Monday, 26 September 2016

South African quota system is an issue

South African’s face great concern regarding the implementation of the quota system, and how it has recently affected the National Cricket team. The players, who this system is supposed to benefit, find it irrelevant and risky for the success of their games.  

Florida’s White Hawks is a U13 cricket team with only white players. Although the other age groups have a diverse group of players, this specific team and their name stand out, especially when it comes to the quota system and their requirements for the South Africa’s national cricket team, the Proteas. In a recent article from BusinessTech, the board of directors of Cricket South Africa (CSA) had “discussed the possibility of having a quota of six players of colour in the national team,” full article at http://businesstech.co.za/news/lifestyle/132103/new-quota-system-for-south-africas-cricket-team/

With regards to a team like the Florida White Hawks, this would be challenging should the local teams continue to only train white players in the sport, at an early. Thabani Mtolo, a cricket fan says “enough isn’t being done for black players to play at the highest level, resulting in a dilemma regarding the quota system”. 

 In the 24 years since the country has been readmitted to international cricket, only seven of the 91 players to win test caps have been black African.  Themba Bavuma who was the country’s first black African cricketer to score a 100 in a test match, seemed to have open doors for many other black Africans interested in the sport. 

In a recent survey that News24 reported on, it was stated that most Black South Africans oppose the whole sports quota system. “More than 70% of black South Africans do not believe that sport teams should be picked based on transformation goals, but rather purely on merit.” Full article at http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/most-black-south-africans-oppose-sport-quotas-survey-20160531

It is challenging for one to look at a local cricket team and find a diverse team with unskilled players. A team shouldn’t be built up based on colour but on merit, as the sport is about having the best players represent the team, and not just a “rainbow nation”. Lance Harris, a local cricket coach says “the systems in place themselves are a problem, it’s not the transformation. If you look at talented people in the country, you can’t ignore race. What you find is that White parents see their child has a skill from an early age, and push them further by placing them in an elite school with good coaching, having that child start early because the parents can afford that, whereas the Black children’s parents can’t usually afford to take them to the best schools”.

The way the quota system is implemented has a negative effect on the sports itself, as our country is actually good. A team like the Proteas results in adding players that aren’t necessarily good but because they have to cater to the quota system, they end up performing badly. 

The best solution to this is the system itself. From a young age, having the child Black or White, the government needs to ensure that the schools sports programs are at a higher level, and cater to the different races, especially in public schools. If the children in public schools are exposed to more sport and trained well, the quota system can fall away, as everyone will have an equal opportunity to compete for placement. There needs to be a constant, consistent flow from the bottom (Primary School) to the top (Nationals). Various platforms and structures need to be implemented at a junior level, where Black children are taught the sport from an early age, and develop their skills. It is pointless to start applying strict quota systems at a National level, when half the team hasn’t practised and mastered the sport from an early age.



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