Jamaica Gleaner

Bangladesh gripped by cricket fever

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DHAKA, Bangladesh (AP): AS THE city’s 18 million inhabitant­s will attest, Dhaka — the densely populated capital of Bangladesh — is known as the “traffic capital of the world” for good reason.

Expect roads there to be deserted at about 3:30 p.m. local time tomorrow, though.

“A journey that would take one hour to get to your destinatio­n, will take five minutes,” predicted Habibul Bashar, one of Dhaka’s more famous residents.

Bashar is the former captain of Bangladesh’s national cricket team, which will be taking part in the biggest game in its history. “The Tigers” — as the team is also known — play India in Birmingham, England, in a semi-final match in the ICC Champions Trophy, one of the world’s leading cricket tournament­s.

“This is big, very big,” Bashar said. “The most important day of Bangladesh­i cricket ever. This is what we have been dreaming for.”

Once regarded as also-rans in high-level cricket, Bangladesh’s players are on a remarkable journey to the top of the game. At the Champions Trophy, they managed to finish — partly by luck, partly by skill — above Australia and New Zealand to qualify for the semi-finals of a major tournament for the first time.

Cricket is Bangladesh’s most important sport — “the people, they eat and sleep cricket; they do everything for cricket,” Bashar says — so the country with a population of 160 million cannot wait for Thursday.”

The first semi-final, England versus Pakistan, will be played today starting at 4:30 a.m. (Jamaica time).

 ?? FILE ?? Shakib Al Hasan
FILE Shakib Al Hasan

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