Fragility, strength and uncertainty at cricket’s margins

Fragility, strength and uncertainty at cricket’s margins
Vaibhav Suryavanshi during a Ranji Trophy match, Patna, India, Jan. 6, 2024. (AP Photo)
Short Url
Updated 28 November 2024

Fragility, strength and uncertainty at cricket’s margins

Fragility, strength and uncertainty at cricket’s margins
  • From IPL ‘mega-auction’ to the more humble sixes events, the sport continues to exist at opposite extremes

Last week’s column considered two of cricket’s extremes. At one end were teams dreaming of qualifying for upcoming World Cups. At the other end were ongoing geopolitics between India and Pakistan. Their latest standoff carries the threat that the 2025 Champions Trophy, scheduled to be hosted by Pakistan next February, will be postponed or changed in shape. Despite more saber-rattling in the last week, a resolution has not been found. A much-needed schedule of play is required by teams, broadcasters and the Pakistan Cricket Board, among others.

It is not surprising that the Board of Control for Cricket in India might have diverted its eyes from the need to find a resolution for a few days. On Nov. 24 and 25, it held its player auction for the 2025 edition of the Indian Premier League. Jeddah was selected as the venue for this glitzy affair. Much has been read into this choice of location. Some have interpreted it as evidence of an imminent surge of Saudi investment in cricket. Irrespective of location, the event is another example of cricket’s ability to generate extremes.

This year’s auction is a “mega-auction,” which occurs every three years. It allows for a reset, in that each of the 10 franchises is allowed to retain only six players, thereby giving them an opportunity to rebuild their squads. In the intervening years, teams can retain as many players as they like, before a “mini-auction.” In this year’s mega-auction, a final number of 577 registered players were put forward for auction, 367 Indians and 210 overseas.

As reported elsewhere in Arab News, the auction opened with two sets of six marquee players. They receive special focus based on their abilities, past performances and stature. It was not long before records were broken. Each year seems to produce a new most expensive player. Last year it was Mitchell Starc, who was sold for $2.9 million. This year it is India’s wicketkeeper-batter, Rishabh Pant, who was bought by Lucknow Super Giants for $3.19 million. An aggregate $757 million was spent.

It is not just a matter of buying top players. Purchases are designed to optimize the dynamics of team strategy, leadership potential, skills balance and the development of young, mainly Indian, talent. This year’s extreme example was the purchase of 13-year-old Vaibhav Suryavanshi for $0.1 million.

Far away from this extravaganza lies another world of cricket, existing at the very margins. Regular readers will recall my annual trip in April to the Chiang Mai International Sixes. Those who organize this tournament also hold another one in November, called the Gymkhana Sixes, which is based largely on local Thais and expatriates. Previously, between 2008 and 2016, a tournament had been held in Bangkok, Then, it was titled the Thailand International Sixes and played at Harrow International School.

One of its leading lights was Mike Maher, an inveterate cricket sixes organizer via his Asian Cricket Sixes Tour. After 2016, the Harrow facility was no longer available and an alternative venue proved to be unsuitable. A move to Chiang Mai was agreed and The Siam International Sevens was created in 2018, held at the Gymkhana Club. This was facilitated by conducive linkages between Maher and the organizers of the Chiang Mai Sixes.

In 2019 the tournament became the Gymkhana Sixes, organized locally, as a one-off. During the COVID-19 restrictions on international travel between 2020 and 2022, the Gymkhana Sixes proved to be a popular opportunity for domestic tournament cricket. It continued in 2023 and was set up for 2024.

However, a few weeks before the Gymkhana Sixes was due to open, the adjacent River Ping burst its banks and flooded the golf course in which the cricket ground sits. The deposited mud was cleared away by a combination of golf caddies and local volunteers. Shortly after this restorative work, the Ping flooded again, to far more devastating effect. Flood waters over a meter deep covered the area, depositing 20 cm of mud and silt.

The waters swept all before them in a diagonal path from one end of the course to the other. One victim of the waters was an electronic scoreboard which, somewhat fortuitously, was discovered by a local resident in her garden some 3 km away. Overall, the ground was rendered unusable. Once it had dried, clearing by hand began, but realization of a mammoth task led to the deployment of machinery.

