Daniel Brettig, Assistant editor, ESPNcricinfo 4y

Black Lives Matter: Justin Langer accepts Michael Holding's criticism about not taking a knee

England v Australia 2020, Cricket

Australia's coach Justin Langer has admitted that the national team did not commit enough time to understanding and learning about the Black Lives Matter issue before choosing not to take a knee prior to their first game since the movement entered the cricket world in a big way earlier this year.

Following blunt criticism from Michael Holding, Langer said that as Cricket Australia went through its own extensive process of reflection about how inclusive it has been for people of colour, the team should have found more time to contemplate taking a knee before the opening match of the T20I series in Southampton.

"In terms of the taking a knee, to be completely honest we could've talked more about it perhaps leading up to that first game; there was so much going on leading up to us getting here, maybe we should've thought and talked a bit more about it," Langer said. "What we do talk about in the team is we want to have a response that is sustained and powerful and it can go, not just in one action, but sustained periods, not just throughout this series, throughout our summer, but throughout time.

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"We're looking at ways, I know there's a lot of talk going on within our group about how we can, I know there's a lot of talking going on about the Australian women's team as well, about how we can have a sustained and powerful response to Black Lives Matter. It's incredibly important, and I just hope and certainly from Mikey's point of view I hope if it looked like there was a lack of respect there, that certainly wasn't the intention of our team.

"We're very aware of it, and when Mikey says what he says, then it's certainly worth listening to and we'll be doing that."

Prior to the game, Australia captain Aaron Finch had explained that "education around it is more important than the protest", in reference to the symbolic gesture made by a succession of sporting teams around the world in recent months.

Holding had bridled at this attitude. "Now Australia come here and I see another lame statement from the Australia captain who is saying that he and the England captain have spoken and they decided not to take a knee," Holding had said on Sky Sports. "I would hope that anyone who gets involved in something like this [does it] because they want to get involved.

"So I would hope that people who are joining in, and are still willing to accept that things need to change and need to send a signal, will voluntarily do what they think is right."

Langer, who has overseen a reinvention of the Australian team's image since the Newlands ball-tampering scandal in 2018, conceded he and others had been stopped in their tracks by Holding's words.

"Michael Holding is one of the great people of world sport, and certainly our game," Langer said. "He's a person who I personally have great admiration, great respect, great love for, and we all watched his presentation, his heartfelt thoughts at the start of the summer. When someone like Michael says something like that, it is certainly important we all listen to it.

"It was a powerful statement by Mikey, as it has been consistently from him and from others throughout the summer, and because of that, it was a powerful message."