Anybody who spent this last fortnight watching the Olympics might not realise
that sport is played in Pakistan.
Nike Air Max 95 Og Slate . The sum total of
Pakistans Olympic achievement since 1947 is ten medals. Eight in hockey,
including three golds, one each in wrestling and boxing. Pakistan havent won a
medal for 24 years. Worse, Pakistan is the most populous nation to fail to win a
medal in Rio. This isnt the performance of a country that values sport. Still,
there is sport outside the Olympics.Hockey is Pakistans national sport. A World
Cup was Pakistans idea, and the trophy for it was made by the Pakistan army.
Scheduled for Pakistan in 1971, the first hockey World Cup was moved to Spain, a
neutral venue, because of a regional conflict that led to the creation of
Bangladesh. Despite the upheaval, Pakistan won. They won it three times more up
to 1994, a record of four wins that is yet to be matched by any other hockey
nation. After 1994, with the popularity of artificial surfaces and modern
fitness techniques, Pakistan are winless, and now struggle to compete. Pakistani
sport, though, is more than hockey.Squash is the sport Pakistan have been most
successful in. Between 1982 and 1997, first Jahangir Khan and then Jansher Khan
won every British Open, the premier tournament in the world game. Pakistanis in
squash, the toughest of racket games, looked invincible. Since 1997, five years
after Pakistans last Olympic medal in any sport, Pakistans superiority in squash
is no more. Like the Olympics and hockey, squash has nothing to showcase since
the 1990s. Despite all this, Pakistanis love sport.And then, there is
cricket.Cricket is Pakistans most popular sport. In 1992, Pakistan won the
cricket World Cup and could justifiably claim to be the best one-day cricket
team in the world. It was no flash in the pan. They might easily have won in
1987 too, had it not been for a heartbreaking home semi-final chase against
Australia. Pakistan were well fancied in 1996 but lost a quarter-final to India.
In 1999 they were so good for much of the tournament that it was bewildering how
they collapsed in the final. Such is the scale of the decline since then that
Pakistan are now ranked ninth in international one-day cricket. Thankfully,
one-day cricket is just one form of the game.T20 cricket is the most Pakistani
sport. When T20 cricket took hold, it seemed to be made for Pakistan with its
pinch-hitters and death bowlers. Pakistan narrowly lost the first final, in
2007. Two years later, in England, a team led by Younis Khan and starring Shahid
Afridi and Mohammad Amir delivered what seemed inevitable, a T20 World Cup.
Pakistan were the best T20 team in the world. It was fun cricket. A nation of
artists had found its art. Within a year, by a quirk of scheduling, they had
lost their title. Pakistan are now ranked seventh in international T20 cricket.
This T20 fun cricket is no longer fun.Test cricket is now Pakistans sport. Dont
take my word for it, look at the rankings. Pakistan are No. 1, the best in the
world, as judged by crickets governing body. Pakistan arent No. 1 at anything
else. There is no Olympic medal or hockey World Cup. Squash is done, and theyre
not exactly shining in the shorter formats. There is no blossoming sports
culture or lottery money to promise a better tomorrow. There is only Test
cricket. A population of 200 million has become a one-trick pony.But what a
trick. How did Test cricket defy the ravages of modern times, the odds of war
and conflict, of politics and nepotism, of corruption and incompetence, of
unprofessionalism and mismanagement? Lets be in no doubt, the same decline hit
Test cricket that destroyed all other sports after the 1990s. The spot-fixing
scandal of 2010 simply hastened the end, putting us out of our misery. If
anything was to survive that disaster it was to be the thrash and crash of
limited overs. Not Test cricket. That would die.Except, some people werent
prepared to accept that fate. They saw the end and vowed to defeat it. They were
dreamers but they dreamt a pragmatic dream. They dreamt of giving their nation
some succour from the ravages of this tortured age. They would achieve it
through unfashionable hard work and integrity. Even in exile, they wanted to be
a beacon of hope and a promise of something better.Chief among them is
Misbah-ul-Haq, the architect of this triumph. Perhaps the greatest ever
achievement of the Pakistan Cricket Board was to make Misbah Test captain after
2010, narrowly followed by its decision to leave him in charge for the next six
years. The PCB got those epoch-making decisions right, Misbah did the
rest.Misbahs captaincy works because of simple virtues. First, he has a clear
plan of how he wants to set his team up and how he wants to win. This might be
too defensive for some peoples tastes, too slow-burn, too patient, but Misbah
knows how to make his plan work.Second, he leads by example, whether its how to
approach the game and the distractions that come with it or how to make the most
of your talents.The power of role models is a strong theme in Pakistan cricket.
