The âharmlessâ locker room culture that brewed behind Englandâs Ashes defeat became something far darker, with tragic consequences for former batting star Graham Thorpe. A leaked video of Thorpe drinking in a hotel roomâdeemed âcatastrophicâ by a coronerâsparked a brutal unraveling, one that the sportâs institutions were seemingly too polite or too PR-conscious to properly confront.
đ» When the Game Cheers, Then Forgets
The cricket worldâs response? A few murmurs, a statement or two, and thenâwell, nothing really. Thorpe, a man who once wore the Three Lions with pride, was reduced to tabloid fodder when the video surfaced. The nuance of his pain, the long and tangled struggle with depression and anxiety, got buried beneath headlines designed to titillate, not to help.
Letâs rewind: a legendary cricketer, already known to be suffering, is filmed in a vulnerable moment. The footage leaks. His reputation is tossed into the furnace. And the response from cricketâs elite? Awkward silence and a PR shuffle. Suddenly, the game that loves to wrap itself in tradition, loyalty, and tea-time decency went ghost. đ«đ»
And yet, Thorpe wasnât alone. He just didnât hide it as well as others. Mental health campaigns in sport are great for Instagram reels, but whereâs the support when itâs messy, unglamorous, and real? The answer seems to be: nowhere to be found. đ€·ââïž
Meanwhile, the system that once lauded him sat back while the headlines did their damage. When the cheers fade and the cameras stop rolling, whatâs left for athletes who once lived in the limelight? Apparently, not much beyond a toxic cocktail of scrutiny and abandonment. đžđłïž
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Challenges
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How many more have to suffer before sport takes mental health seriouslyâwithout waiting for tragedy to act? How do we hold media, sports institutions, and ourselves accountable for what happens off the pitch?
đŹ We want your take. Is the sports world failing its heroes? Is the media complicit in the downfall? Drop your thoughts in the blog commentsânot just on socials. Letâs have the conversation where it matters. đ§ âïž
đ Comment, like, shareâshine a light so this doesnât happen again.
The most powerful voices will be featured in the next issue of the magazine. đïžâ



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