An immediate impact of the floods was on the 2024 Gymkhana Sixes. They were moved to Royal Chiang Mai Golf club some 30 km north of the city and held on Nov. 23, involving six teams. Although the setting is beautiful, the site is too far out of town to host the International Sixes event in April. The cost of restoring cricket to the Gymkhana Club is estimated to be about $32,000. A crowd funding and general appeal has been initiated. One rich irony is that turf-laying requires water. This will be in short supply in coming months up to the Sixes in April. Restoration of an area devastated by unexpected flood water now requires water as a salving balm.

All of this is in stark contrast to the event in Jeddah. Yet, there are linkages. Cricket’s ecosystem is fragile. Its playing surfaces are nurtured by climate. Grounds of a sufficient quality are required to sustain cricket from amateur to international levels. Sometimes the grounds curated by amateur teams are required for international tournaments. This has been the case with the Gymkhana ground in Chiang Mai. It may be a surprise to learn that junior and senior n men’s teams played there in International and Asia Cricket Council World Cup qualifying tournaments in 2017 and 2019.

Although there may have been an interdependency in recent times, this is unlikely to be replicated in future. Instead, a gap is emerging. The Gymkhana Club will go to its loyal base to support its restoration work. Saudi cricket is aspirational, which will have been boosted by its association with the IPL auction and BCCI leaders. It remains to be seen how these will unfold in cricket’s global landscape. At an opposite extreme, the plight of the Gymkhana Club will go largely unnoticed. It will be a shame if grassroots cricket of this sort is subsumed by mightier concerns.


‘Historic moment’ — India’s 6 best baseball players are finally going pro

‘Historic moment’ — India’s 6 best baseball players are finally going pro
Updated 15 sec ago

‘Historic moment’ — India’s 6 best baseball players are finally going pro

‘Historic moment’ — India’s 6 best baseball players are finally going pro
  • Dubai-based Baseball United signs 6 players, including 3 born in India, to the Mumbai Cobras, the country’s first professional baseball team

DUBAI: Baseball United, the first professional baseball league focused on the Middle East and South Asia, has announced the signing of three Indian and three Indian-American players.

They will compete for the Mumbai Cobras, the first professional baseball franchise in the history of India. The franchise will take center stage against the Karachi Monarchs when Baseball United kicks off its inaugural season in Dubai on Nov. 14. It will mark the first time a professional baseball league has ever played in the Middle East or South Asia.

The milestone is even more significant due to the inclusion of six Indians, giving the nation’s athletes a global platform usually reserved for cricket. Among the players are three homegrown talents, all developed within India’s grassroots baseball community by local coaches and universities, as well as via Baseball United’s India Development Program.

“This is a historic moment for sport in India,” said Kash Shaikh, Baseball United CEO, chairman and co-founder. “We know that cricket is king in India. But we believe that baseball is the country’s young prince. The core elements of the game are the same — you hit, catch, throw and run. And there’s quite a bit of shared terminology.

“Once more Indians learn the game, I know they will start to love (it). And one of the best ways to help people fall in love with baseball is through the Indian stars who will take the field for the Mumbai Cobras. These young men — all with inspiring stories — will be some of the nation’s newest sports heroes.”

Although overshadowed by cricket, baseball’s popularity in India has grown steadily. It has been played across 26 states — from Kerala in the south to Punjab in the north — for more than 50 years, with a stronghold of talent across Mumbai and Maharashtra. According to YouGov, there are 53 million avid fans in India with an average age of just 24 years old — one of the youngest fanbases in all sports.

More than 500 schools and universities across India compete in baseball and softball, with Lovely University, a private facility in Phagwara, Punjab, winning this year’s All India Inter University Baseball Championship.

All three of the local Indian players joining the Cobras — Saurabh Gaikwad, Akshay More and Tushar Lalwani — were standout pitchers.

Gaikwad, 23, is the son of local farmers from Pangari in Satara district, Maharashtra and has played baseball for 11 years. He’s pitched in four University National Championships and several international tournaments, including Baseball United’s All-Star Showcase exhibition in November 2023 and the Baseball United Arab Classic in 2024. Gaikwad has been coached by Vishnu Kalel, Baseball United’s baseball development manager in India, since 2014, and instructed by Carlos Mirabal, the organization’s manager of global baseball operations, since 2019.

More, 21, lives with nearly 40 other family members in Pune district, Maharashtra. He began playing baseball in 2019 after focusing on martial arts in his early childhood. More’s first international experience was also at the Baseball United All-Star Showcase, after which he played in three University National Championships, and the Baseball United Arab Classic. More was named “Best Pitcher” in the All India Inter University Baseball Championship in 2023 and 2025. He has been coached by both Kalel and Mirabal since 2021.

