Wasim furious as hospitality hits Pakistan practice (8 June 1999)
The recent skirmishes between India and Pakistan over the disputed territory of Kashmir have heightened rivalry to such an extent that the security operation for today's World Cup Super Six game at Old Trafford is on red alert
01-Jan-1970
8 June 1999
Wasim furious as hospitality hits Pakistan practice
Michael Henderson
The recent skirmishes between India and Pakistan over the disputed
territory of Kashmir have heightened rivalry to such an extent that
the security operation for today's World Cup Super Six game at Old
Trafford is on red alert.
But Wasim Akram, the Pakistan captain, was not thinking of crowd
trouble. Nor was he thinking of the injuries that may keep Ijaz Ahmed
and Yousuf Youhana out of a game Pakistan must win to assuage the
defeat by South Africa last Saturday. He was trying to conceal his
anger that, on the best-equipped Test ground in England, his players
were unable to practise properly the day before such an important
match.
Wasim, who spent nine years with Lancashire before leaving at the end
of last season, could not disguise his concern at the lack of
adequate facilities at this World Cup. Last week the Pakistanis found
an indoor school at Northampton closed because there were sponsors to
accommodate, and yesterday, when heavy rain drove the players inside,
Old Trafford proved no better.
The six-lane indoor school at the Stretford End of the ground, which
opened two years ago at a cost of £1.2 million, is regarded as the
best of its kind in the country. It was designed for such days, yet
it had been given over entirely to a corporate hospitality area.
Jim Cumbes, Lancashire's chief executive, said the arrangements made
for sponsors, who will be entertained today in a marquee-type space,
could not be revised at so late an hour.
Wasim, frustrated that his men could not use the facilities in a
manner for which they were intended, was hopping mad. "It's
absolutely ridiculous," he said. "If this sort of thing had happened
in Pakistan, to players from other countries, we would never hear the
end of it."
Pakistan's wretched morning did not end there. Upon being directed to
an indoor school a mile away in Trafford Park, they took one look at
the antiquated net area and promptly returned to the ground, where
the rain had turned the outfield into a series of lakes, denying them
the opportunity of doing some gentle exercises.
While Wasim was fuming, and the Indians were resting in their city
centre hotel, Cumbes, having announced the highest police presence
for a match at Old Trafford, was talking to Raman Subba Row, the
match referee appointed by the International Cricket Council. They
were joined by Alan Hutchings, the experienced commander of police
operations at the other Old Trafford, half a mile up the road.
Nobody has greater experience of the game's flashpoints than Subba
Row, who was the referee in Bridgetown two months ago when Sherwin
Campbell was recalled to the crease to pacify a crowd angry that
their local favourite had been run out against Australia. On that
occasion he had to persuade Sir Garfield Sobers to address the crowd
before play could resume.
Subba Row was the referee when these teams met at Bangalore three
years ago in the last World Cup, a game India won by 39 runs after
Wasim pulled out on the day of the match with a shoulder injury. When
Wasim returned to Lahore he found angry mobs outside his house,
accusing him of throwing the game, and there were effigies of him
burned in the streets.
It will help Subba Row that the umpires standing in today's match,
David Shepherd and Steve Bucknor, are the most experienced in the
world. They also stood in Bangalore, and neither man will flinch at
the prospect of doing his duty. They enjoy the respect of the
players, and will live up to the umpires' creed, "without fear or
favour".
Before the Bangalore match, Subba Row said he summoned the captains
"and told them it was important to communicate to the crowd that all
the players were good friends, which they are. There is nothing false
or shallow about that. They are good mates, and they must get that
across".
He added: "I think there is a mixed Asian population in Manchester,
which is a help. In some places it is more one-sided. But I shall
underline to the captains that this, of all matches, is not the one
to go over the top."
The teams have met in 74 one-day internationals across the world,
most recently in Sharjah when Pakistan won each of their three games.
Never before have they met in England in an official match, although
unofficial fixtures in Harrogate, Uxbridge and at Crystal Palace have
been ruined by crowd misbehaviour.
Three years ago, the final of the World Under-15 tournament between
the countries at Lord's was interrupted twice by spectators, before
India completed a four-wicket victory.
Cumbes said 80 per cent of the tickets for today's match had been
sold before the competition began and there would, therefore, be
plenty of neutrals in the crowd.
"This is only a cricket match," he said, and was swift to reasssure
spectators that "we want people to enjoy the match, but to be orderly
about it".
Pakistan (from): Saeed Anwar, Shahid Afridi, Abdul Razzaq, Ijaz
Ahmed, Inzamam-ul-Haq, Yousuf Youhana, Salim Malik, -Moin Khan,
*Wasim Akram, Azhar Mahmood, Saqlain Mushtaq, Shoaib Akhtar,
Wajahatullah Wasti.
India (from): S C Ganguly, S R Tendulkar, R S Dravid, A D Jadeja, *M Azharuddin, R R Singh, -N R Mongia, J Srinath, A Kumble,
B K V Prasad, D S Mohanty, S Ramesh, A B Agarkar.
Source :: The Electronic Telegraph