No Pakistan handshake aligned with government, says India captain

No Pakistan handshake aligned with government, says India captain
1 / 3
Pakistan's captain Salman Agha, right, walks past India's captain Suryakumar Yadav after the coin toss ahead of the Asia Cup cricket match between India and Pakistan at Dubai International Cricket Stadium on Sept. 14, 2025. (AP)
No Pakistan handshake aligned with government, says India captain
2 / 3
Pakistan's captain Salman Agha, right, watches as India's captain Suryakumar Yadav flips the coin at the toss ahead of the Asia Cup cricket match between India and Pakistan at Dubai International Cricket Stadium on Sept. 14, 2025. (AP)
No Pakistan handshake aligned with government, says India captain
3 / 3
Pakistan players react after their loss in the Asia Cup cricket match against India at Dubai International Cricket Stadium on Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025. (AP)
Short Url
Updated 14 sec ago

No Pakistan handshake aligned with government, says India captain

No Pakistan handshake aligned with government, says India captain
  • Gameended on a bitter note as Indian players headed into their dressing room without a customary handshake
  • Pakistan, in protest, snubbed the post-match ceremony in theirfirst match since the bitter rivals' military clashed 4 months ago

DUBAI: India’s victorious captain Suryakumar Yadav defended his team’s decision not to shake hands with the defeated Pakistan players on Sunday, saying that it was taken in alignment with their government and cricket board.
India thumped Pakistan by seven wickets in a Group A Asia Cup clash in Dubai which ended on a bitter note as Indian players headed into their dressing room without a customary handshake.
Pakistan, in protest, refused to attend the post match ceremony as tensions flared in a match which was the first between the bitter rivals since May’s military action.
The cross border clashes were sparked after an attack in Pahalgam in Indian Kashmir in April which killed 26 people, with India blaming Pakistan.
New Delhi resisted the calls to boycott the match and cleared the team to play Pakistan only in multi-national events.
“We are aligned with the government and Board of Control for Cricket in India,” said Suryakumar after scoring 47 not out as India chased down a modest Pakistan target of 128 in 15.5 overs.
Left-armer Kuldeep Yadav led India’s spin rout with 3-18 as Pakistan were restricted to a below-par 127-9 in 20 overs.
Pakistan’s head coach Mike Hesson termed said he was disappointed with the Indian players’ refusal to shake hands.
“We were ready to shake hands at the end of the game,” said Hesson. “We are disappointed that the opposition did not do that.
“We went over there and they were already gone to the changing room, so that was obviously a disappointing way to finish the match.”
Hesson said that the decision not to send captain Salman Agha to the post match ceremony was “just in the flow of the things.”
“The team manager Naveed Cheema lodged a protest with match referee Andy Pycroft after the match,” said Pakistan’s team management in a statement after the match.
“The behavior of Indian players was against the spirit of sportsmanship,” it added. “That is why skipper Agha was not sent to the post match ceremony.”
India, with two wins from two, are nearly through to the next Super Fours stage of the tournament with their final group match against Oman on Friday.
Pakistan play UAE next on Wednesday and despite the defeat to India are expected to make the next stage.


Spinners power India to win over Pakistan in Asia Cup

Spinners power India to win over Pakistan in Asia Cup
Updated 14 September 2025

Spinners power India to win over Pakistan in Asia Cup

Spinners power India to win over Pakistan in Asia Cup
  • India skipper Suryakumar Yadav hits unbeaten 47 to help his team thrash Pakistan by seven wickets
  • Match was first meeting of the two teams since a military conflict between their countries in May

