London:Former England captain Michael Vaughan categorically denied that he ever made racist comments during his stint with county side Yorkshire, though he added that he would "take some responsibility" because he "played for Yorkshire County Cricket Club for 18 years".
Vaughan was dropped from the BBC's coverage panel for the Ashes series, beginning December 8, after his name appeared in the racism controversy involving former Yorkshire player Azeem Rafiq.
Rafiq, who played for Yorkshire between 2008 and 2018, recently recounted the 'institutionally racist' English cricket culture before the parliamentary committee during his nearly decade-long stay at the county side.
Read: ICC calls off Women's World Cup Qualifier after new COVID-19 variant emerges
The off-spinner, who moved from Pakistan to the UK in 2001 and played a total of 39 First-Class games taking 72 wickets, has said that England players Alex Hales and Gary Balance would refer to cricketers of colour as 'Kevin', adding that the former had also named his dog 'Kevin', as it was black.
Rafiq alleged that Vaughan had said there were "too many of you lot, we need to do something about it" before a game in 2009. Vaughan, has, however, denied it.
"It hurts deeply, hurts me that a player has gone through so much be treated so badly at the club that I love," Vaughan said on BBC Breakfast's Dan Walker on Saturday.