ICC ban Shannon Gabriel for four ODI’s following homophobic comments

To optimise for archiving, the original image and related documents associated with this article have been removed.

The International Cricket Council has banned West Indies bowler, Shannon Gabriel for the first four matches of the one-day series, after being found guilty of ‘personal abuse of an opposing player’.

The 30-year old made the homophobic comments towards England captain Joe Root during the third Test in St Lucia.  Root received widespread praise for his response to the bowler saying: “Don't use it as an insult. There is nothing wrong with being gay.”

Notes of commendation included director of Sport at LGBT charity Stonewall, Kirsty Clarke who said "Language is really influential and it's great if Joe Root was willing to challenge potentially abusive comments...The more players, fans, clubs and organisations that stand up for equality in sport, the sooner we kick discrimination out and make sport everyone's game."

It is unknown exactly what Gabriel’s initial comments were after Root refused to share details of the incident, but the fast-bowler was later charged by the on-field umpires under article 2.13 of the code of conduct that covers “language of a personal, insulting, obscene and/or offensive nature”. Shannon admitted the offence and was subsequently fined 75% of his match fee as well as three demerit points.

The ban resulted as an accumulation of five other demerit points that had already been received by Gabriel from two previous incidents.

You may also like

View All

Pinned Article

Sport Resolutions Annual Conference 2026: Early Bird Tickets Now on Sale

Early Bird tickets for the Sport Resolutions 11th Annual Conference are now available. Join leading sport and legal professionals in London on 7 May 2026 for a full day of discussion, insight, and networking

Read More

Vonn incident raises questions surrounding athlete autonomy

Following American athlete Lindsey Vonn’s horrific crash during the women’s downhill event at the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics where she broke her leg, questions have arisen surrounding athlete autonomy as Vonn decided to compete after suffering another injury just over a week prior

Read More

How to Manage Athlete Selection

On 13 March 2026, Sport Resolutions will be hosting an event on athlete selection which will focus on the elements required for an effective selection process, and cover guidance on how to achieve and deliver a fair process, as well as considerations in drafting an athlete selection policy and running a selection appeal procedure

Read More