The team manager criticizes the partisan atmosphere during the India-Pakistan match in the World Cup – Sports

The team manager criticizes the partisan atmosphere during the India-Pakistan match in the World Cup – Sports

More than 120,000 spectators packed into the Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad, India on Saturday to watch the men’s Cricket World Cup box-office clash between arch-rivals India and Pakistan.

However, almost all of them were Indian fans and were cheering for their team with the highest levels of energy they could muster.

India beat Pakistan by seven wickets in a lopsided match to maintain their unblemished 50-run World Cup record against their neighbours.

Pakistan were bowled out for 191 in the 43rd over after their batting line-up collapsed in characteristic fashion in the face of disciplined Indian bowlers.

To make it even more terrifying for the Pakistani players, the chants of the stadium announcer and spectators were clearly just to irritate the hosts.

This was also the case with music played in a cauldron-like setting.

Pakistan manager Mickey Arthur felt it all and couldn’t help but be “very honest” about what he felt was a partisan climate.

“It doesn’t feel like an ICC event to be quite honest,” Arthur said in the post-match press conference when asked how influential the partisan buildup was against the “shy” Pakistan team.

It seemed like a two-part series; “It looked like a BCCI (Board of Control for Cricket in India) event.”

Arthur accused the organizers of the public address system of favoring India by refusing to play a popular patriotic song: “I did not hear Dil Dil Pakistan Come across the microphones often tonight.

But Arthur did not see that as an excuse for Pakistan’s indirect seven-wicket loss to India.

See also  Celebrating Kaitlyn Clark, the Iowa State women's basketball team fills the arena

“So yes, that plays a role, but I won’t use that as an excuse because for us it was about living in the moment. It was about the next ball and it was about how we face the Indian players tonight.”

Pakistani fans were effectively banned from taking to the ground after failing to obtain visas to cross the border, leaving the arena filled with blue shirts of India fans as the home team cruised to a seven-wicket win.

Team Arthur was only supported by a small number of overseas Pakistani fans who made the trip from the US and UK.

Since the 2008 attacks on Mumbai, India and Pakistan have not played a full bilateral series, with New Delhi and Islamabad still at loggerheads diplomatically.

India failed to issue visas to Pakistani fans despite them already getting tickets for World Cup matches.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back To Top