Afghanistan now an international cricket force to be reckoned with

Afghanistan now an international cricket force to be reckoned with
Afghanistan's Naveen-ul-Haq (R) and Afghanistan's Fazalhaq Farooqi (L) celebrate the dismissal of Bangladesh's captain Najmul Hossain Shanto during the ICC men's Twenty20 World Cup 2024 Super Eight cricket match between Afghanistan and Bangladesh at Arnos Vale Stadium in Arnos Vale, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines on June 24, 2024 (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 27 June 2024
Follow

Afghanistan now an international cricket force to be reckoned with

Afghanistan now an international cricket force to be reckoned with
  • The country’s men’s team produced one of the shocks of the 2024 T20 World Cup when they beat Australia to reach the semifinals

LONDON: It is a fool’s game trying to predict which matches in a tournament will produce a shock result. If the prediction is wrong, then one is likely to look foolish. If a shock or surprise result occurs, there is retrospective analysis of why it was so surprising and unforeseen. This situation has applied in the 2024 men’s T20 World Cup.

My reaction on waking up, in England, to the news that Afghanistan had beaten Australia was one of shock. Why was I shocked and should that have been my initial reaction? Perhaps it was because I predicted Australia would win the tournament. Perhaps it was because I had underestimated Afghanistan.

The team had lost to India by 47 runs in their previous match, after being thrashed by the West Indies by 104 runs. On this basis it was reasonable to assume that Australia had the upper hand, given that they were on a run of eight consecutive T20I victories, their longest winning streak in the format.

Both of my fellow Arab News podcasters had reported that one of the pitches at Kingstown, St. Vincent, had generated significant spin and had wondered how Australia would cope with Afghanistan’s high-quality spinners. Influenced by pitch reports, Australia opted to select an extra spinner, who was economical but claimed no wickets. Afghanistan’s batting has been patchy during the tournament, relying heavily on its openers, one of whom, Rahmanullah Gurbaz, is the tournament’s leading scorer, the other, Ibrahim Zadran, not far behind.

The team also feature the tournament’s leading wicket taker, Fazalhaq Farooqi, who played for the MI Emirates in the 2024 ILT20. Add in the captain Rashid Khan, one of the world’s leading spin bowlers with almost 150 T20I wickets, and the team has a solid spine. Support to that has not always been consistent but, against Australia, it appeared in the shape of Gulbadin Naib, whose medium pace claimed four wickets for only 20 runs, sparking a collapse of Australia’s middle order.

In that spell, Naib captured the wicket of Glenn Maxwell, who was threatening to win the match for his team. The minds of the Afghanistan players must gone back to Nov. 7, 2023, when they reduced Australia to 91 for seven in the 18th over, chasing 292 to win. A win could have propelled Afghanistan into the semifinals of the ODI World Cup.

However, fighting injury, cramp, dehydration and exhaustion, Maxwell, literally off his own bat, secured victory for Australia, surviving several missed chances in a score of 201. The scars of that loss will have run deep for Afghanistan and the memories must have resurfaced as Maxwell batted on a different level to his teammates. This time, the Afghan players held their nerve, a fine catch accounting for Maxwell, paving the way for a 21-run victory which they celebrated wildly.

Only one match, against Bangladesh, stood in the way of a semifinal place. Even the sceptics were forced to admit that an Afghanistan victory would not be a shock. In a tense, low scoring, rain-interrupted encounter the Afghan team held their nerve to triumph by five runs, although not without controversy.

In the 12th over, with Bangladesh two runs behind the recalculated target score, Afghanistan’s coach was seen on camera asking his players to slow down. Immediately, Naib, fielding at slip, threw himself to the ground, apparently suffering from cramp. He was treated and taken off the field, whereupon rain returned. On resumption of play, Naib then bowled the 15th over, taking a wicket which he celebrated by sprinting around the field.

Commentators were unimpressed. Some have felt that the “spirit of cricket” was impugned. Others have called for the International Cricket Council to invoke a penalty against Naib for “time-wasting” under its Code of Conduct. These include a match-fee fine, suspension points and an in-match five-run penalty.

No action has been taken so far. Afghanistan’s captain appeared irked by Naib’s behavior or, maybe, it was the instruction from the coach. He is Jonathan Trott, a South African-born cricketer who played 127 times for England. In the semifinals, he was faced with plotting the cricketing downfall of the country of his birth. It did not go well.

