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Adapt now: what cricket can learn from sailing on how to be green

SailGP, by adding a competition element, has shown humans can change and that sport can help to change them

The shadow of an aeroplane over Headingley: tours with players and support staff flying in for a short time produces a vast glut of emissions. Photograph: Lee Smith/Action Images/Reuters

If you want sportspeople to make greener choices, there’s a simple way to do it: make it a competition. “Athletes really want to win things,” says Fiona Morgan, who has helped to create one of the most sustainably minded sporting tournaments in the world.

SailGP, of which Morgan is chief purpose officer, was launched four years ago to be the F1 of the sailing world – a fast-paced, high-drama racing circuit where Olympic legends such as Ben Ainslie and Heather Mills drive the fastest boats in the world, “flying” them across the water on hydrofoil stalks within easy sight of shoreline spectators. It has reinvented sport by having its sailors compete on and off the water: alongside its race fixtures, the sailors vie in an equally valuable Impact League, which measures the actions they are making to mitigate their environmental impact and innovate for a carbon-free future.

The results have been extraordinary – three seasons in, the ultra-competitive athletes have changed their behaviours so dramatically that Morgan has had to make the criteria far tougher. If you wanted proof that humans can change – and sport can help to change them – then it’s right here.

Which is good news for cricket, not least because Morgan has a vested interest in it, sitting on the board of Manchester Originals. As a sustainability champion, she is uncompromising about the big changes the sports industry needs to make, and fast, but she’s also impressed by what the England and Wales Cricket Board has already achieved.

“People underestimate what cricket have done,” she says, pointing to the Environmental Sustainability Plan for Cricket last week and the work the governing body has been quietly undertaking to help clubs build resilience into their infrastructure. “They’ve invested £5m in mitigating climate risk like flooding, which is no small thing.”

For Morgan, the Hundred offers a huge opportunity for the sport to do things differently. “Cricket’s a heritage sport, like golf or the America’s Cup,” she says. “The reason why SailGP could have sustainability at its heart was because we were starting a tournament from scratch.”

Through their Old Trafford takeover each summer, Manchester Originals have been setting more challenging sustainability goals around the stadium than had been attempted before, introducing a plant-based menu in the media centre. In September, the ground announced its first official sustainability pledge including a number of pilot schemes to encourage more travel to the venue by public transport and bike.

Gone are the days, like in 1932, when it was a slow boat from England to Australia. Photograph: HF Davis/Getty Images

The travel and tourism associated with sporting events is the thorniest part of the problem when it comes to the industry’s detrimental impact on the climate, Morgan says. “Sport is a travelling circus. That is who it is. And the value of that is really big.”

The outcome is a vast glut of emissions as planes ferry athletes, support staff, fans and equipment across the globe and back again. Staging competitions and air travel account for roughly half of the ECB’s carbon footprint.

In many sports, fixture calendars are thrown together with no thought for the travel emissions they will incur (just look at England’s tour to South Africa in January, which comprised three one-day internationals). In SailGP, they are carefully planned in order to prevent needless flying. “Everyone has the data, so they know which is the better option. It’s about changing decision-making at a senior level.”

Climate change is going to require sport to challenge the basis of some of its most embedded economic models, Morgan says. “I don’t know how we’re going to tackle this, but when a big event goes to a city the most important key performance indicator for the host is how much international tourism it will generate. Everyone is currently ignoring that and the fact it’s simply not going to be available in the same way in the future. We need to be asking how sport can drive different kinds of value – stuff that’s not footfall.”

Her message to cricket – as to all sports – is to adapt early and to adapt now. Even the most unlikely sports can make a huge contribution to a more climate-positive future: “People assume that motorsport has a terrible footprint, but some of the stuff it’s doing is incredible. The investment it can make in clean energies and car technology will shift the entire automotive industry.

“Instead of criticising sport, we need to recognise their influence. Educate your athletes. They go through EDI [equality, diversity and inclusion] training, so why wouldn’t they go through climate education? They have such a powerful voice.”

The UN has identified sport and fashion as the two consumer sectors with the greatest potential to change global behaviour because people continue to relate to them at all ages. As such, athletes have become the greatest influencers the world possesses.

Which brings us back to the idea of the impact league and whether cricket could ever be persuaded to adopt it. Could we see Nat Sciver-Brunt and Harry Brook competing to eat less meat or to lobby world governments on their environmental concerns? Morgan says that all the most-watched sports have shown interest in the concept. “In the next year you’ll see another sport doing it in some way, and one of our big ambitions is getting it into schools to inspire young people.”

In the meantime, you can see it – and the teams – in action in Dubai this weekend, at the final SailGP race of the year.

Uganda realise T20 World Cup dream

The World Cup is over, long live the T20 World Cup. And more importantly, viva Uganda, who will be making their debut in the 2024 event after qualifying for their first major tournament. The Cricket Cranes, as they are known, beat Rwanda by nine wickets in their final qualifier game last week, skittling the opposition for 65 and knocking off the runs in just over eight overs to spark joyous scenes of celebratory singing and dancing at the Wanderers Cricket ground in Windhoek, Namibia.

Uganda’s captain, Brian Msaba, who has been representing his country for nine years, took two for 10 as part of an all-round bowling effort from the team. He described the outcome as a “dream come true” as his team of students and semi-professional athletes joined Namibia as the third and final African side in the tournament. “It has been years of toil and hard work, four or five years of sacrifice,” he said “I think the whole world realises there is a lot of potential outside the big nations.”

The turning point in the Africa Qualifier tournament came when Uganda notched up their first win against a full International Cricket Council member country, beating Zimbabwe by five wickets. Neither Zimbabwe nor Kenya were able to make the final cut for the T20 tournament, which will include Oman, Nepal, Papua New Guinea, Canada and the USA.

Quote of the week

“I hope he’s OK” – Australia’s chair of selectors, George Bailey, responded to a Mitchell Johnson column criticising David Warner for his substandard form, only to prompt more ire from Johnson. “I’m OK. I want to make sure everyone knows that I’m OK and I’m actually in a good headspace.”

Memory lane

For a brief moment in a dire decade, hope flickered for England. In the first Test of the 1997 Ashes, Australia – of Warne, McGrath and all the other big ’uns – were crushed by nine wickets at Edgbaston. Headlining the show was Nasser Hussain’s Test-best of 207 after the visitors had collapsed to 54 for eight in their first innings, Andy Caddick, Darren Gough and Devon Malcolm running through the entire lineup inside 32 overs. The victory followed England’s 3-0 win in the preceding ODIs; the Australians were in some bother … until they weren’t. After a draw in the second Test, they won the next three by hefty margins: 268 runs at Old Trafford, an innings victory at Headingley, 264 runs at Trent Bridge. An English victory at the Oval to close the series was simply a consolation.

Nasser Hussain hit 207, his best Test score, at Edgbaston in 1997. Photograph: John Giles/PA

Still want more?

Harry Brook says England can take heart from ‘perfect’ batting, Simon Burnton reports from Antigua.

The ructions caused by Mitchell Johnson’s column continue.

And terrestrial TV has lost out to Amazon for coverage of World Cup tournaments in Australia.

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