DUBAI: Spinners led by Kuldeep Yadav helped India thrash Pakistan by seven wickets in the Asia Cup on Sunday as the neighbors met on the cricket pitch for the first time since a military conflict between them in May.
Kuldeep returned figures of 3-18 and along with fellow spinner Axar Patel kept Pakistan down to 127-9 in a key Group A T20 clash in Dubai.
India lost two wickets after a fiery 31 off 13 balls from opener Abhishek Sharma, but skipper Suryakumar Yadav hit an unbeaten 47 to achieve the target with 25 balls to spare.
Suryakumar put on 56 runs with left-hander Tilak Varma, who hit 31 before being bowled by Saim Ayub.
The captain stood firm and hit the winning six as Indian fans celebrated at a stadium, which had alot of empty seats, and the players from both teams went off without handshakes.
Abhishek came out roaring as he hit Pakistan pace spearhead Shaheen Shah Afridi for a four and a six and, despite the fall of Shubman Gill in the next over, kept up the charge.
Swashbuckling Abhishek cracked four boundaries and two sixes before he mistimed another attempt for a maximum to be caught at long-off off spinner Ayub.
India’s bowlers set up the dominant win as Axar, who took 2-18, and Kuldeep combined to rattle the opposition batting, which suffered from a lack of partnerships.
Hardik Pandya struck in the first over to dismiss opener Ayub for a golden duck and fellow quick Jasprit Bumrah sent back wicketkeeper-batsman Mohammad Haris for three.
Sahibzada Farhan, who top-scored with 40, attempted to rebuild the innings along with Fakhar Zaman, who made 17, in a partnership of 39.
Axar broke the stand with his left-arm spin as he got Zaman caught out and in his next over had skipper Salman Agha out for three.
Left-arm wrist spinner Kuldeep came into the attack and struck twice on successive balls to pack off Hasan Nawaz (5) and Mohammad Nawaz (0) as Pakistan slipped to 64-6 inside 13 overs.
Wickets kept tumbling, but number nine Afridi took on the opposition attack with four sixes in his unbeaten 33 off 16 balls to push the total past 120 and play out Pakistan’s full 20 overs.
India, with two wins from two, are nearly through to the next Super Fours stage of the tournament with their final group match against Oman on Friday.
Pakistan play hosts United Arab Emirates next and despite the defeat are expected to make the next stage.
India resisted calls to boycott the T20 clash between the nations, who have not played in any bilateral series since deadly attacks in Mumbai in 2008 were blamed on Pakistan militants.
The hostilities in May this year left more than 70 people dead in missile, drone and artillery exchanges, before a ceasefire.


Emotions run high as India and Pakistan face off after May clashes

Emotions run high as India and Pakistan face off after May clashes
Updated 14 September 2025

Emotions run high as India and Pakistan face off after May clashes

Emotions run high as India and Pakistan face off after May clashes
  • Even before the clashes in May between the two nuclear-armed neighbors, bilateral cricket ties had been suspended
  • India, the reigning 20-overs world champions, are firm favorites to retain their Asia Cup title

DUBAI: An India-Pakistan cricket match is always a blockbuster but emotions will run even higher in Sunday’s Asia Cup clash between the nuclear-armed neighbors, who engaged in a four-day military conflict earlier this year.
Even before the clashes in May, which nearly escalated into a full-blown war, bilateral cricket ties had been suspended. The arch-rivals now play each other only in multi-team tournaments.
Political relations have deteriorated further since the clashes, with several former Indian players urging the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) to boycott what will be the first meeting between the teams since the recent hostilities.
While the threat of a boycott is over, sparks may fly with India captain Suryakumar Yadav and his Pakistan counterpart Salman Agha ruling out dialing down aggression in the much-anticipated Group A fixture.
India, the reigning 20-overs world champions, are firm favorites to retain their Asia Cup title and are determined not to let geopolitics derail their campaign.
“Once the BCCI said they are aligned with the government, we are here to play,” India’s batting coach Sitanshu Kotak told reporters on Friday.
“Once we are here to play, I think players are focused on playing cricket. I personally don’t think they have anything in mind apart from playing cricket and that’s what we focus on.”
Pakistan coach Mike Hesson also wants his team to stay focused though the significance of the match is not lost on him.
“Being part of a highly-charged event is going to be exciting,” the New Zealander said this week.
“From my perspective ... it is about keeping everybody focused on the job at hand. That will be no different.
“We know India are obviously hugely confident and rightfully so. But we are very much focused on improving as a team day-by-day and not getting ahead of ourselves.”
India appear by far the strongest side in the eight-team tournament, having reinforced themselves with the selection of pace spearhead Jasprit Bumrah and top order batter Shubman Gill.
They were ruthless in their nine-wicket demolition of the United Arab Emirates, whom they routed for 57 in 13.1 overs before returning to chase down the target in 27 balls on Thursday.
Pakistan also opened their account with an easy victory against Oman but their batting has been rather inconsistent.
Pakistan are without former skippers Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan but will take heart from winning a T20 tri-series in UAE, also involving Afghanistan, before heading into the Asia Cup.
“We have been playing good cricket in the last two-three months and we just have to play good cricket,” Pakistan captain Salman said on Friday.
“If we can execute our plans for a long enough period, we are good enough to beat any team.” 


