Key Points
- Usman Khawaja wants to see more diversity in Australian cricket.
- 32 per cent of local players are multi-cultural
Test cricketer Usman Khawaja wants to see Australian cricket have similar levels of multicultural representation at elite level as there is at the local level.
Of all registered club cricketers in Australia, 32 per cent - or 126,500 - were either born overseas or had parents immigrate to Australia, figures from Cricket Australia show.
But Khawaja said Australia had a "very white-dominated cricket team" which was not reflective of the general population.
Data from the 2021 Census showed .
"Because the fact is, Australia is a very multicultural place," he said.
"Part of it is just showing the world that, because it's hard for them to see because we have a very white-dominated cricket team.
"Which is funny because that's not what the general population looks like. It's not even what the sport looks like."
Khawaja hopes this year's Twenty20 World Cup can be the start of highlighting the need to better support the entire demographic of the sport.
Friday marks 100 days to the start of the tournament, where the Pakistan-born Khawaja is a multicultural ambassador.
So far, 85 per cent of tickets have been sold to Australian residents, but a match involving Australia does not feature in the top-four selling games.
India's clash with Pakistan at the MCG on 23 October tops the list, followed by India against South Africa, India against a qualifier and then the 13 November final.
'Where Australia is heading'
Khawaja said it was an opportunity to show the world "where Australia is heading and where we want to head".
"Even when I was younger there were a lot of guys I played with from subcontinent backgrounds," he said.
"They were there in the system ... it's just about trying to give them the best chance to succeed in the future."
Of the 464 men to play Test cricket for Australia, he is one of just 26 to have started their lives overseas.
When it comes to players from Asia, that number drops to one of five after Bransby Cooper, Rex Sellers (both India), Stephen O'Keefe (Malaysia) and Dav Whatmore (Sri Lanka).
A man of Islamic faith, Khawaja is the only Muslim in Australia's Test history.
It's a situation he is constantly reminded of after being told by fans on the street they now support Australia because they have someone who represents them.
But the 35-year-old has long made the point he wants to see change.
Diversity in coaching
And crucial to that, as far as Khawaja is concerned, is in coaching.
Cricket Australia does not have records on the diversity in its coaching ranks, but the suggestion is it does not meet that of the playing numbers, particularly at an elite or premier cricket level.
"Cricket is one of those games that has a lot of things that are dictated in real life," Khawaja said.
"The journey, going through the system that aren't fully under your control."
Australia's Usman Khawaja is one of just 26 players on the national team to have started their lives overseas. Source: AAP / Anjum Naveed/AP
"If you have predominantly white coaches and selectors, they will gravitate naturally to the whiter community," he said.
"That's not because they are racist, it's just because they grow up and see a kid who reminds them of their son or daughter. It's a natural bias they have."