On a poor pitch, Afghanistan was dismissed for 56 in 11.5 overs, South Africa winning by nine wickets. Until that match, Trott’s star players had performed to the top of their abilities and the supporting cast had done so when required. Two of them, Naib and Mohammad Nabi were part of the squad which joined Division 5 of the World Cricket League in June 2008. The team rose rapidly into Division 2, enabling it to enter the 2009 qualifiers for the 2011 ODI World Cup. Although it failed to do so, one-day international status was granted.

Since then, continued development was rewarded with full membership of the ICC in 2019. One of the requirements to be fulfilled is that of having a funded women’s team with pathway structures in place, participation in at least one ICC women’s World Cup in the previous four years, or feature on the ICC rankings table. This is not being fulfilled.

The women’s team was first established in 2010, playing in only one tournament. In 2020, the Afghanistan Cricket Board awarded 25 central contracts, but the squad was disbanded following the Taliban capture of the country in August 2021 and the subsequent ban on women’s sport. Many of the team’s players are understood to be in Australia.

The Taliban’s different policy toward the men’s team is a recognition that cricket is the country’s most popular sport, holding particular significance amongst Pashtun men. The team’s success offers legitimacy to the regime at home. Other countries’ concerns about human rights are brushed aside. So far, the ICC has adopted soft diplomacy. It can hardly change that now the team is even more successful. Had it not been so, these issues would not be in such sharp profile. How they play out is unpredictable.

Those who did not foresee Afghanistan’s success have been made to look foolish. As if further proof was needed, I revisited a website which offered odds on which teams would reach the semifinals prior to the tournament. Remarkably, the most favored were India, South Africa, England and Afghanistan. Taking heed of that website would have eliminated any mention of shock and Afghanistan in the same sentence. Despite the semifinal loss, Afghanistan’s men’s team are now a force not to be underestimated in future.


World’s best female tennis players heading to Riyadh next month

World’s best female tennis players heading to Riyadh next month
Updated 04 October 2024
Follow

World’s best female tennis players heading to Riyadh next month

World’s best female tennis players heading to Riyadh next month
  • The first professional women’s tennis event to take place in the Kingdom runs Nov. 2 to 9
  • ‘We’re excited to begin a new chapter for tennis in the Kingdom,’ said Saudi Tennis Federation president Arij Mutabagani

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia will welcome some of the world’s top tennis players — including Poland’s Iga Swiatek and Aryna Sabalenka of Belarus — next month for the Women’s Tennis Association Finals in Riyadh.
The championship will be the first professional women’s tennis tournament to take place in the Kingdom. It will run Nov. 2 to 9 at King Saudi University in Riyadh.
The top eight singles players and doubles pairs from the WTA will face off in the season-ending event, which will decide the 2024 champions. The tournament is the first of a three-year contract between the WTA and the Saudi Tennis Federation, with the Hologic WTA Tour’s flagship event making Riyadh its home through to 2026.
Saudi Tennis Federation president Arij Mutabagani said: “We’ve seen the passion that our young population has for the game, and our aim to inspire 1 million (people to take up) tennis by 2030 is progressing rapidly, as seen with the recent WTA community engagement programs that were rolled out across the city last week.
“With just 30 days to go until the world’s top female tennis stars compete here in Saudi Arabia for the first time, we’re excited to begin a new chapter for tennis in the Kingdo,” he added.
With WTA World Number 1 Swiatek, and 2024 US Open champion Sabalenka already confirmed for the season finale, the stage is set for a thrilling spectacle. Tickets are on sale via webook.com
The WTA Finals Riyadh is a key element of the STF’s plans to inspire participation in tennis across Saudi and is the latest international sports event to take place in the country. It is also part of the WTA’s aims to grow the game worldwide and inspire a new generation of girls to take to the court.
In recent weeks, WTA Finals tournament director Garbiñe Muguruza and community ambassador Judy Murray made the trip to Riyadh to kick off the WTA Community Engagement clinics supporting the STF’s efforts to inspire a new generation of Saudi tennis stars.


Three of Liverpool’s biggest stars are out of contract soon but Arne Slot is still smiling about it

Three of Liverpool’s biggest stars are out of contract soon but Arne Slot is still smiling about it
Updated 04 October 2024
Follow

Three of Liverpool’s biggest stars are out of contract soon but Arne Slot is still smiling about it

Three of Liverpool’s biggest stars are out of contract soon but Arne Slot is still smiling about it
  • Manager Arne Slot still found time to joke about the situation on Friday when quizzed about their futures
  • Questions about Salah, Van Dijk and Alexander-Arnold will only grow as the season goes on and their contracts run down

