- Apr 5, 2014
- 25,909
I agree with all that (I sense you may be a bit younger than me).I had a very different state school experience. I grew up in London and played club cricket for a fairly working class team, my state school and my regional area side under the County banner. In the wake of the 2005 Ashes there was a huge clamour to play Cricket in state schools and the schools league we played in was fantastically competitive (with a chunk of funding from the Lords Taverners).
I played with some sensational players, who had they been at private school (especially from a younger age), would have slotted into the County structure and probably have been able to make a solid career of things. The issue is access both in terms of equipment and time. Private schools usually finish their terms considerably earlier than state schools, and most counties cater camps/training/games towards those private school term times. That's before you even think about whether a state school can afford to have and maintain nets/bowling machines/new balls/bats/etc.
I think it's fair to say that cricket is less of a focus for state schools, but there are a ridiculous number of kids who are clearly talented enough to play in the academy system who get blocked from doing so due to a pre-existing recruitment bias towards the private schools.
I don't think it's an intended bias though. If you want honey you go to where the beehive is.