[This article was first published in www.sapannews.com, the media platform of the SOUTHASIA PEACE ACTION NETWORK]
On Sunday, the 19th of November, 2023, two teams will face each
other at the Narendra Modi Stadium, Ahmedabad. The winner will lift the
2023 Cricket ODI World Cup (Men). Eight teams would have been
eliminated by then. Fans of all competing countries would hope their
heroes will still be taking the field that day, regardless of what the
ranking and the form sheets say. They may or may not have a backup team
to cheer for, just in case their team doesn’t make it that far.
I am a Sri Lankan.
Obviously, I want Dasun Shank’s boys to tear the form book to shreds.
Sri Lanka is not among the favourites. No one is even saying ‘dark
horse.’ Rank underdogs would be the appropriate tag. So I think of the
much talked about glorious uncertainties of cricket, console myself in
the knowledge that any team can have a bad day in the office, that Sri
Lanka could probably beat any of the other nine competing teams at last
twice in a 10-match series and hope that it’s one of those two days.
Come
the 19th of November, we will all know. Speaking strictly for myself, I
would like a Sri Lanka vs Bangladesh or Afghanistan final (I like
underdogs). Second preference: Sri Lanka vs India or Pakistan. In the
unlikely event that Sri Lanka will not make it to the final (yes, I’m a
diehard fan), I would like two of the following teams to play that day:
Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India and Pakistan. If not me, then my
neighbor, my brother, my cousin, someone in the family or a friend. I’m
like that. Overall there are five South Asian teams competing for the
World Cup. For me, that’s a lot to cheer for. Tons of consolation
scenarios (in the unlikely event that Sri Lanka doesn’t go all the way
to win it all).
They’ve played each
other on 134 occasions, Pakistan winning 73 to India’s 56 with five
ending with no-result or ties, I’m not sure. India and Pakistan are
ranked No 1 and No 2 in ODIs right now. Rankings do indicate relative
strengths and form but again we have those glorious uncertainties.
Pakistan in particular have a reputation for swinging between the
amazing and abysmal. A close game or one-sided affair, we really cannot
tell. This doesn’t detract from the adrenalin rush that their
encounters usually produce. These are two very good teams, each packed
with multiple match-winners.
That’s about
the cricket. India and Pakistan, whether we like it or not, are
countries which, when bracketed together, make people go ‘uh oh!’
That’s politics. And the politically inclined or even fixated will,
again whether we like it or not, talk about the match up as though it’s
part of a war. The invective and self-righteousness expressed on social
media platforms is indicative enough. For me, as a Sri Lankan, it’s
mind-boggling. It’s probably the same for many cricket lovers from
Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Nepal, the sixth South Asian cricketing
nation.
The players carry the weight of each
country’s expectations, but the Pakistan team don’t appear to be
carrying extra baggage on account of such concerns. That’s thanks to the
Indian fans. The vast majority, at least those on the streets and not
necessarily hammering keyboards, seem deaf to the political noise.
They’ve welcomed the Pakistan team with the kind of warmth that makes us
wonder what borders and boundaries really are, what they are said to
contain and what is clearly uncontainable.
There’s
something beautiful about borders being rendered irrelevant. To me, it
speaks of community and solidarity where people momentarily perhaps
recognise the true worth of a cricketer. It’s when both the hero and the
fan find their respective national flags retired.
There
will be 47 matches being played before the big day, the final. Half the
games will feature at least one South Asian team. The final may very
well feature two non South Asian teams. In such a situation, I would
shelve all disappointments and find something that’s more than
‘consolation’ in enjoying the cricket. I’d be backing the team less
favoured to win, but will no doubt be no less delighted by the contest
even if the other team won.
I’m pretty sure Sri Lanka will win the World Cup, but I’d be no less pleased if the trophy returned to my neighbourhood.
malindadocs@gmail.com
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