LIVERPOOL, England: Mohamad Salah, Virgil van Dijk and Trent Alexander-Arnold have entered the final months of their contracts at Liverpool and can leave as free agents at the end of the season.
Yet, manager Arne Slot still found time to joke about the situation on Friday when quizzed about their futures.
“It’s the same boring answer as always and I could really understand if you ask me this once every two weeks but if you ask me this after two or three days again then you still get the same answer and people feel that I’m boring them,” Slot told reporters at his media conference ahead of Saturday’s game against Crystal Palace. “So, try it after the international break again.”
Questions about Salah, Van Dijk and Alexander-Arnold will only grow as the season goes on and their contracts run down. All three will be able to talk to potential suitors outside of England from January.
All three are Liverpool icons given their roles in leading the Merseyside club to its first league title in 30 years in 2020 and having won the Champions League the season before.
Alexander-Arnold is a home-grown talent and, at the age of 26, a player whose best years are likely ahead of him.
In the cases of Salah, 32, and Van Dijk, 33, Liverpool are dealing with players at the latter stages of their careers, who are unlikely to have any sell-on value if handed long-term deals.
Those are factors that Liverpool executives such as football CEO Michael Edwards will have to consider.
Salah, who has consistently been linked with a move to the Saudi League, has been in outstanding form this season, with six goals in nine games as Liverpool has risen to the top of the Premier League and made a perfect start in the Champions League. If he is not to be offered a new deal, a January move would be a final chance to realize a financial return on the forward, who cost around $50 million when signed from Roma in 2017.
That would have a potentially detrimental impact on Liverpool’s season, while Salah would also miss out on a hefty signing bonus he would be able to negotiate as a free agent.
The same applies with Van Dijk, who is Liverpool’s captain and remains a rock at the heart of the defense.
Salah said he is treating this like his last season at the club, while Van Dijk has said he is calm about his position.
Liverpool spent around $150 million in total to sign the duo, who were so pivotal to its success under former manager Jurgen Klopp, and it would likely cost well in excess of that to replace them with like-for-like players.
All three players have been important to what has been such a promising start for Slot since he succeeded Klopp in the offseason.
And Slot was keen Friday to focus on maintaining that form, rather than contract discussions.
Liverpool can move four points clear at the top by beating Palace in the early kickoff, before defending champion Manchester City and Arsenal play later in the day.
There was no danger, he said, of his team getting carried away with its early success under him.
“We are Liverpool, so players are used to being on top of the league,” he said. “It would be very weird if a player at Liverpool is all of a sudden with his head in the clouds.”


Chelsea not ready for Premier League title tilt, says Maresca

Chelsea not ready for Premier League title tilt, says Maresca
Updated 04 October 2024
Follow

Chelsea not ready for Premier League title tilt, says Maresca

Chelsea not ready for Premier League title tilt, says Maresca
  • “I really don’t think we can compete with City and Arsenal,” Enzo Maresca said
  • “The reason why is that City are working with the same manager for nine years, Arsenal for five years“

LONDON: Enzo Maresca says Chelsea are not ready to compete with Manchester City and Arsenal for the Premier League title despite their impressive start to the season.
The Blues are fourth in the table and, with 15 goals, are the division’s top scorers after winning four of their six league games under the Italian.
Cole Palmer, who scored four first-half goals against Brighton last week, is one of the form players in the top-flight.
Maresca demonstrated Chelsea’s enviable strength in depth by fielding an entirely changed starting line-up for Thursday’s 4-2 Europa Conference League win over Gent.
However, three months into his tenure, the former Leicester boss dismissed suggestions Chelsea could challenge the league’s established top two and win a first title since 2017.
“I really don’t think we can compete with City and Arsenal,” he said. “I really think that, because we are not ready.
“The reason why is that City are working with the same manager for nine years, Arsenal for five years. It’s something that if you want to compete for important things, you need that time.”
Chelsea host Nottingham Forest on Sunday seeking their fourth league win in a row.
The mood around the club has been transformed since Forest’s last visit to Stamford Bridge a year ago when they won 1-0 during a poor run for Chelsea, who ultimately finished sixth after a strong finish.
Chelsea have spent lavishly over the past two years, compiling a huge squad with mixed results, but there are signs they may have turned a corner at last.
“When you win games it always creates energy, trust, confidence,” said Maresca. “It’s helping the process.
“But the players are the first to recognize when the team plays well or not. The results are helping but they are convinced because they can see clearly the purpose and identity we have.”


