Australian batter Usman Khawaja has announced his retirement from international cricket after the fifth Ashes Test at the Sydney Cricket Ground, using his farewell press conference to speak about racial stereotyping, discrimination, and the pressure he faced for expressing political and humanitarian views during his career.
“I’m a coloured cricketer,” Khawaja said, adding, “The Australian cricket team is our pride and joy, but I’ve felt very different in a lot of respects, particularly in how I’ve been treated. I was criticised for missing a game, yet other teammates who weren’t playing weren’t questioned at all.”
Khawaja, the first Muslim to represent Australia in international cricket, said he had endured such treatment for years but felt compelled to address it publicly so that future players would not face the same experience.
“I know people think, ‘Uzzy’s playing the race card again,’ but don’t gaslight me,” he said. “I didn’t want to talk about this, but I want the journey for the next Usman Khawaja to be different.”
Khawaja said he felt he was treated “a little bit different, even to now,” because of his Pakistan and Muslim background.
“Different in the way I’ve been treated, different in how things have happened,” Khawaja said at a media conference in Sydney.
Referring to criticism he faced ahead of the Perth Test, he said a bout of back spasms, something beyond his control, triggered sustained attacks. “I copped it for about five days straight. Everyone was piling in.”
Khawaja said the criticism took a racial turn, with stereotypes portraying him as lazy and selfish. “Once the racial stereotypes came in, Pakistani, West Indian, coloured players, we’re selfish, we don’t care about the team, we don’t train hard enough. These are things I’ve dealt with my whole life,” he said.
The batter had been criticised for playing golf twice and skipping an optional training session in the lead-up to the Perth match, with some commentators suggesting golfing contributed to his injury. Khawaja rejected the double standards in such assessments.
“I can give you countless examples of guys who’ve played golf the day before a match and then got injured, and you haven’t said a thing,” he told reporters.
“I can give you even more examples of players who’ve had 15 schooners the night before a game and then got injured, but no one said a word; they were just being ‘Aussie larrikins.’”
He said that, unlike others, his injury led to his credibility and character being questioned. “When I get injured, everyone went at who I am as a person.”
Khawaja also acknowledged that he had sensed the end of his international career was near. “Going into this series, I had an inkling this would be my last,” he said. “I’m glad I can go out on my own terms.”
The veteran batter also addressed the backlash he faced for speaking about issues beyond cricket, including Palestine and immigration.
“I still find it hard that when I say everyone deserves freedom and Palestinians deserve equal rights, it becomes such a problem,” Khawaja said, noting, “But I understand why—we have right-wing politicians who are anti-immigration and Islamophobic.”
Describing himself as an Australian Muslim who migrated from Pakistan at the age of five, Khawaja said attacks on Islam and immigration debates felt deeply personal.
“When people attack my faith or Muslims for everything that’s happening in the world, it affects me. I am an immigrant. It’s personal,” he said. “So I’m going to speak up.”
Rejecting calls to “stay in his lane” as a cricketer, Khawaja said his intention had always been to promote unity rather than division.
“Where others try to create hate and animosity, I’m trying to bring people together,” he said, highlighting that “I’m proud to say I’m an Australian Muslim from Pakistan. I love this country, my family, and this game.”
Australian batter Usman Khawaja has scored 6,206 runs at an average of 43.49 across 87 Test matches, including 16 centuries and 28 half-centuries, underscoring his consistency and longevity at the highest level.
Paying tribute, Cricket Australia chief executive Todd Greenberg said Khawaja had made an immense contribution to the game both on and off the field. “Usman has been one of Australia’s most stylish and resilient batters, and his impact extends beyond cricket, particularly through the work of the Usman Khawaja Foundation,” Greenberg said in a statement.
He stated that Khawaja had been among Australia’s most reliable opening batters, noting that his excellence was recognised when he was named ICC Test Cricketer of the Year in 2023, the same season Australia won the World Test Championship.
Khawaja’s family faced a wave of Islamophobic and racist online abuse following the tragic mass shooting at Bondi Beach in Sydney, with trolls calling his children “future school blasters” and telling the family to “go home” to Pakistan, despite Khawaja’s clear condemnation of the violence.
Usman, a staunch supporter of the Palestinian cause, has also faced significant backlash and controversy for his public expressions of solidarity with Palestinians during Israel’s Genocide on Gaza.
Reacting to accusations that his support for Palestine was antisemitic, Khawaja strongly rejected the claim, clarifying that “standing up for the people of Gaza is not anti-Semitic, nor does it have anything to do with my Jewish brothers and sisters in Australia, but everything to do with the Israeli government and its deplorable actions. It is about justice and human rights.”
Ahead of the first Test against Pakistan in Perth, Khawaja had also planned to wear shoes bearing the messages “Freedom is a human right” and “All lives are equal,” written in the colours of the Palestinian flag, describing the gesture as a humanitarian statement on the Gaza genocide.
The International Cricket Council (ICC) banned this, ruling it a political message in breach of regulations prohibiting personal statements on political, religious, or racial causes without approval.
The post “I felt treated differently”: Usman Khawaja calls out racial stereotyping as he retires appeared first on Maktoob media.


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