24 September 1998
Mushrooms and bullshit
Syed Ashfaqul Haque
The most successful skipper in the sorry history of Bangladesh
cricket fell Tuesday from grace, thanks to the spooky game of the
selectors.
Akram Khan was not only stripped of the captain's armband but also
ominously thrown out of a team that he led to giddy heights in Kuala
Lumpur only a year and half ago. Had not the big man from Chittagong
waged a lone battle against the victory-sniffing Hollanders,
Bangladesh's dream of an International Cricket Council (ICC) Trophy
win would have certainly gone up in smoke yet again?
The character he played when chips were dreadfully down carved a
niche in the hearts of cricket-crazy crores across the country. His
international career spans over 10 years and his four years at the
helm of the national team has seen Bangladesh win two major trophies
- ICC and ACC, and the maiden one-day international, that against
Kenya.
While the fans may not forget the historic moment and the man behind
the successes, an unscrupulous gang in the Bangladesh Cricket Board
(BCB) did not find any difficulty in disremembering the moment and
the man.
For the sake of a change and to save the skin of the selectors, the
wandering boat of Board president Saber Hossain Chowdhury was saddled
with a new crew for the Nepal mission. The expectation and efforts of
an all-too-eager Aminul Islam Bulbul, the long-term deputy to Akram,
bore fruits lately when the three-man selection committee asked him
to step into the sticky shoes of the dumped Chittagonian. The
selectors, led by the 'Jack of all trades' Enayet Hossain Siraj, also
chopped all-rounder Naimur Rahman from the Nepal-bound team.
It's very true that Bangladesh cricket hit its lowest ebb in the
Commonwealth Games where the sporting ambassadors, oblivious to the
commitment and conviction necessary for the country's cause, abased
their motherland in faraway away Kuala Lumpur. Bangladesh, the
International Cricket Council Trophy champions, made a mockery of
their claim for Test status, by going down meekly to all their three
group league opponents.
Barring the 'sentiment' of the few in the Board who are shedding
crocodile's tears, it hurt really terribly the aficionados, who had
to swallow the news of the dreadful defeats of the national team at
the hands of cellar-dwellers like Ireland and Scotland.
It is obvious that the skipper should have to face the music
following the pathetic performances since the one-off ICC Trophy
triumph. But the dons of our cricket Board simply cannot pass the
buck to Akram. They are the main culprits who need to be put on the
dock for mishandling the whole affair.
"We had included him (Akram) in the Commonwealth Games not for his
performance, but to continue as a captain," Siraj came up with the
lamest of excuses in front of the newsmen while announcing the 14-man
team. The reality was that Akram was first selected as player, as he
always could have rightly been in any Bangladesh team on account of
his batting performance, and then he was named the captain a week
after.
And if one has to pick a consistent cricketer of the past few months
among the bunch of freakishly famous flop-masters then the name which
will crop up first in any body's mind is that of all-rounder Khaled
Mahmud Sujon, followed by former captain Faroque Ahmed. Statistics
will show Akram Khan, with his small but steady contributions,
trailing behind two or three in the order of the recognised batsmen.
Aminul, who, in support of some Board members, appeared to have
concentrated more on becoming captain rather than scoring runs,
hardly justifies his rating as the country's top batsman in recent
months. He was surprisingly out of touch throughout the ICC clash, in
the tours to Kenya, New Zealand and the British Isles. Apart from
some brilliant innings, which included his gutsy half-centuries in
Ireland and in a triangular one-day series against India, Aminul is
guilty of being inconsistent along with his predecessor. Not only
that, some sources close to the Kuala Lumpur tour party revealed on
condition of anonymity that the captaincy issue reflected badly on
the team's performance and discipline.
But the selectors did neither look into it nor hesitate to pass
contrasting judgements for the same crime. Well, it's understandable
that Akram should be replaced for his performance as captain to lift
the fledgling morale of the team. But how is that Akram does not get
a place in the team as a player?
Considering the dubious activities of the Board over the years, one
cannot argue much about the fact that defeats in Kuala Lumpur were
always on the cards for a team which was coached (?) by none other
than former manager Gazi Ashraf Hossain Lipu. It is those culprits in
the Board who had inducted Gazi Ashraf as coach, replacing Cuthbert
Gordon Greenidge, BCB's director of coaching, citing a vague 'special
circumstance.' The truth was that the celebrated Caribbean hit out at
the cricket administrators on very professional issues. Angry at
being the victim of a hate-campaign set off by a section of BCB
officials, Greenidge opted to let the countrymen know through The
Daily Star about the dismal activities of the Board. He did not
hesitate to reveal that the Board did nothing at all for the
development of the game nationally since the ICC Trophy victory.
Everybody in the Board has got his own agenda. The president himself
is accused of leading the long list of fortune hunters. Although
cricket is wandering in the wilderness, the rise of the 37-year-old
Board president was phenomenal. Within the span of one year a little
known Saber Chowdhury has become a state minister and an influential
ICC executive member, perhaps by cashing in only on the ICC Trophy
victory. Cynics never cease to tell that the young politician is now
gunning for another goal -- the mayorship of Dhaka; developing the
game nationally is from his mind.
Since this is their tendency in the guise of promoting cricket, no
one should expect a decent result or the growth of the game under the
rule of these administrators.
In the wake of growing frustration among cricket fans, the Board
members always need a scapegoat to save their thick skin. That
scapegoat this time is Akram. An expert said it all: "They're
treating us like mushrooms. They want to keep us in the dark and feed
us bullshit."
Source :: The Bangladesh Daily Star (https://www.dailystarnews.com)