Sri Lanka sprints to six-wicket win over Bangladesh for crucial Asia Cup T20 win

Sri Lanka sprints to six-wicket win over Bangladesh for crucial Asia Cup T20 win
Updated 14 September 2025

Sri Lanka sprints to six-wicket win over Bangladesh for crucial Asia Cup T20 win

Sri Lanka sprints to six-wicket win over Bangladesh for crucial Asia Cup T20 win
  • Nissanka perfectly manipulated the line and lengths of the Bangladeshi bowlers to score 50 off 34 balls

ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates: Pathum Nissanka became the quickest Sri Lankan batter to reach 2,000 T20 runs as the opener sprinted his team to a six-wicket win over Bangladesh in a crucial Asia Cup match on Saturday.
Nissanka perfectly manipulated the line and lengths of the Bangladeshi bowlers to score 50 off 34 balls and Sri Lanka breezed to 140-4 in a strong start to its campaign.
Bangladesh, which handed Hong Kong a seven-wicket drubbing in its first Group B game, recovered from a horror start to score 139-5 after it lost both openers to fast bowler Nuwan Thushara and Dushmantha Chameera’s successive wicket maidens with the new ball.
Nissanka batted fluently and scored six fours and a six as he reached the 2,000-run landmark in his 68th T20 innings when he completed his half century. Kusal Perera had the previous Sri Lanka record, achieving the feat in 76 innings.
Nissanka fell soon after his entertaining 95-run stand with Kamil Mishara (46 not out) had all but sealed the game, when Shoriful Islam held on to a spectacular two-handed catch at deep backward square leg.
Bangladesh had to pay a heavy price of dropping Mishra on 1 when Mahedi Hassan couldn’t hold on to a two-handed catch close to the 30-meter circle at wide mid-on. Although Perera and Dasun Shanaka also perished quickly while going for big shots, Mishara’s unbeaten knock of 32 balls ensured Sri Lanka finished off the game with more than five overs to spare.
Earlier, after being put into bat, Shamim Hossain (42) and Jaker Ali (41) helped Bangladesh recover from a disastrous start in the second half of their innings when they combined in a 86-run unbroken stand off 61 balls.
Wanindu Hasaranga made an impactful return to international cricket with figures of 2-25 after missing the last series against Zimbabwe due to a hamstring injury. The leg-spinner should have had the wicket of Jaker in his eventful second over only to see his sharp googly grazing the off stump after going through the defenses of the batter, but both bails stayed on the stumps.
Hasaranga’s sharp spinning deliveries and the twin strikes of Thushara and Chameera saw Bangladesh slump to 53-5 in the 10th over when captain Litton Das (28) was out leg before wicket while attempting reverse sweep against Hasaranga.
Chameera bowled some impressive yorkers in the death overs and finished with identical figures of 4-1-17-1 with Thushara. Shamim hit the lone six in Bangladesh’s otherwise defensive innings when he smacked the only off-color Sri Lanka bowler — Matheesha Pathirara (0-42) — over midwicket.
 


