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Afghanistan (cricket) players eye heroes' welcome (Read 433 times)
Zarmina
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Afghanistan (cricket) players eye heroes' welcome
Feb 2
nd
, 2009, 9:58pm
Afghanistan players eye heroes' welcome
Cricinfo
February 2, 2009
The Afghanistan players are expecting a huge reception back home in Kabul after winning the World Cricket League Division 3 in Argentina. The team left Buenos Aires on Sunday night and will arrive in Afghanistan on Tuesday, and fast bowler Hameed Hasan was anticipating a large crowd turning out to greet them.
"I am very excited about seeing them," he said. "When we won Division 4 in Tanzania there were lots of people at the airport. So as we have won Division 3, there will be even more people there, blocking the roads and celebrating by banging drums.
"I really enjoy the celebrations as we have such great fans. The people in Afghanistan pray for us and are waiting for the trophy to come home so we can all celebrate together."
However, the players also know they have plenty of hard work to put in if they are to realise their dream of playing in the 2011 World Cup, and once the party is over it will be straight back to work, preparing for the World Cup Qualifiers beginning April 1.
Hameed, himself, will be off to play first-class cricket in Pakistan after a couple of days' rest in Peshawar, and the team is expected to get together either in India or Pakistan in early March for a training camp ahead of the qualifiers.
The joy was writ large on wicketkeeper Karim Khan's face as well. "I am very, very happy," he said. "We won Division 5, we won Division 4, now we have won Division 3 and if we all work hard we will get to the World Cup. This is our country's dream and this is my dream, and the Afghan people are very happy.
"I have seen the Afghan websites, I have seen the newspapers and people have said they will be coming to the airport to meet us. Even the president may be coming to see us at the airport."
However, he said the players would need to lift their game if they were to take the final step, though he believed they had the ability to perform well at that level.
"Hopefully, we can beat the likes of Kenya, Bermuda and UAE and get to the World Cup in 2011," said Karim. "It is my dream to play ODIs and face the likes of Pakistan, Australia, England and India. I have faced Shoaib Akhtar from Pakistan, India's Irfan Pathan and Australia's Mitchell Johnson in the nets, and I want to play them in a real match."
Karim will be back in training with former Pakistan wicketkeeper Rashid Latif, who acted as his personal coach in the build-up to the event in Argentina, and helped him improve his game.
"I sent an email to Rashid Latif to thank him for all his hard work with me," said Karim. "I used to be an offspinner but now I am a very good wicketkeeper. Rashid has invited me for more training in Karachi in 15 days' time so I am going for more hard work on my wicketkeeping and my batting."
Middle-order batsman Raees Ahmadzai also believed that Afghanistan would need to raise their game to do well at the qualifiers. "I am very happy that I am going to play for my country in the World Cup Qualifier but we need to work on our game and avoid the mistakes we made against Uganda, and in the first match against the Cayman Islands," said Raees.
"Our first priority is to qualify for the top six - that will be our first target so that we can play ODIs for the next four years. We want to get through to the second stage of the competition and try and get in the top four, as that would be a real gift for the Afghan people. It would be amazing to come from the refugee camps and play cricket with the big nations and try and beat a Test-playing country. That would be the greatest achievement of our lives," he said.
The top four sides from the qualifiers will go on to feature in the 2011 World Cup, while a top-six finish will secure ODI status for the next four years, as well as automatic qualification for the Intercontinental Cup.
Afghanistan progressed as the first qualifier and will be placed in Group B alongside Kenya, The Netherlands, Bermuda, UAE and Denmark. Uganda will be up against Ireland, Scotland, Canada, Oman and Namibia in Group A.
The fixtures for the qualifiers in South Africa from April 1-19 will be released shortly.
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Re: Afghanistan (cricket) players eye heroes' welc
Reply #1 -
Feb 4
th
, 2009, 9:58pm
Good post, here's a related article:
Players act as Afghanistan’s ambassadors
(Reuters) - February 4, 2009 - BUENOS AIRES - It has taken less than eight months for Afghanistan to jump from the fifth division of world cricket to one level below the major test-playing countries.
The team from the war-torn nation continued one of sport’s unlikeliest success stories by winning the third division in Argentina last week, a six-team tournament which doubles as a qualifier for cricket’s World Cup.
Only last May, Afghanistan were playing in the fifth division of the International Cricket Council’s (ICC) world league. Having finished top of that in a tournament played in Jersey, they then came top in the fourth-division tournament in Tanzania last October.
In April, they travel to South Africa with a chance of qualifying for the 2011 World Cup or gaining coveted one-day international status.
National television reports chart the team’s progress and thousands of people turn out to welcome them home after their tournament wins.
Coach Kabir Khan describes his team as ambassadors for the country, offering a change from the stereotyped image of religious fanatics and interminable violence.
“We might be the first Afghans to come to Argentina, so we were the ambassadors for Afghanistan,” he said.
“Most people might have got a view about us and the sort of nation we may be, because of all the war and stuff.
“They might think all kinds of things but they welcomed us with open arms and we have been treated very well here.
Street game
“Cricket is getting a huge following and the other thing it brings people together as well,” he said, adding that the players never discussed politics among themselves.
“What I’ve seen is that people might be in different groups politically but when it comes to cricket all of them are together.”
Remarkably, cricket has only recently been introduced to the country by Afghans who were raised in neighbouring Pakistan, in particular in the city of Peshawar.
“Before the war started and before people started migrating to Pakistan, there was no sense of cricket,” said Khan, himself a Pakistani who played four tests and 10 one-day internationals for his country in the 1990s.
“Nobody even knew about cricket. But the boys who migrated...started to learn about cricket because there was nothing else in Pakistan. It’s a game which you can play in the street, that’s how they got into this sport.”
At the moment, the players are occupied full-time with cricket although they are paid only nominal sums.
“We are playing for pride and to get to the World Cup,” said fast bowler Hamid Hassan.
The team’s strength lies in the bowling attack, led by spinner Mohammad Nabi and right-arm fast bowler Hassan, and the disciplined fielding.
Lucky rain
The batting can be erratic and Afghanistan enjoyed a huge let-off in Argentina in their final match against the Cayman Islands.
Having restricted Afghanistan to 68-5, Cayman Islands were only 28 runs from victory with eight wickets standing when rain forced the match to be abandoned for the day.
Afghanistan, who would have been eliminated if they had lost, came back the next day and made 230 from their 50 overs, the highest score of the tournament, before going on to win by 82 runs.
“We more than a little bit lucky and I think God was very kind to us,” said Khan. “It was all those prayers back home. The rain came at the right time.”
The final and highest hurdle on the road to the World Cup will be in South Africa where 12 teams—including established sides such as Scotland, Ireland, Netherlands and Kenya—will be competing for World Cup places.
Four teams will qualify for the 2011 World Cup—to be held jointly in Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka—and six will earn one-day international status.
Hassan said Afghanistan stood a reasonable chance.
“We have lots of talent, all of the boys in Peshawar and lots playing in the countryside in Afghanistan.”
“It’s going to be difficult but not beyond our capabilities. They boys have got potential, they’ve got the talent,” added Khan.
“They’re playing for pride and respect and we’re getting pride and respect for our nation all over the world.”
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