Hindustan Times (Noida)

Amini’s family affair as PNG make global bow at World Cup in UAE

- Agence France-presse sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

SYDNEY: Charles Amini’s two brothers, his parents and a grandfathe­r all played cricket for Papua New Guinea, and there’s even a stadium named after the family. But he is the only one to reach a World Cup— and happily claims bragging rights.

The leg-spinning all-rounder is a crucial cog in the Pacific nation’s team at their first global tournament, the T20 World Cup in the UAE and Oman, a feat he calls “a very big deal”.

Cricket runs deep in his family, with brothers Chris and Colin, father Charles senior, mother Kune and grandfathe­r Bryan all representi­ng PNG.

So entrenched are they in the sport that the country’s main cricket stadium in the capital Port Moresby, Amini Park, is named after them. “I don’t want to brag, but I don’t think any of them have gone to a World Cup,” the 29-year-old jokingly said on an ICC podcast of his illustriou­s brethren, when asked who was the best player in his family. “But in all honesty, I would probably say my big brother Chris (was the best), he was a very, very good player.”

PNG open their account against co-hosts Oman on October 17 in a Group B that also includes Scotland and Bangladesh. They will fancy their chances of progressin­g to the Super 12.

Along with Amini, bowling all-rounder Norman Vanua, classy opener Tony Ura and veteran captain Assad Vala will be key to their success.

“The match the boys are looking forward to is Bangladesh,” said Vala, a mainstay who has been on the team since 2005. “It will be really good for us to test ourselves against a top quality team and see where we are at against the best teams in the world.”

Making a top-level tournament has been a long time coming for the sprawling Pacific nation, whose team are known as the Barramundi­s, named after the fish native to Australia and the Indo-pacific.

Cricket was introduced to PNG in the 1900s by Christian missionari­es from England and it became popular among coastal villages where they, and early British explorers, first landed.

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