Tennis world number one Iga Swiatek splits with coach Tomasz Wiktorowski

Tennis world number one Iga Swiatek splits with coach Tomasz Wiktorowski
Updated 04 October 2024
Follow

Tennis world number one Iga Swiatek splits with coach Tomasz Wiktorowski

Tennis world number one Iga Swiatek splits with coach Tomasz Wiktorowski
  • The 23-year-old won the French Open and US Open during her first season with Tomasz Wiktorowski
  • The world number one has won five Grand Slam titles including four French Open trophies

WARSAW: World number one Iga Swiatek on Friday confirmed she has split with her coach Tomasz Wiktorowski and as a result would not compete in next week’s WTA tournament in Wuhan, China.
“After three years of the greatest achievements in my career, together with my coach Tomasz Wiktorowski we decided to part ways,” Swiatek wrote on Instagram.
“After an important change in my sports team, I decided to withdraw from the tournament in Wuhan,” she later said in a post on the X account of the Chinese tournament.
“I’m really sorry for fans in China and those who wait to see me play, but I hope you understand that I need some time.”
After her US Open quarter-final defeat in September, Swiatek also withdrew from the prestigious Beijing 1000 WTA tournament in which she was the defending champion citing “personal matters.”
“I want to start with a big thank you and appreciating our work together,” Swiatek said of fellow Pole Wiktorowski.
“His experience, analytical and strategic attitude and enormous knowledge about tennis helped us to achieve things I’ve never dreamed of only a few months after we started working together.”
Swiatek said she has held “first talks” with possible new coaches, adding: “I’m ready to take the next step of my career. I will let you know when I make a decision.”
The 23-year-old won the French Open and US Open during her first season with Wiktorowski, and has held the world number one ranking since November 2023.
She has won five Grand Slam titles including four French Open trophies.


Top seed Sabalenka stunned by Muchova in Beijing last eight

Top seed Sabalenka stunned by Muchova in Beijing last eight
Updated 04 October 2024
Follow

Top seed Sabalenka stunned by Muchova in Beijing last eight

Top seed Sabalenka stunned by Muchova in Beijing last eight
  • World number two Aryna Sabalenka was on a streak of 15 victories in a row
  • She won titles in Cincinnati and then the US Open for the first time

BEIJING: The 49th-ranked Karolina Muchova stunned top seed Aryna Sabalenka in three sets to reach the China Open semifinals on Friday.
The Czech player won 7-6 (7/5), 2-6, 6-4 and faces China’s Olympic champion Zheng Qinwen or 17-year-old Russian Mirra Andreeva for a place in the final.
Last year’s US Open champion Coco Gauff plays Spain’s former world number two Paula Badosa in the other semifinal in Beijing.
World number two Sabalenka was on a streak of 15 victories in a row, claiming titles in Cincinnati and then the US Open for the first time.
The Belarusian previously had trouble though with Muchova, who this time last year was inside the top 10 before injury struck.
US Open semifinalist Muchova had won the last two meetings between them with both going to a deciding set.
This encounter proved to be just as tight as Sabalenka’s hopes of usurping Iga Swiatek at the top of the rankings took an unexpected hit, having been a break up at 4-2 in the deciding set and seemingly on course for the last four.
“The conditions here are so tough, it can go one way or the other. There was a couple of great returns from her, she got the momentum and started playing more aggressively,” said Sabalenka, who will play at the Wuhan Open next week.
“It was a really high-level match and she played some unbelievable tennis.”
Three-time major champion Sabalenka faced three break points at the start but she held firm, then had a sniff herself on her opponent’s serve at 2-1, but Muchova similarly refused to buckle.
The hard-hitting Sabalenka had set point on Muchova’s serve at 5-4 but surrendered the opportunity when she rattled her forehand wide on the Czech’s second serve.
Muchova double-faulted to give Sabalenka another chance to wrap up the first set but again she failed to take it.
The Czech had two set points in the tiebreak and grabbed the second at the end of a thrilling rally to go a set up.
It was the first set 26-year-old Sabalenka had dropped since the third round in New York.
Sabalenka started the second set brightly to break for 2-1 and broke once more on the way to sealing the set with comparative ease.
Neither could hold serve in the deciding set before Muchova, who at one point had appeared to be wilting in the face of her opponent’s superior power, found another gear to clinch the match in two hours, 46 minutes.
This time last year 28-year-old Muchova was ranked ninth in the world having reached the French Open final and semifinals at Flushing Meadows.
But her 2023 season ended after the US Open because of wrist surgery and she did not play for nearly 10 months until returning this summer.
Sabalenka felt she should have been more aggressive in the match, but said: “I was really close to winning today, but things didn’t go my way and I can only be proud of myself,” she said.