Lalwani, 22, is from Andheri West, Mumbai, where his mother worked in a call center. He has played baseball for six years, after starting his athletic career as a cricketer. He pitched in four University National Championships, four Federations National Championships and in the Baseball United Arab Classic in 2024. He has been coached by both Kalel and Mirabal since 2021.

The three Indian-American signings are Karan Patel, Raul Shah and Aaron Singh.

Patel, 28, is a pitcher from Houston, Texas. His father, an avid cricketer, was born in Mumbai. Patel made history in 2019 by becoming the first player of Indian descent to be drafted by a Major League Baseball team, selected by the Chicago White Sox in the seventh round after four years at the University of Texas at San Antonio. Patel pitched at All American level with the Birmingham Barons and spent last year with the Lincoln Saltdogs of the American Association of Professional Baseball. He was the first overall draft pick by the Cobras in the inaugural Baseball United Draft in 2023.

Shah, 31, a second baseman from Chatham, UK, was a member of Great Britain’s national team for the 2022 World Baseball Classic qualifiers. He spent four years at Johns Hopkins University and most recently played for the Southern Maryland Blue Crabs in the Atlantic League. He was a ninth-round pick by the Cobras in the inaugural draft. 

Singh, 28, a shortstop from Artesia, California spent four years at the University of Redlands where he was all-conference, all-region and AA while earning the ABCA Rawlings Gold Glove. Most recently, he played for the Schaumburg Boomers of the Frontier League.

“This is such a big day in my life,” said Kalel. “I’ve always dreamed of helping baseball players in India reach the biggest stages. And now, thanks to the vision of Kash Shaikh and the entire team at Baseball United, that dream has come to life.

“I learned about pitching from watching videos on YouTube 10 years ago. The first video I watched was actually about Mariano Rivera — one of Baseball United’s co-founders — and his amazing pitch, the ‘cutter.’ After that, I started working with local kids to teach them proper mechanics and techniques for pitching. And when I met Carlos Mirabal a few years later, he really took my training and coaching to another level.”

He added: “In 2022, when I first met Mr. Kash Shaikh, and he eventually offered me a job at Baseball United, it was a magical moment for me. I cried that day with tears of joy. Then, when Mr. Kash and the team announced the Mumbai Cobras franchise one year later, that became another amazing milestone in my life. Since then, there have been so many incredible moments through Baseball United. But today — as we announce three professional players whom I coached in my home of Maharashtra for all of these years — today may be the biggest moment yet. I can’t wait to see all the Mumbai Cobras jerseys on the fields and in the stands in Dubai.”

The Mumbai Cobras will take the field for the first time on Nov. 14 at Baseball United Ballpark in Dubai. The league will open with the Subcontinent Series, three games between Mumbai and the Karachi Monarchs.

Overall, four teams — including the Arabia Wolves and Mid East Falcons — will compete in a month-long season, with the top two teams advancing to the best-of-three championship, the United Series, on Dec. 12–14. The games will be broadcast globally, with partners announced in the coming weeks.

The full Mumbai Cobras roster will be revealed today.


6 basketball legends to headline NBA District in Abu Dhabi

6 basketball legends to headline NBA District in Abu Dhabi
Updated 4 min 4 sec ago

6 basketball legends to headline NBA District in Abu Dhabi

6 basketball legends to headline NBA District in Abu Dhabi
  • Oscar Robertson, Derrick Rose, Mark Jackson, John Starks, Rudy Gay and Michael Carter-Williams will be present at the interactive fan event from Oct. 2-5

ABU DHABI: The National Basketball Association and the Department of Culture and Tourism — Abu Dhabi have announced that NBA legends Oscar Robertson, Derrick Rose, Mark Jackson, John Starks, Rudy Gay and Michael Carter-Williams will headline an expanded fourth edition of NBA District from Thursday, Oct. 2 to Sunday, Oct. 5 at Manarat Al Saadiyat. 

The interactive fan event will be held in conjunction with the NBA Abu Dhabi Games 2025 presented by ADQ, which will feature the New York Knicks and the Philadelphia 76ers playing preseason games on Thursday, Oct. 2 and Saturday, Oct. 4 at Etihad Arena on Yas Island.

Fans will be able to participate in basketball activities on a full-size NBA court, take photos with the Larry O’Brien Trophy, purchase limited-edition and customized NBA merchandise, attend panel sessions with select legends, and more. 

