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Shaharyar Khan and Rameez Raja: have been at the forefront of Pakistan's domestic revamp
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Who would want to be part of the Pakistan Cricket
Board? Already in the dock over any number of issues -
the Senate Standing Committee inquiry, a stalled
constitution, allegations of financial
unaccountability and a lack of transparency - they
also have to deal with increasingly shrill and
hysterical criticism for the 3-0 series loss against
Australia. And last week, as if somehow all this
weren't enough, the PCB unveiled a brand new look for
domestic cricket. Nothing aggravates traditionalists,
particularly those of a cricketing kind, quite like
attempts to modernise, jazz-up or market their game.
Pakistani traditionalists are no different.
First, a little background. When ABN-AMRO agreed to
sponsor domestic cricket recently, they were the first
to do so in nearly eight years. Furthermore, it was in
line with the restructuring that Rameez Raja, the former chief executive of the Pakistan board, had initiated last season in a bid to revamp a
much-criticised domestic set-up. Raja's vision, one
pursued by Shaharyar Khan, the chairman of the board, and espoused
relentlessly (and tediously) by Imran Khan among
others, was to shift the emphasis from departments and
corporations, such as PIA and Habib Bank, to regional
teams which could harness and nurture talent more effectively and re-ignite dormant
public interest. The obstacle, until then, had been
the lack of financial resources; banks offered
little-educated cricketers a job and a career after
they retired from the game, regional sides offered
them measly match fees and little else.
Earlier this season, players in the regional
Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, the showcase of the domestic
roster, were paid monthly salaries and employed on
six-month contracts. The money came mainly from the
windfall of the India series earlier last year and
wasn't endless. But with ABN-AMRO secured as sponsors,
TV rights having been sold to broadcast domestic
matches and regional sponsors also being sought, the
PCB's pockets are deeper. Last week, then, it seemed
appropriate for the PCB to unveil 'National Cricket
Pakistan'.
The vision is lofty - to make domestic cricket a
popular spectator sport in Pakistan. Plenty of right noises were made at the press conference: mission statements, re-branding, and consumer-reaction models were
bandied about with the same liberal abandon Pakistani
bowlers display towards no-balls. Regional teams have been
renamed - Peshawar become the Panthers, Hyderabad the
Hawks and so on. Furthermore, ABN-AMRO, led by
full-time cricket fanatic and part-time consumer bank
head (and suitably monikered), Salman Butt, have plans
to spice up contests, providing entertainment during
games, improving stadium facilities and also promoting
matches heavily beforehand.
The last week has seen a fairly intense ad campaign in
most main dailies advertising the schedule of matches
in the ongoing national one-day tournament. Tickets for
the recent Quaid-e-Azam Trophy final, held in
Faisalabad, were sold on a float that moved through
the city centre. Crowds of up to 700 on a couple of
days might seem low, but given that last year there
were less than even that (not including dogs), it is
an improvement.
But there are concerns, some ludicrous, others less so,
and most of these were raised at the launch itself.
Local journalists, never shy in prompting verbal
jousts with the PCB, immediately raised doubts. One
questioned bluntly why ABN-AMRO should be given any
support, given their minimal involvement and
association with the game in the past. Another couple
asked why the format, and in particular the choice of
animal names, was copied from South Africa and
England, going as far as to suggest that renaming the
Whites of Karachi to Dolphins and the Blues to Zebras
was somehow a cultural insult to the people of the
city. They are not alone: a couple of letters in an
English daily raised the same issue. It was left,
finally, to that most level-headed of journalists, Gul
Hameed Bhatti, to voice the most serious and credible
concern.
Bhatti warned that for the sponsorship to be truly
successful and for domestic cricket to start
attracting viewership, involvement would have to go
beyond hollow marketing plans. For starters, although
one-day matches are being broadcast live on television
currently, the quality of coverage is abysmal. It is,
Bhatti argued, more likely to turn people off cricket
than onto it and if either the PCB or ABN-AMRO are
serious about what they want to achieve, then they
have to ensure that the channel which broadcasts the
matches does so with an acceptable level of quality.
They cannot, as another reporter whispered, "just
throw money at the game and hope it will develop".
Shahid Hashmi, AFP's veteran sports reporter, also
recalled how involved past sponsors had been with the
game, and how it would require more than re-branding and
marketing gimmickry for any long-term
success.
Both Hashmi and Bhatti are witness to times when
sponsorship was more than just money. Former sponsors
Pakistan Tobacco Company (PTC) used to publish an
annual and comprehensive statistical review of each
season. They were staffed by people who, in the words
of Hashmi, had a deep affection for the game, and it is
something ABN-AMRO should look to now. Certainly,
watching games currently on TV is a deeply shattering
experience; commentators don't know the names of
players, some don't even know how many teams are
participating in a tournament. Urdu commentary is just
about bearable, the English version makes you yearn
for the screech of chalk on blackboard.
Ultimately, given that sponsorship has been as
forthcoming as restrained knocks from Shahid Afridi,
both parties should be applauded for negotiating a
three-year deal. Furthermore, if it is a given that
the PCB will act in the best interests of the game
(not as easy an assumption as you may think), then
added to the energy, drive and passion that Salman
Butt the banker reportedly possesses for the game, it
should in theory prove a fruitful association. Three
years is a lifetime in Pakistan cricket and to infer
too much now is to tempt fate. One thing, though, is
certain: sports headlines (sample: 'Lions devour
Zebras') have surely never been this colourful.
Osman Samiuddin is a freelance journalist based in Karachi.