Deccan Chronicle

East Timor hope to copy Afghans’ rise

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Dili (East Timor), March 13: Navigating pigs and goats as they practise on a dusty paddock, a group of young East Timorese are hoping to copy the fairy-tale rise of Afghanista­n by making it as Asia’s latest emerging cricket nation.

In the impoverish­ed, once war-ravaged country, which only gained independen­ce from Indonesia in 2002, the manicured pitches of Lord’s are a world away for aspiring cricketer Juvelino Mique “Micky” Rama Pinto, 16.

His 14-year-old batting partner, Joana Gonsalves Borges, has seen cricket on TV and is excited by “watching big sixes and wickets being taken”. Like Micky, she wants to play for East Timor.

The vision to turn soccerobse­ssed East Timor on to cricket originated with Mark Young, who played at league level in Lancashire and Gloucester­shire before emigrating to New Zealand in 1997.

Young and a Pakistani colleague, Muhammad Tayyeb Javed, argue that East Timor can use cricket as part of its revival just like Afghanista­n, whose players learned the game in refugee camps but have risen to the elite Test level.

East Timor, one of the world’s youngest nations, is still suffering the effects of a violent, decades-long independen­ce struggle which destroyed infrastruc­ture. With high levels of poverty, one of the world’s worst rates of malnourish­ment and 60 percent of its 1.3 million population under the age of 24, there is an urgent need fro new opportunit­ies for young Timorese — including, now, cricket.

Management consultant Young and his partner, Lara, came to East Timor hoping to help the country after first working in India, where he said “the poverty there left a big impression on us”.

Through the Volunteer Service Abroad (VSA) aid agency, Young was placed in East Timor as an advisor to a government organisati­on tasked with diversifyi­ng the economy.

Walking to work one morning in Dili, Young noticed a group of youngsters playing cricket with homemade bats and stumps.

They had been taught the basics by Tayyeb, who lived in Dili with his Timorese wife Mariana Dias Ximenes — a marathon runner who represente­d the young country at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. “I contacted him and we are now working together to develop cricket in Timor,” Young told AFP. “We now have over 100 young Timorese playing the game, 40 percent female.”

“We have exciting plans to take a representa­tive team to Bali in April 2019 and one day be the newest ICC nation in Asia,” he said.

“Our inspiratio­n is Afghanista­n, another postconfli­ct society who only started playing seriously 20 years ago and are now highly ranked in world cricket, number eight in Twenty20.”

 ?? — AFP ?? Local youth in East Timor play cricket in Dili, capital of the country.
— AFP Local youth in East Timor play cricket in Dili, capital of the country.

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