Musical artists Siilawy, Tul8te, DJ Jack, Stick no bills and DJ D-Nice will headline a concert at NBA District on Friday, Oct. 3.  A “Sunday Coffee Rave” on Oct. 5 will feature a performance by local DJ Abu Dhabi House Movement. 

Below are brief bios of the participating NBA legends:

Robertson, a 12-time NBA All-Star, was named the league’s Most Valuable Player in 1963-64, won the 1971 NBA championship as a member of the Milwaukee Bucks, is a member of the NBA’s 75th Anniversary Team, is a two-time Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame inductee, and was inducted into the FIBA Hall of Fame in 2009. The NBA Western Conference Championship Trophy is named in his honor.

Rose, a three-time NBA All-Star with the Chicago Bulls, became the youngest player in NBA history to win MVP at age 22 following the 2010-11 season.

Jackson was the 1987-88 NBA Rookie of the Year as a member of the Knicks, was an NBA All-Star in 1989, and is sixth on the NBA’s all-time career assists list.

Starks, an NBA All-Star in 1994 with the Knicks, was the Sixth Man of the Year in 1997 and is the franchise’s all-time leader in three-pointers made.

Gay, a 2007 NBA All-Rookie First Team selection, played 17 seasons in the NBA, won two FIBA World Cup gold medals with Team USA, and was known for his consistent scoring and versatility as a forward.

Carter-Williams was the 2013-14 NBA Rookie of the Year as a member of the 76ers.

The legends will also attend the NBA Abu Dhabi Games 2025 presented by ADQ.  Tickets for the games are on sale at etihadarena.ae and ticketmaster.ae. 


McLaren heads into Azerbaijan Grand Prix on verge of F1 constructors’ title

McLaren heads into Azerbaijan Grand Prix on verge of F1 constructors’ title
Updated 18 min 10 sec ago

McLaren heads into Azerbaijan Grand Prix on verge of F1 constructors’ title

McLaren heads into Azerbaijan Grand Prix on verge of F1 constructors’ title
  • Asking Oscar Piastri to give up second place to Lando Norris at the Italian Grand Prix because of a slow pit stop showed how McLaren’s
The Formula 1 title race is heating up, and McLaren’s golden rule — “Let ‘em race” — risks expanding into a whole rule book.
Asking Oscar Piastri to give up second place to Lando Norris at the Italian Grand Prix because of a slow pit stop showed how McLaren’s seemingly simple approach risks being bogged down in debates about what’s fair on track.
The battle between Norris and Piastri will become McLaren’s sole focus if the team can wrap up the constructors’ title Sunday at the Azerbaijan Grand Prix in Baku with a record seven races remaining.
McLaren leads by 337 points and takes the title if one driver wins and the other is second or third, which would end the faint mathematical chances of Ferrari, Mercedes and Red Bull.
It’s a big contrast to last year, when McLaren held off Ferrari in the final race of the season to win the constructors’ title for the first time in 26 years. “It’s a pretty remarkable position that we’re in,” Piastri said. “A very proud moment for everybody and myself included.”
McLaren ‘aligned’ on its rules
Was swapping the cars in Italy the best way for McLaren to make up for a team mistake beyond Norris’ control? Or was Piastri punished for something that’s “just part of racing,” as he suggested over the radio?
The Monza decision has prompted yet more discussion at McLaren about the best way to race.
“We’ve again had a lot of discussions about how we want to go racing and a lot of that is to stay for us,” Piastri said, adding that giving away the details could allow rival teams to exploit McLaren’s approach. “I do think we have enough freedom to control our own destiny in the championship.”
That call left Piastri with a lead of 31 points, instead of 37. Expect to hear a lot more about it at the end of the season if that six-point swing decides the title.
“You can’t plan for every single scenario that’s going to happen, but I think we’re very aligned,” Piastri said. “Ultimately I respect the team’s decisions and trust that they’ll certainly do their best to make the right ones.”
Red Bull decisions
Azerbaijan is a place where team rivalry has boiled over before.
In 2018, it was where up-and-coming challenger Max Verstappen collided with established contender Daniel Ricciardo. It forced Red Bull into a rethink of its “no team orders” approach — not dissimilar to McLaren’s “let ‘em race” — and set the two drivers on opposite trajectories.
Ricciardo was only on the podium once more that season, lost out to Verstappen by 79 points and left the team at the end of 2018. Verstappen hasn’t had a teammate who’s challenged him since.
The gap between him and Yuki Tsunoda is vast — 230 points to 12.
Red Bull heads into Azerbaijan widely expected to promote Isack Hadjar, whose podium finish in the Netherlands was an exclamation point in a strong rookie season, to Tsunoda’s seat for 2026.

