Matthew Hoggard, Tim Bresnan, John Blain withdraw from ECB racism listening to

Matthew Hoggard and Tim Bresnan, the previous England quick bowlers, together with ex-Scotland worldwide John Blain have all joined Andrew Gale in withdrawing from the disciplinary course of referring to allegations of historic racism at Yorkshire.

The quartet of former Yorkshire cricketers had been amongst seven individuals resulting from seem earlier than the Cricket Discipline Commission (CDC) in March, on fees levelled by the ECB in June following allegations made by their former team-mate, Azeem Rafiq.

However, it’s understood that Hoggard, Bresnan and Blain have now taken the identical strategy that Gale took final 12 months, informing the ECB that they’ve misplaced confidence within the course of and that they won’t try and defend themselves towards the fees.

After what the ECB described as a “thorough and complex investigation”, the gamers had been charged in accordance with Directive 3.3, which says: “No participant may conduct themselves in a manner or do any act or omission at any time which is improper or which may be prejudicial to the interests of cricket or which may bring the ECB, the game of cricket or any cricketer or group of cricketers into disrepute.”

Gale, the former club captain and latterly head coach – who is also Bresnan’s brother-in-law – responded two weeks later with a statement that denied all the allegations against him, adding that he had “moved on along with his life”. He was also one of the 16 members of staff who won an employment tribunal against Yorkshire last year, after their collective sacking in the wake of the allegations.

Hoggard’s witness statement, parts of which were revealed in The Cricketer last week, will be his only contribution to the commission. At the time of writing, only Hoggard’s former England captain and fellow 2005 Ashes-winner, Michael Vaughan, and former bowling coach Richard Pyrah are due to participate with the process. Gary Ballance, who has left Yorkshire and returned to play for Zimbabwe, the country of his birth, accepted his CDC charge on five counts, including the use of racist language, but will not appear at the hearings.

In November 2022, the CDC announced the hearing would be made public which in turn led to a delay in the process due to respondents appealing the decision. However, the ECB confirmed to the Press Association on January 13 that those appeals had been dismissed by an independent Appeal Panel convened by the CDC.

It is known that Hoggard, Bresnan and Blain cite this, together with a lack of confidence within the course of following leaks to the media, as causes for not volunteering to the inquiry.

Source web site: www.espncricinfo.com

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