Gulf News

Let’s rumble

All eyes will be on Dubai today as India and Pakistan prepare to go head to head in their Asia Cup Group A clash |

- BY GAUTAM BHATTACHAR­YYA Sports Editor

Even six months ago, there was hardly an inkling that the city would be hosting an India-Pakistan cricket match in such a prestigiou­s event as the Asia Cup.

As all roads lead to Dubai Internatio­nal Stadium today, there is a virtual guarantee that there will be at least one of the teams — if not both once again — in the final on September 28.

While the venue has worked as a windfall for the legion of expat fans of these two countries here, a billion more will be glued to their TV sets, laptops and smartphone­s to follow the contest which has held the game’s followers in thrall for generation­s.

It’s easily the most worn out cliché to say that the IndiaPakis­tan cricket matches have been always “more than a cricket match” and with good enough reason.

It’s simple: which other sporting contest on the globe has such stark political overtones, rich history and sees a roller-coaster of emotions?

Politics inseparabl­e

The legacy may have come a long way since the former Pakistan President General Zia-ul-Haq initiated “cricket diplomacy”, when he visited India to watch a Test match in 1987, but there is no gainsaying that politics and cricket had been inseparabl­e in this contest.

Martand Jha, a research scholar at the Centre for Russian and Central Asian Studies at the Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, summed India-Pakistan matches up well in a line last year: “Sometimes it has come as an icebreaker. At other times, it has merely marked a deceptive lull before another storm.”

The irony, however, lies in the fact that, in the ever fluctuatin­g relationsh­ip between the two neighbours, the people of either country have held each other’s cricketing heroes in a great deal of awe and admiration.

The standing ovation that Wasim Akram and his team won from the Chepauk crowd after they defeated India in a Test at the Asian Test Championsh­ip in 1999 is unforgetta­ble, while members of Indian team or the cricket writers still talk in glowing terms about the famous Pakistan hospitalit­y during the 2004 tour.

The period between 2004 and 2008, until the 26/11 happened in Mumbai, was a golden period for India-Pakistan cricket — and it’s not a surprise that it coincided with a semblance of stability in the political relationsh­ip between two countries. This was the time when General Pervez Musharraf’s friendly advice to a younger Mahendra Singh Dhoni, not to cut his famous locks, made the headlines.

The former Indian skipper, incidental­ly, is the only tenuous link from 12 years back when India and Pakistan last played in the UAE in a twomatch exhibition series in Abu Dhabi which ended 1-1.

Bilateral series

Indian skipper Rohit Sharma, filling in for Virat Kohli who has been rested after a prolonged England tour, will be certainly picking Dhoni’s brains if the going gets tough in the middle.

“It’s always exciting to play Pakistan, though the tournament is just more than a game,” Sharma said ahead of their back-to-back matches as they took on qualifiers Hong Kong before an empty stadium yesterday.

It’s going to be a decade this November since the Mumbai attacks, and the bilateral series between the two countries have not quite resumed after that barring a hastily arranged series of One-dayers and T20s in 2013. The romantics of the game would like to believe that there could be a glimmer of hope with the legendary Imran Khan taking over as the Prime Minister of Pakistan, but it’s anybody’s guess as to where would cricket lie on his list of priorities now.

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SARFRAZ AHMAD
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ROHIT SHARMA
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©Gulf News

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