Source: Messi, Inter Miami agree to extend contract beyond 2026

Source: Messi, Inter Miami agree to extend contract beyond 2026
Updated 19 September 2025

Source: Messi, Inter Miami agree to extend contract beyond 2026

Source: Messi, Inter Miami agree to extend contract beyond 2026
  • The contract extension would ensure that the 38-year-old remains in competitive action until and after the 2026 World Cup hosted by the US, Canada and Mexico
  • An official announcement is expected within the next two weeks, said the source

MIAMI: Inter Miami and Lionel Messi have agreed to extend the Argentine superstar’s contract to remain in Major League Soccer (MLS) beyond next year’s World Cup, according to a source close to the club.

The contract extension would ensure that the 38-year-old remains in competitive action until and after the 2026 World Cup hosted by the US, Canada and Mexico.

The tournament gets under way on June 11, with the final to be played at the MetLife Stadium on July 19.

Messi’s previous deal was due to run out at the end of this year following the 2025 MLS season.

An official announcement is expected within the next two weeks, said the source contacted by AFP late Wednesday, and could mean Messi ending his career in the MLS.

Messi moved to Inter Miami in 2023 after an unhappy stay at Paris Saint-Germain, but the rump of his stellar career was spent at Barcelona, where he played from 2004 to 2021 after coming through the youth system at the Spanish giants.

At Barcelona he won the La Liga title 10 times and lifted the UEFA Champions League trophy on four occasions.

In 2022, he led Argentina to World Cup glory in Qatar and has expressed a desire to try to retain the trophy next year.

He has scored 114 international goals and also won the Copa America twice with Argentina, in 2021 and 2024.

Messi could play at a sixth World Cup next year, which would set a new all-time record, although he could be matched by long-time rival Cristiano Ronaldo.

The eight-time Ballon d’Or winner is also just three goals short of Miroslav Klose’s record of 16 career World Cup goals.

Argentina comfortably booked a spot at next year’s finals, finishing nine points clear at the top of the South American qualifying table.

Messi finished as the top scorer with eight goals, including a brace in what may have been his last competitive match on home soil against Venezuela two weeks ago.

He was named the MLS Most Valuable Player in the 2024 season even though Inter Miami were eliminated in the playoffs.

In 2025 he became the fastest player to reach 40 goals in MLS history.

Inter Miami sit in sixth place in the Eastern Conference and well-positioned to qualify for the play-offs, with multiple games in hand on most of their rivals due to their participation in the Club World Cup.

They were thrashed 4-0 in the last 16 of that tournament by Paris Saint-Germain.

Messi’s side were also well beaten in the final of the Leagues Cup earlier this month, going down 3-0 to Seattle Sounders.


Neom climb to 4th in Saudi Pro League after victory over Al-Okhdood

Neom climb to 4th in Saudi Pro League after victory over Al-Okhdood
Updated 19 September 2025

Neom climb to 4th in Saudi Pro League after victory over Al-Okhdood

Neom climb to 4th in Saudi Pro League after victory over Al-Okhdood
  • Hard-fought 1-0 home win leaves the newly promoted side on 6 points from their first 3 matches
  • 21-year-old Saudi international Abdulmalik Al-Oyayari grabs decisive goal with a superb right-foot shot

RIYADH: Newly promoted Neom climbed into fourth place in the Saudi Pro League on Thursday thanks to a hard-fought 1-0 home victory over Al-Okhdood that left them on six points after their first three matches.

The only goal of the game came on 28 minutes when 21-year-old Saudi international Abdulmalik Al-Oyayari received Abdoulaye Doucoure’s pass and struck a superb right-foot shot past the stretching Samuel Portugal in goal. It was his team’s first home goal in the Pro League and gave then their first home victory.

Another home-grown player, Abdulaziz Noor, hit the bar with a stunning left foot shot from almost 30 meters in what was one of the standout moments of the match. Despite the presence of danger man, and former France international, Alexandre Lacazette the home team could not add to their tally but ultimately one goal proved to be enough.

To add insult to injury, Al-Okhdood had Colombian midfielder Sebastian Pedroza sent off in second-half stoppage time.

Earlier in the day Al-Taawoun moved into fifth place, also on six points, after thrashing Ettifaq 4-1 at home, and Al-Kholood earned their first points of the season with a 2-1 win against visiting Damac.