The Free Press Journal

Afghanista­n pride as Test status beckons

- AFP

Afghanista­n's fairytale rise in world cricket could this week see them acquire coveted Test status, a massive boost for a nation long divided by war and riven by ethnic rivalries.

No longer rank minnows, Asghar Stanikzai's team are up for considerat­ion following their victories over Ireland in the Interconti­nental Cup in March, paving the way for their potential entry into cricket's elite.

Both Afghanista­n and Ireland are bidding to become the 11th and 12th nations to join the Test club, nearly two decades after their immediate predecesso­rs Bangladesh, if confirmed by the Internatio­nal Cricket Council (ICC) at a meeting in London.

"A committee is working inside the cricket board, and we will work on our proposal to present it to the ICC in the future, and hopefully full membership and Test status are on the way," chairman of the Afghan cricket board, Atef Mashal told AFP during a recent interview.

Unlike the sport's other major players, fghanistan was never a colony of the British Empire.

Instead many Afghans' first contact with the sport took place during the 1980s and 1990s, as refugees who had fled to Pakistan to escape the Soviet invasion.

Cricket struggled under the hardline Islamist Taliban, who viewed sports as a distractio­n from religious duties -- and famously shaved the heads of a visiting Pakistani football team as punishment for wearing shorts. But recent successes, particular­ly in last year's ICC World Twenty20, have further raised the country's profile. Spinners Rashid Khan, who idolises former Pakistan internatio­nal Shahid Afridi, and Mohammad Nabi both made their mark in the Indian Premier League. Khan was sixth-highest wicket-taker in his debut IPL with 17 scalps.

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