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Sports / Cricket

Cricket: Pakistan hope Zimbabwe is first step out of wilderness

Published: 24 Apr 2015 - 02:42 pm | Last Updated: 14 Jan 2022 - 06:09 pm


Karachi - Deserted grounds, deprived fans and falling standards -- Pakistan has suffered badly from six years without hosting international cricket, but Zimbabwe's planned tour next month could restore hope.

On March 3, 2009, Pakistani cricket suffered a cruel blow when the bus carrying the Sri Lankan Test team was attacked by militants near Lahore's Gaddafi stadium, leaving eight people dead and seven visiting players wounded.

That tragic incident, at the height of the homegrown militant Islamists' bloody fight against the state, forced the suspension of all international cricket in Pakistan.

No team was willing to risk their safety to visit Pakistan, beginning an unwanted odyssey for the 1992 world champions, who have played most of their "home" matches since 2009 in the United Arab Emirates.

The security situation in Pakistan has improved markedly since the military launched a major anti-insurgent offensive in the northwest last June.

And Monday's announcement that Zimbabwe have agreed to come for a short tour next month has brought hope that big-time cricket could be about to return.

It also is a welcome ray of light for Pakistani fans after the side crumbled to an embarrassing 3-0 whitewash in their one-day series in Bangladesh.

Zimbabwe's trip is likely to be confined to Lahore and last only a week, but the sight of a Test-status team playing again in Pakistan will send out an important message.

Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) chairman Shaharyar Khan was understandably upbeat as his efforts behind the scenes look to be bearing fruit.

As well as Zimbabwe, an Australian army team are due in Pakistan next week to play their local counterparts, and Khan hailed the developments as "opening another door" towards full rehabilitation.

"We believe that shortly Pakistan would be hosting age-group teams, 'A' teams and women's teams, and also, once confidence in our security arrangements improves, in due course senior teams as well," he told AFP.

Khan, in his second tenure as PCB chief, drew on his experience as a former foreign secretary and built slowly, unlike his predecessors who tried to tempt bigger teams to Pakistan too quickly.

"The idea was to go for what was doable," he said.

AFP