Quetta's aspiring cricketers bat against security concerns and lack of support for the sport

Published March 22, 2016
A cricketer taking part in net practice. ─ AFP
A cricketer taking part in net practice. ─ AFP

QUETTA: The car park attached to a sports complex in Quetta is full most afternoons ─ but there are no cars parked there.

Instead, the lanes criss-crossing the enormous stretch of asphalt are filled with dozens of teenage boys clad in bright colours, playing cricket with taped-up tennis balls and stumps erected at all points of the compass.

The chaos of the battlefield leaves onlookers baffled ─ but each of the fielding teenagers knows exactly where his ball is flying and how he needs to catch it. These boys are devoted to the game.

Cricketers leaving after taking part in a practice session at an academy in Quetta. ─ AFP
Cricketers leaving after taking part in a practice session at an academy in Quetta. ─ AFP

The national cricket team which stands on the brink of elimination from the World T20 ─ and is facing a crucial match against New Zealand in Mohali on Tuesday night ─ does not have a single player from Balochistan in their squad.

Around 100 metres from the car park, at the western end of the Nawab Akbar Bugti Cricket Stadium, professional cricketers clad optimistically in national colours practise on the rough, uneven ground scattered with stones.

"I could not get a permanent place in Pakistan's national team because nobody patronises Balochistan players like they patronise cricketers from other provinces," says opening batsman Shoaib Khan.

Cricketers exercising as they practice at an academy in Quetta. ─ AFP
Cricketers exercising as they practice at an academy in Quetta. ─ AFP

He is the only cricketer from Balochistan to represent Pakistan at the international level in recent history, playing four T20 matches during a tour to Canada in 2008 where he was second-highest scorer with 99 runs.

Domestically, he has scored 3,695 runs in 121 innings of 65 first-class matches, with the help of seven centuries and 13 fifties ─ but has not been tapped again for the national side.

Not one other player from the province has played an international T20, ODI or Test match since Khan.

Unaffordable profession

Cricketing fans across Pakistan were riveted by the Pakistan Super League (PSL) last month ─ the first franchise-based T20 league in the country ─ with audiences gathering in a charged atmosphere to watch the Quetta Gladiators face off against Islamabad United in the final.

Quetta lost, but their nail-biting run to the PSL final reignited calls in some quarters for national selectors to give players from Balochistan ─ such as the Gladiator's Bismillah Khan ─ a proper chance.

Cricketers stretching during a practice session at an academy in Quetta. ─ AFP
Cricketers stretching during a practice session at an academy in Quetta. ─ AFP

"Our players have the best fitness when compared to players from other parts of the country but they don't have proper grounds, pitches, kits, and gym facilities," he told AFP, adding that if they did "nobody could beat players from Balochistan".

Security issues complicate matters, he said, with the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) refusing to hold even Grade II matches in Quetta.

Then there is the issue of pay for players trying to make a living in a province facing grinding poverty where, Khan said, the fee for a Grade II match is just Rs4,000.

"Our boys can't afford to be playing for the whole day," he said, adding that he had to defy his own parents who wanted him to take on "any other profession" that would net him a decent pay day.

Wasim Bari, a former Test cricketer who has also served as national chief selector, says Baloch players need special attention to become polished international stars.

A cricketer taking part in net practice at an academy in Quetta. ─ AFP
A cricketer taking part in net practice at an academy in Quetta. ─ AFP

"Balochistan players have immense passion ... but lack facilities and opportunities. Since the national team is always selected on merit, there is dire need that PCB provide them special grooming," he said.

Shoaib Khan agrees, saying there was "no sport culture in Balochistan".

"There are no grounds, academies are not being promoted and no major tournaments are organised."

"We don't ask that you should include us in the national team at the beginning,” said Gohar Faiz, a talented fast bowler from Quetta ─ just that players should be given a chance.

Going beyond boundaries

Khair Muhammad, the recently elected chairman of the Balochistan Cricket Association, agrees that both provincial and federal cricket authorities have neglected the province.

Recently elected chairman of the Balochistan Cricket Association, Khair Muhammad, speaking with AFP during an interview at an academy in Quetta. ─ AFP
Recently elected chairman of the Balochistan Cricket Association, Khair Muhammad, speaking with AFP during an interview at an academy in Quetta. ─ AFP

"We will establish cricket academies and provide players with grounds and resources," he promised.

To achieve this, he has sought help from Socio Pakistan, a non-governmental organisation working on public welfare projects in Quetta, to establish cricket academies and provide proper kits to players in the province.

"We have focused on 37 clubs in the region and will provide them nets, rollers, kits and all other basic necessities," said Amanullah Kakar, Socio Pakistan Chief Executive Officer.

Cricketers taking part in a catch practice at an academy in Quetta. ─ AFP
Cricketers taking part in a catch practice at an academy in Quetta. ─ AFP

Sayed Muhammad Sufi, sports editor at Geo, said that despite the lack of resources things were improving, citing players such as PSL star Bismillah Khan.

As for Bismillah Khan himself, like the players at the stadium in Quetta, he remains hopeful that he may yet officially don Pakistan's colours.

"I am pretty satisfied with my performance at the moment and hope to be selected for the national team after the World T20 or by latest at the end of the year," he said.

Cricketers exercising at an academy in Quetta. ─ AFP
Cricketers exercising at an academy in Quetta. ─ AFP
Men and boys of all ages are devoted to the game. ─ AFP
Men and boys of all ages are devoted to the game. ─ AFP

Opinion

Editorial

Impending slaughter
Updated 07 May, 2024

Impending slaughter

Seven months into the slaughter, there are no signs of hope.
Wheat investigation
07 May, 2024

Wheat investigation

THE Shehbaz Sharif government is in a sort of Catch-22 situation regarding the alleged wheat import scandal. It is...
Naila’s feat
07 May, 2024

Naila’s feat

IN an inspirational message from the base camp of Nepal’s Mount Makalu, Pakistani mountaineer Naila Kiani stressed...
Plugging the gap
06 May, 2024

Plugging the gap

IN Pakistan, bias begins at birth for the girl child as discriminatory norms, orthodox attitudes and poverty impede...
Terrains of dread
Updated 06 May, 2024

Terrains of dread

Restored faith in the police is unachievable without political commitment and interprovincial support.
Appointment rules
Updated 06 May, 2024

Appointment rules

If the judiciary had the power to self-regulate, it ought to have exercised it instead of involving the legislature.