Pakistan begin Asia Cup with 93-run win over Oman

Pakistan begin Asia Cup with 93-run win over Oman
Updated 12 September 2025

Pakistan begin Asia Cup with 93-run win over Oman

Pakistan begin Asia Cup with 93-run win over Oman
  • Pakistan scored 160-7 after opting to bat and Oman were bundled out for 67 in 16.4 overs
  • Haris struck seven fours and three sixes on his way to 50 off 32 balls

DUBAI: Pakistan thumped Oman by 93 runs to begin their Asia Cup campaign thanks to Mohammad Haris’ 66 off 43 balls at Dubai International Stadium on Friday.
Pakistan scored 160-7 after opting to bat and Oman were bundled out for 67 in 16.4 overs.
Haris struck seven fours and three sixes on his way to 50 off 32 balls.
Pakistan take on India in the Twenty20 tournament’s most high profile clash on Sunday at the same venue.
Haris crossed the 20-run mark in T20s for the first time in 12 innings. His best in 11 innings prior was 15 against Afghanistan in the preceding tri-series. He was 107 not out in June against Bangladesh at Lahore.
Opener Shahibzada Farhan (29) and Haris put on 85 off 64 balls to drive the innings.
Saim Ayub was out for a golden duck, as was skipper Salman Agha, both falling to left-arm spinner Aamir Kaleem.
Kaleem also bowled Haris in the 13th over and finished with 3-31 in four overs — his career best against a full ICC member.
Fakhar Zaman hit 23 not out off 16 balls and Mohammad Nawaz scored 19 off 10 balls to help Pakistan pass 150. They lost their last five wickets for 56 runs in seven overs.
In a chase that never got going, Hammad Mirza top-scored for Oman with 27 off 23 balls.
Oman collapsed from 41-2 to 51-9, losing seven wickets for 10 runs across 34 deliveries. The innings ended in the 17th over, with the last pair adding 16 runs.
Spinners Saim Ayub and Suyiyan Muqeem, and medium pacer Faheem Ashraf shared six wickets across seven overs in the rout.


Risks in cricket sponsorship laid bare in India

Risks in cricket sponsorship laid bare in India
Updated 11 September 2025

Risks in cricket sponsorship laid bare in India

Risks in cricket sponsorship laid bare in India
  • National team’s previous sponsors, Dream11, have been dropped as a result of India’s newly assented gaming bill

Team India’s shirt front, for both men and women, has displayed Dream11 since 2023. This prominent sponsorship has disappeared with immediate effect, starting with the men’s Asia Cup, which opened on Sept. 9 in the UAE.

Dream11’s disappearance is a casualty of India’s newly assented gaming bill, The Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Bill, 2025, which prohibits all forms of money-based online gaming and seeks to promote e-sports and online social games. The new law was passed by the Indian Parliament on Aug. 21, with an element of surprise and alacrity. It includes provisions to set up an Online Gaming Authority that will oversee the sector and provide policy guidance, along with harsh penalties for non-compliance. 

Its impact on Dream11, India’s largest fantasy sports platform, is severe, causing it to cease all paid contests and switch to a free-to-play model. It may be assumed that the company’s owners would be upset, since 95 percent of group revenues and profits have been erased overnight. Instead, it has been sanguine, at least publicly, expressing respect for the law. Harsh Jain, the CEO of Dream Sports, the parent company, has said that jobs are safe and that sufficient reserves are available to allow transition away from the fantasy sports platform, which was valued at $8 billion.

Even before the new bill came into force, Dream11 and its competitors had been subject to rising regulatory costs, the government having quadrupled the goods and service tax rate on online games. Profit margins were squeezed and Dream Sports registered losses in its latest financial year, its first in years. Although Dream11 is upbeat about its capacity to rebuild, the wider gaming industry, valued at $25 million and comprising about 400 companies, faces a shake-out. Its contribution to India’s economy, through its spend on advertising and services, will drop sharply.

