Robinson led the England attack with a 4-75 in the first innings at Lord's and made a useful 42 with the bat with a 3-26 in the second innings.
Cricket legend Sachin Tendulkar said on Tuesday that England should allow Ollie Robinson to resume playing, as the pacer apologized following his suspension for historic racist and sexist tweets.
Robinson, 27, was suspended from the England team earlier this month after he resumed his Test debut against New Zealand.
He impressed with both bat and ball in the game of a draw, but was then barred from international duty for the result of an investigation by the England and Wales Cricket Board.
"We need to understand that he did this many years ago and he is sorry for that," Tendulkar told AFP.
"They dropped him in the second Test despite doing well and he realized what he did... He apologized and also said that it would not happen again," he said.
"We need to be fair with them and start playing them at some level," he added.
Robinson led the England attack with a 4-75 in the first innings at Lord's and made a useful 42 with the bat with a 3-26 in the second innings.
But he found himself apologizing after being stumped on the first day of the opening Test for tweets that included comments linking Muslim people to terrorism and derogatory remarks about women and people of Asian heritage. .
He took a short break last week for county team Sussex to be with his family and skipped two early games.
The Sussexes have said Robinson is "a very different person from the person who wrote those tweets", and Tendulkar said he couldn't agree more.
Tendulkar said, "You have to move on. If the players apologize and apologize for it, not as a formality, but from the bottom of the heart, then we should move on."
"I'm not saying don't reprimand them or whatever the penalty is. It's already happened. For an athlete, it's a huge blow in itself if you get kicked out of an event." "
Robinson's suspension has divided opinion, with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden saying the ECB's decision was "over the top".
The ECB has however ordered a "social media review" to address the player's behaviour.
Ever since Robinson's posts surfaced, the social media feeds of several international players have been under scrutiny, with an unnamed player sending offensive tweets under the age of 16.