Hindustan Times (Noida)

Familiar feeling of isolation hits Pakistan cricket again

- Dhiman Sarkar dhiman@htlive.com

KOLKATA: The media advisory from New Zealand Cricket (NZC) reached Indian journalist­s at 2:15am on Tuesday. It said the England Cricket Board (ECB) had received “a threatenin­g email related to NZC”, one which was “treated seriously, investigat­ed, and deemed not credible.” Hence, the women’s cricket team’s tour of England would continue.

Contrast that to NZC’S reaction in Pakistan where it pulled out the men’s team hours before the first One-day Internatio­nal. NZC CEO David White said there was “specific and credible threat” but refused to share informatio­n with the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB). “You can take any decision on the basis of security threat and perception,” was how PCB chairman Ramiz Raja reacted. On Monday, ECB announced that it wouldn’t be travelling to Pakistan either next month with the men’s and women’s teams. Cricket Australia is reconsider­ing next year’s tour and, as a domino effect, the scheduled visit by West Indies too can be hit, said Raja who took charge this month.

“This Western bloc gets united unfortunat­ely and tries to back each other. Who can we complain to?,” said the former Pakistan batter referring to the successive pullouts. PCB’S losses are expected to be between $15 million to $25 million and it is likely to seek compensati­on.

Raja said a good performanc­e in next month’s T20 World Cup would be the best way for Pakistan to show that it has been hard done by. “We go in the World Cup now and where we had one team in our target---our neighbours India, they now add two more teams ---New Zealand and England. So pick up the strength and develop a mindset that we are not going to lose because you didn’t do right by us with us and we will avenge that in the ground,” he said.

In his video message, Raja also said the cancellati­ons were a lesson for Pakistan who had gone out of their way to “accommodat­e and pamper these

sides...from now on, we’ll tour only when it serves our interest.” Pakistan toured England last summer when the country was struggling to contain Covid-19 and vaccines hadn’t yet been rolled out—a Sydney Morning Herald report on Tuesday said that tour saved the ECB from losing $526 million.

So, from playing 12 T20IS to prepare for the World T20, Pakistan could head to the competitio­n next month having played just one, away to West Indies, this term. This was supposed to be a busy season in Pakistan with four teams scheduled to visit. Instead, the former one-day world champions find themselves

in the familiar position of being shunned by countries.

This would have been New Zealand’s first tour in 18 years.

England haven’t been there since 2005, Australia last visited in 1998-99 and South Africa finally came earlier this year after 13 years. India have intermitte­ntly paused cricket relations with its neighbours since the 1950s and haven’t been to Pakistan since 2006.

So, although the terrorist attack on the Sri Lanka team bus and match officials’ entourage in 2009 led to internatio­nal cricket being stalled in Pakistan, there have been instances prior such as the bombing of the twin towers in New York in 2001 and a terror attack in Karachi that had led to games shifting to neutral venues.

Studies have found that hosting sporting events can get a nation to feel good about and enhance its internatio­nal standing. “Cricket has been the most popular source of public joy (in Pakistan),” said academics Salman Yousaf and Fahad Laber. In a paper that probed whether internatio­nal sports boycott act as a social identity threat, Yousaf and Laber said cricket played a “pivotal part in the nation-building

process in Pakistan.”

All that got unhinged after 2009 when Pakistan was forced to move its cricket to UAE.

Baby steps began to be taken in 2015 when Zimbabwe visited, but even that trip was blighted by a terrorist attack. In 2017, Sri Lanka visited Pakistan and with help from the Internatio­nal Cricket Council, the country hosted a World XI led by Faf du Plessis for three T20s. Sri Lanka visited twice in 2019 when a Rawalpindi stadium ringfenced by heavy security staged the country’s first Test since 2009. Bangladesh played a Test in 2020 and later that year, Zimbabwe came again. PSL had come home in 2017 and foreign cricketers and coaches didn’t shirk from travelling to Pakistan, a point Raja didn’t miss pointing out.

The build-up to the big 2021-22 domestic season thus had gone smoothly. Pakistan had again readied a thick security blanket for a New Zealand tour that would have helped change perception­s about the country. Instead, as John Lennon sang in ‘Isolation’, they were left feeling that “The world is just a little town/everybody trying to put us down...”

 ?? AFP ?? Elaborate security arrangemen­ts were put in place at Rawalpindi stadium which was to host the first ODI against New Zealand.
AFP Elaborate security arrangemen­ts were put in place at Rawalpindi stadium which was to host the first ODI against New Zealand.

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