Cricket in Germany: A history beyond bat and ball | DW | 01.10.2021

Twelve years after arriving from India with his mother, Rohit Singh captained Germany at the inaugural European Cricket Championship (ECC).

“Playing cricket is like oxygen to me,” Singh told DW.

Despite Singh’s 237 runs and six wickets, Germany failed to move on to championship week at the Euros-style, T10 tournament — a shorter, more digestible form of cricket that encourages big hitting.

In two weeks time, Singh and Germany will take on the even bigger task of T20 World Cup qualification. But does anyone in Germany know or care?

A German batter hits a shot

Germany in action at the European Cricket Championship

“We know that 95% of our players in the men’s game are from Bangladesh, India, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, but we can only talk about integration if Germans are also playing,” German Cricket Association (DCB) general manager Brian Mantle said in an interivew with DW. “If they don’t know about cricket then they won’t come.”

With the ECC being broadcast in over 100 countries and the network that organizes it (the European Cricket Network – ECN) boasting over a million Facebook followers, visibility is no longer an excuse.

Despite Germany having cricket history dating as far back as 1858, having no perceived cultural roots has long hampered the sport’s attempts to branch out into wider German society.

The Cartamal Oval in Malaga, Spain

The Cartamal Oval in Malaga, Spain plays host to the European Cricket Championship

Cultural clashes

The late 1980s and early 1990s were a formative time for modern Germany, and also for cricket. The DCB was founded in 1988 and, after reunification, Germany joined the sport’s governing body, the International Cricket Council (ICC).

Volker Ellerbeck, who grew up in West Berlin, lived through this transformation, having returned from a year of studying in Oxford, United Kingdom, with a love of cricket. 

While playing with a group that called themselves “refugees from Thatcher’s England” on pitches left behind by the British army, he befriended West Indian janitors and truck drivers who taught him how to bowl.

Eventually, Ellerbeck found himself representing Germany in international tournaments. Throughout, Ellerbeck admits, tensions between those from cricket cultures and non-cricket cultures were so deep-rooted that many European finals were lost because of a lack of team spirit.

Germany's 1997 cricket team

Volker Ellerbeck (top row, far right) in action for Germany at the legendary 1997 European Nations Cup Final against France

“German selection has always been contentious,” Ellerbeck told DW.

Cultural clashes remained into the mid-2000s, as some domestic clubs kept to themselves, while others welcomed a mix of cricket backgrounds. Few actively recruited those from non-cricket cultures.

For 33-year-old Max Höck, a young German born in the small town of Tegernsee near Munich, there was no concept of cricket until a school teacher from Manchester taught him technique out of a textbook.

Höck would go on to play for Germany’s men’s first team and, while his love for cricket was always at the forefront, playing the sport also opened his eyes to himself.

“As a white German, cricket allowed me to work through my racial prejudice earlier than others,” he told DW. “You listen to others and realize that your own perspective is strange, that it’s a western perspective.”

Höck felt cricket gave him the chance to develop in a way the rural Germany of his youth could not.

“In Germany, I think there’s a feeling that we’re the first generation who could manage our history, and use contact and exchange to work through it,” said Höck.

Anuradha Doddaballapur playing for Germany

Anuradha Doddaballapur bowling for Germany

Women’s game on the rise

Cultural clashes are less of an issue for Germany’s women’s cricket team, ranked 25th in the world in T20 and made up predominantly of native Germans.

Recognizing their pathway to the national team is easier to reach due to the level of play, Germany’s women have used their situation to their advantage to create a more inclusive, diverse sport.

Anuradha Doddaballapur, Germany’s captain since 2017, has built on the pioneering work of DCB Vice President Monika Loveday and Stephanie Frohnmayer, Germany’s first team captain.

Arriving in Germany from India via the UK in 2011, Doddaballapur initially had to play for Frankfurt’s men’s team because there was no women’s team.

Two years later, she was playing for Germany. By 2015, she had founded Frankfurt’s first women’s cricket team, a team she also coaches and who this year were crowned women’s Bundesliga champions.

Last year, Doddaballapur made cricket history when, in a T20 international against Austria, she became the first woman to take four wickets in four balls.

Germany's women playing cricket in Krefeld

Germany’s women in action against France in Krefeld

“It’s an exciting time for women’s cricket. You can foresee how this will look in a few years with better funding. The potential is there,” Doddaballapur told DW.

Importance of integration

Funding has doubled since 2016 to nearly half a million euros, but support outside of the ICC and its extensive criteria is also needed.

Cricket at the 2028 Summer Olympics would be a game changer and would open up greater support from the German Olympic Committee (DOSB).

Germany’s federal program “Integration through Sports,” run through the DOSB, has long been boosted by the large number of immigrants and refugees playing cricket.

In 2002, Satyanarayana Srinivas left India, where he had played professionally, for Duisburg, a city in western Germany where he intended to study. He thought the cricket chapter of his life was over, but a day after he arrived, he was shocked when he stumbled across a group of young Punjabi guys playing cricket in a parking lot.

Köln CC at a game in Bochum

The development of club cricket in Germany relied on player passion

“I thought I’d be the only brown guy on the streets and people would see me as an alien,” Srinivas told DW. Cricket helped change that as Srinivas went on to keep wicket for Germany. He still plays for Köln CC now.

Höck, though, believes the DOSB slogan is misleading.

“I would say, the DOSB may be unaware that their working slogan ‘Integration through Sport’ is a violent statement,” Höck told DW.

“Firstly, it articulates an expectation towards an ‘abstract other’ which actually doesn’t exist, and secondly, it doesn’t include the far more pressing issue of Germans integrating themselves into global societies.”

Challenges remain

Despite commitment from a passionate association to integrate the sport into wider society, German cricket faces the same struggles so many marginalized sports do.

Cricket is still often depicted as an exotic British pastime. There’s a heavy reliance on volunteers, club facilities often render ground strokes immaterial and there’s a lack of visibility, although the ECN is helping to change that. The game is still caught between an amateur reality and professional desires.

“There are a lot of good players but they can’t come because they’re working on daily wages and can’t take lots of days off,” said Rohit Singh. “They have families to feed at home.”

A Köln CC player pushes forward at the ball

Club cricket facilities in Germany are still a problem today

‘Taking on the world’

Ultimately, German cricket just wants a chance to be taken seriously.

“It sounds like we’re trying to take on the world,” said Mantle. “We’re growing so fast but we’re still one of the smallest sports in the country. We’re trying to make cricket a German sport and create long-term structures.”

While integrating the sport into schools is slow, German cricket is growing strong enough that most of the players selected for the ECC had never played for the country before. Some were also born in Germany, such as 22-year-old Mahela Daub.

“I grew up here and have a special connection with Germany,” Daub, born in Göttingen, told DW. “It’s good to be a part of it and represent the country.”

When Germany play their World Cup qualifiers in two weeks though, the squad will look different. For some, this is an issue.

Srinivas, the former Germany wicket keeper, would prefer to see more domestic-based players get called up rather than someone of better ability who happens to have a German passport — to play for Germany you need to either have been born here, have a German passport or have lived in the country for three years and can prove this is your home.

On the other hand, Singh believes the presence of professionals can only be good for the sport and its infrastructure.

Cricket in Germany has been at the crease for a long time. Now, after 30 years, critical contributions from so many and with milestones looming, the hardest and most defining part of Germany’s innings approaches.

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