The implications for the Board of Control for Cricket in India, or BCCI, are less problematic. Its revenues have almost doubled over the past five years, to the point where its cash and bank balance records show about $2.25 billion, with 60 percent generated by the Indian Premier league. It is by far away the richest cricket board in the world, Cricket Australia a distant second with $79 million. Dream11’s three-year contract with the BCCI was valued at Rs 358-crore (circa $41 million) and was due to run until March 2026. The board has released a tender to invite new sponsors for a tenure of two-and-a-half to three years. A bid submission deadline of Sept. 16 has been set. 

Despite each of the BCCI’s five previous main team sponsors having problems that led to early contact termination, there is unlikely to be a shortage of interest. The Indian front-of-shirt spot is probably the most visible in world cricket, something which the BCCI clearly believes, because it has increased its base asking price by 10 percent. It is keenly aware that sponsoring the Indian cricket teams provides brand visibility to upwards of a billion people. It is coincidental that the previous sponsors ran into trouble. Sahara, which sponsored between 2001 and 2012, foundered because of legal issues for its owner. Star Indian, 2014 to 2017, encountered ant-trust scrutiny and rising costs, while Chinese smart-phone company, Oppo, suffered from poor returns and Indo-Chinese geo-political tensions between 2017 and 2020. Prior to Dream11, edtech company, Byju’s, faced severe financial and operational difficulties that ultimately led to insolvency.   

Whoever lands the new deal will hope that the so-called curse or “jersey-jinx” of sponsoring India’s cricket teams does not strike again. It is reminder that, even in India’s cricket-obsessed society and market, there are latent risks lurking in changes that emerge in regulatory regimes and market dynamics. While the BCCI seems to be immune from risk in its sponsorship strategies, apart from inconvenience caused by a sponsor’s early termination, the cessation of Dream11’s activities has affected other parts of cricket’s ecosystem.     

The company had partnerships with the Caribbean Premier League, New Zealand’s Super Smash and the Big Bash League in Australia. It had also been the “official fantasy game partner” for all ICC events. Although Dream11 had deals with the Pro Kabaddi League, the Indian Super League and the International Hockey Federation, it is cricket where the main impact has fallen. Apart from the immediate effect in India, European Cricket, which was backed financially by Dream11, announced a temporary suspension of matches on Aug. 25. This included all games part of the European Cricket Network, or ECN, the European Cricket Series, the European Cricket League, the Women’s European Cricket Championship and all international matches involving European countries.

ECN started in July 2019 with a single tournament in Spain, with eight clubs and 16 matches. It had an ambition to kindle the unrealized potential for cricket in Europe. In 2024, it had more than 1,800 televised games in 20 countries, following on from 1,700 matches in 2023, when events were organized on 330 days across 16 countries. Europe’s cricket infrastructure has been built from a very low base. Each host country earned about 10,000 euros per tournament, critical funding for national boards outside of mainstream cricket. This funding is now in jeopardy and the ECN has to find ways of completing its 2025 tournament schedule, as well as finding new sponsors.

Fantasy sports platforms became essential infrastructure for cricket development in Europe and other emerging markets. Dependency on revenue streams from those platforms was shattered overnight by the elimination of their business models by regulators in another country. The fact that the country is India adds another dimension to its already evident burgeoning influence across large swathes of cricket’s landscape. The evidence lies in the affluence of the BCCI, its control of its own players, the close linkages between the BCCI and the ICC, and the levels of Indian ownership in franchise leagues, of which The Hundred is the latest incarnation.

The motivations for the online gaming bill are honorable. It seeks to address addiction and financial ruin caused by compulsive playing, mental health and suicide caused by heavy financial loss, as well as opportunities for money laundering and threats to national security by illegal messaging. Although gambling and betting have long been restricted by Indian law, the online domain remained largely unregulated. Digital engagement of a healthy variety, such as social and educational games that build skills and cultural values, are supported. Nonetheless, one bill enacted in Mumbai has impacted sport in the physical arena, exposing the fragility of building cricket development and sponsorship strategies on gaming platforms.