Afghan Pakistan Cricket match!

The match generated a lot of interest in Afghans, and the Sharjah stadium was filled with Afghans. Moe of such activities needed between the two countries.

Bats and balls beat bombs for Afghan fansBy AFP
Published: February 10, 2012

http://i1.tribune.com.pk/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/334487-afghancricketfanAFP-1328884685-532-640x480.jpg

Hundreds of fans have come to Kandahar Olympic Committee office to watch this game on big screen, says official. PHOTO: AFP

****KABUL: **Thousands of Afghans took a break from the war Friday, glued to their television sets to watch their cricketers take on Pakistan in a historic one-day international.

**
Newcomers Afghanistan, who have played just 18 one-day internationals against fellow low-ranking teams, are playing their first match against a top Test playing nation.

The game has a limited following in the capital Kabul but a strong fanbase in the south and east of the country, near the Pakistan border.

In the southern city of Kandahar, heartland of both Taliban insurgents and cricket lovers, shops closed as fans converged on any television screen they could find to watch the match, played in Sharjah.

“Hundreds of cricket fans have come to the Kandahar Olympic Committee office to watch this exciting game on the big screen,” said Sayed Sarwar Amani, head of the martial arts federation.

Many travelled from rural areas into the city to watch the match because they have no electricity at home, he said.

Most fans were young, in their 20s, he added – a reflection perhaps of the relative newness of the game in Afghanistan, brought to the country by Afghan refugees who learnt to play in refugee camps in Pakistan.

“We hope to have a fighting game of cricket with Pakistan, and hope to defeat them in this historic game,” he told AFP as the match got underway with Afghanistan winning the toss and choosing to bat first.

A Kandahar district security chief said he and about 20 policemen were watching the match in his office.

**“I have been waiting for this game for a long time. This is not a cricket game, this is the war between Afghanistan and Pakistan,” said Pahlawan, who like many Afghans uses just one name.

**
**But as the security forces watched the game, some of t
heir enemies among the Taliban were following it too.

**
“I am personally a fan of cricket, I will follow this match closely,” Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid told AFP ahead of the match.

Truck drivers also took a break, pulling up at the Spin Boldak transport department offices near a border crossing into Pakistan to watch the game, said Mohammad Khalil, who works for the department.

“About 12 drivers who are exporting dried fruits to Pakistan stopped their trucks on the way and they are watching the game of cricket,” he said.

“They say once the game finishes they will go to Pakistan.”

Friday’s contest is fitting because most of the Afghan players learnt the game in Pakistan after fleeing the Soviet invasion of their country in 1979.

Afghanistan gained a notable foot up on the world cricket stage by finishing fifth in the 2011 World Cup qualifiers which earned them the right to play one-day internationals.

Re: Afghan Pakistan Cricket match!

Thank Allah we won. I can walk into the office tomorrow and not have to worry about jabs on how Pakistan lost.

Re: Afghan Pakistan Cricket match!

.

Re: Afghan Pakistan Cricket match!

Are you a Pakistani?

I didnt knew it

Re: Afghan Pakistan Cricket match!

LOL! What did you think I was? An Indian?

Re: Afghan Pakistan Cricket match!

Of Course not

I Thought u were Pakistani Born Afghani

Re: Afghan Pakistan Cricket match!

LMAO! Nah good old fashioned ABCD here :p

Re: Afghan Pakistan Cricket match!

Mohammad Nabi: Taking refuge in cricket
**For most young Afghan immigrants residing in Peshawar, concentrating on studies and even gathering the willingness to open their books remained a difficult ask while the war raged on across the border.

**
Mohammad Nabi, whose two sixes against Pakistan on Friday complemented the aggression that the minnows had adopted, fared no better with his books. His heart was on the cricket field but his family, including nine chachas, remained adamant that there was no future in the sport, as bombs and bullets filled up the Kabul air.

**Born in a refugee camp in Peshawar, Nabi’s first visit to Afghanistan, incidentally, was forced by cricket. He had been sneaking out of the house to train at a local club – having had enough of the tennis-ball cricket at home – but the talent, his broad frame that oozed aggression and the urge to be different forced him to take up professional cricket, only to give in to his family’s demands before taking up the sport once again.

**
“I wanted to play cricket but with the war and the atrocity, I couldn’t have imagined playing in or for Afghanistan,” said Nabi. “But two years after the war ended, the Afghanistan team became a reality and when I visited the country for the first time, I was left traumatised: 30 years of war had left Afghanistan in an appalling state, the bullet-riddled walls an apt illustration of that.”

For all the excitement and promise that Nabi brought with him, his introduction to international cricket – and his dreams – faced another obstacle. He was unable to take part in the tournament he had gone to Kabul for due to illness and despite impressing in the trials for a grade II Afghanistan side, he faced the snub.

However, the omnipresent augur, and some sifarish, forced his inclusion – the moment when Nabi changed gears. He scored plenty, took wickets too, including the prized scalp of Mohammad Hafeez in his third match – only to realise who Hafeez was five years later – and swiftly wore the captain’s arm-band at various levels.

“I’ve been quite lucky in my journey so far. I had some friends who helped me, especially when Peshawar clubs stopped recruiting Afghan players early in my career. I even scored a 39-ball century playing for the MCC XI in India. But I think self-learning and the will to improve has helped me the most.”

Like Pakistan, Afghan players are nomads too. Lack of facilities and infrastructure at home resulted in them training in Dubai, Lahore and Sri Lanka. But that turned out to be beneficial for a blooming team, using world-class facilities to hone in on their skills and aim of being cricketing powers one day.

“We’re great crowd pullers. Once, in a Ramazan event in Karachi, we had people hanging from tree branches along the boundary line, that’s how badly they wanted to see us play.”

With Nabi impressing against mightier opposition, lucrative calls for greener pastures are frequent.

“I get offers from all around the world but country takes preference. There a lot of work to be done with the Afghanistan team. We are not where we want to be but are on the way. I want to see my country in the big league before I consider anything else.”
*
Published in The Express Tribune, February 12[SUP]th[/SUP], 2012.*

Re: Afghan Pakistan Cricket match!

Thats great then :hug: