Sport in Pakistan & Akhtar factor

Sport in Pakistan suffers not only from inadeq­uate infrastructure but also selfi­sh interests and mismanagement.
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Inevitable and frequent as it is, the retirement of a sportsperson is most often a time to rewi­nd past performances and memories without dissecting the complexities connecting the individual with the system of which he is a product. An exception must necessarily be made for Sh­oaib Akhtar, who has announced his decisi­on to bow out of international cricket, for there is mu­ch in the manner of this Pakistani pa­cer that is in common with the administration — including the administration of sport — in his country. Dr­awing sustenance from a me-against-the-wo­rld philosophy, both Akhtar and those governing Pakistan have ever remained in the headlines.

While Pakistan can never claim to have always been represented by the most well-behaved, un­ited and honest players in the cricket world, such have been Akhtar’s wild ways that there is little mi­ssing in his catalogue of controversies: allegations of chucking, ball-tampering, performance-enhancing drugs, tantrums, night-clubbing, sw­­earing at players… and even assaulting a tea­m­mate. It is no surprise then that the man axed on disciplinary grounds for the 1996 Saha­ra Cup in Canada — the tournament that would otherwise have launched his international career — has borne the harshest punishment ever meted out by the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB). If a 13-match ODI ban was slapped on Akhtar after he hit Md Asif with a bat two days before the Wo­rld T20 in 2007, he also faced a five-year ban, subsequently reduced to 18 months, for publicly cr­iticising the PCB in 2008. And yet, much like the sports administrato­rs in his country, Akhtar has always refused to learn.

Sport in Pakistan suffers not only from inadeq­uate infrastructure, facilities and sponsorship and a blanket cancellation of tours by internatio­nal teams due to security concerns, but also selfi­sh interests and  mismanagement — Akhtar pr­­esenting a classic case in this regard. With Pa­kistani cricket in urgent need of a poster boy after match-fixing charges against prominent pl­ayers culminated in the Justice Qayyum rep­o­rt in 2000, the PCB pampered the ‘Rawalpindi Express’ by forgiving all his misdemeanours and even encouraging him not to mend his ways. In­deed, the PCB has been as cavalier in its at­t­itude as Akhtar. Which is why the first bo­w­ler to breach the 100mph barrier will retire without fully realising his potential. And any success th­at Pakistan enjoys in sport continues to be despite the system.

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