Cricket should take precedence, but it’s not. Blatant politics is ruining cricket. A stand-off between Pakistan and India has been threatening two major events this year: the Asia Cup and the World Cup. The worst scenario is that India plays its Asia Cup matches in a neutral venue and not in Pakistan, the host of the event. In a tit-for-tat, Pakistan threatened not to tour India for the 50-over World Cup that follows the Asia Cup and demanded their matches be shifted to a neutral venue.
Not an ideal scenario for cricket fans around the world. The stand-off continues as the matter is not in the hands of the respective cricket boards, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) and Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB). It is in the hands of the two respective countries.
While Pakistan has been flexible, a tendency they showed by sending the Pakistan team to the Twenty20 World Cup held in India despite threats by BJP zealots, but India has remained firm on defanging the spirit and events. BCCI secretary Jay Shah, son of India’s powerful home minister Amit Shah, had denounced any probability of India going across the border almost a year before the event.
Shah also categorically declared that the Asia Cup 2023 would be held at a neutral venue. A few days later, India’s sports minister Anurag Thakur, who previously held the posts of both secretary and president of the BCCI, tried to pacify things by saying that the government would take a final decision.
Another bone of contention or discontent is that Jay Shah is the president of the Asian Cricket Council (ACC), and with that double hat on his head, he announced the annual calendar of the ACC in January this year. It was a week or so after a change in Pakistan cricket’s set-up, with Najam Sethi taking over as head of the 14-man management committee.
Sethi showed displeasure in not taking Pakistan into confidence as a major stakeholder. On Sethi’s demand, a meeting of the ACC was convened in Oman in February, but the status quo remained as nothing could be decided. Another meeting was convened on the sidelines of the ICC Board meeting in March.
That, too, failed to provide a breakthrough, but a hybrid model was proposed. The idea put forth was that while five teams played their matches in Pakistan, India played at a neutral venue. Pakistan’s point of view is that if that model was followed, then the same arrangements would be made for the World Cup, meaning Pakistan would play its matches on a neutral venue.
It remains to be seen for how long Pakistan can afford to affront the ICC and the BCCI. Asia Cup and World Cup are two different entities, just like the ACC and ICC. ACC has little power, and it is ruled by India. India’s clout in the ICC is immense and significant. India can vitiate and veto. They have the power and the money to influence the ICC. Pakistan had signed a Member Participation Agreement with the ICC, and that binds them to feature in all the ICC events. Pakistan gets handsome money in each five-year cycle of ICC events, and that is 128 million dollars.
PCB management committee chief Najam Sethi is defiant. He doesn’t want to go on the back foot. At this stage, the PCB is only in discussions with the ACC over the hosting of the ACC Asia Cup, and no discussions regarding the Men’s World Cup have taken place with the ICC. This is not to say that the hybrid model will not be advocated at the proper ICC forum at the right time.”
While there is nothing official, there were reports that ten venues have been allocated for the World Cup, but Mohali is not included in that list. Mohali is a venue where Pakistan have been at ease playing their matches. They did so in 2011 and then in 2016. Excluding Mohali from the list meant that India had assumed Pakistan would not tour them. But while we assume that there emerged reports from Indian media that if Pakistan tours India, then Chennai and Kolkata are assigned to host Pakistan games. That is some news, if it is to be believed.
The matter is mired in politics. India is now busy with its glitzy and lucrative Indian Premier League until May 28. Fans around the world want India to tour Pakistan for the Asia Cup, and the same for Pakistan for the World Cup. But politics will have its say. A breakthrough is only possible if there is a thaw in the relations between the two countries.
Cricket had been the winner. It can win again; fingers crossed!