic history lesson” from the minister.She went on:208 secret rooms and a hidden chamber just one metre from cable serving City of London and the British people. That is what the unredacted plans tell us that the Chinese Communist Party has planned for its new embassy if the government gives them the go ahead. Indeed, we now know they plan to demolish the wall between the cables and their embassy cables, in which our economy is dependent.Kearns said this would mean the Chinese could have access to “cables carrying millions of British people’s emails and financial data”, and she said this meant they would have “a launchpad for economic warfare against our nation”

1 day ago
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Wes breaks cover to challenge Keir – without even mentioning him | John Crace

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1 day ago
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