You won’t see many cricket items in this blog, but yesterday’s India-Pakistan match, which India took by the narrow margin of 29 runs on its home pitch at Mohali (there, don’t I sound like I know what I’m talking about?), had geopolitical ramifications, as these two fierce rivals (in sport and everything else) completed the event peacefully and amicably, with the two nations’ prime ministers watching the action together. Predictably enough, the Obama administration has released a statement praising the match as a diplomatic breakthrough; soon, presumably, we can expect the president (who must be quietly mourning the loss by his beloved Pockystahn) to announce a global sports initiative aimed at building world peace through hitting, kicking, and throwing balls.
That idea would not be entirely crazy, at least to those old enough to remember Richard Nixon’s “ping-pong diplomacy.” Yet sports can also inflame tensions, sometimes even to the point of military conflict, as in the 1969 “Soccer War” between El Salvador and Honduras. Of course, in that part of the world, countries used to fight over just about anything — including bat droppings. Still, as Right Field readers will understand, a sporting event is a good place for any sort of discussion: You sit side by side without having to stare each other in the face, and whenever you don’t feel like talking, you just look at what’s happening on the field. If Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis had just sat down at a baseball game together, that whole Civil War thing might have been avoided . . .
...cricket= the most civilised and civilising of sports..(where you catch the ball w/out the glove)...shame Oz 12 year reign has ceased, 'though.... :=/
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseActually, if Lincoln and Davis had got together to watch a sporting event, it might well have been a cricket match. Prior to the Civil War, the upstart baseball was growing, but cricket was still the most popular team sport in America.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseOne guess as to how those prime ministers, athletes, and spectators pronounce the word "Pakistan". They can also tell Muslims from Christians, and educated people from fools.
ice9
Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse...oh, btw...29 runs is not really close....pak. was chasing 260...1 day game...(real cricket, tests= 5 day matches)....lost 4 wickets early....thus behind 8 ball through their innings....
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