The chairman of Yorkshire County Cricket Club resigned on Friday as the latest fallout from a racism row involving former player Azeem Rafiq plunged the English county cricket side into fresh chaos. Rafiq has accused Yorkshire of failing to deal adequately with his allegations of racism when he played for the club.
“Today I announce my resignation as chairman of Yorkshire County Cricket Club, with immediate effect,” Roger Hutton said.
“There has been a constant unwillingness from the executive members of the board and senior management at the club to apologise, and to accept that there was racism, and to look forward.”
Hutton, who joined the Yorkshire board in 2020, nearly two years after Rafiq ended his second stint at Headingley, bemoaned the failure of senior figures at the club to apologise for the way Rafiq had been treated.
“For much of my time at the club, I experienced a culture that refuses to accept change or challenge,” he added.
“During my time as chairman, I take responsibility for failing to persuade them to take appropriate and timely action… I now call for those executive members of the board to resign, to make way for a new path for the club I love so much.
“When someone makes claims as serious as his, they need to be investigated and changes need to be made. I would like to take this opportunity to apologise unreservedly to Azeem.
The crisis engulfing Yorkshire intensified when the England and Wales Cricket Board announced Thursday they were suspending the club from staging international matches as they branded the club’s handling of the Rafiq case “wholly unacceptable” and the matter “abhorrent”.