Misbah is rivalling Imran Khan as heroic leader, although Misbahs leadership
comes with greater measure and an icier cool.Third, Misbah is pragmatic, never
looking too far ahead or setting unachievable goals. On first impressions he is
inscrutable, but he is a deep thinker on the game, a student of cricket. None of
this comes with bombast or hyperbole. The art of understated determination is
perfected in him.Misbah has an ideal accomplice in Younis Khan, a world-class
batsman hungry to leave his mark on the game but imbued with the same conviction
and integrity. The final Test, at The Oval, perfectly captured the partnership
of Misbah and Younis. Misbahs best laid plans were unworkable without Younis
brilliance. If Misbah is the architect, Younis is his master builder.Another
Younis, Waqar, shouldnt be forgotten. Nor should Dav Whatmore or Mohsin Khan.
They all built the victory too. Coaching Pakistan is difficult. The media, the
players and the board will quickly make you the scapegoat when much remains
outside your control. One-day failures can distort and overshadow success in
Test cricket. Nonetheless, Waqar persevered through hard times, particularly
improving Pakistans current generation of fast bowlers.That challenge now rests
with Mickey Arthur, a highly skilled, no-nonsense coach. He finds a team in
ruder health than when it arrived on Englands shores. Arthur will require much
longer with the team for his influence to be properly felt but his hand was
evident in the tricky, but correct, decision to drop Mohammad Hafeez for the
final Test.Arthurs assessment of the squad will be mixed. As the new world No.
1, this Pakistan team is far from a finished work. It is a work in progress,
evolving before us, which adds to the fascination of Pakistans new-found status.
Hafeez aside, the batting impressed in England. Sami Aslam played with
commitment and patience, as a proper opener should. Azhar Ali grew into the
series, and improbably fixed a technical problem in the process. Asad Shafiq
looked ready for greater responsibility and for Pakistans No. 3 spot. Sarfraz
Ahmed knew how to make an impact. But perhaps most pleasingly, the old stagers,
Misbah and Younis, seemed far from done, ready for more runs, more press-ups,
more salutes.The bowling underwhelmed to a degree. Amir wasnt quite the
wicket-taker we imagined, but he played his role, taking on much of the pace
bowling burden and hinting at a brooding threat to come. Wahab Riaz was
sensational in bursts but needs to turn those thrilling, adrenaline-infused
breakthroughs into conclusive spells. Rahat Ali was as steady as Sohail Khan was
sensational. Yasir Shahs potential and influence is clear but he felt the
effects of no fifth bowler with long, fruitless bowling stints in the middle
Tests.Encouragingly, then, Pakistan have scope to improve as they assume their
status as the worlds leading Test team. They will need that improvement to see
them through series in New Zealand and Australia. Australia, in particular, is
the measure of any would-be world champion.But the top spot is fully deserved.
Consider Pakistans political environment. Consider the alarming decline in sport
- and the multi-factorial circumstances that contribute to it. Consider the
failure in limited-overs cricket. Consider six years of exile in the UAE, and no
home Tests for six years. Consider an international game designed for the Big
Three - who now all sit immediately below Pakistan. Consider the outsider, the
nomad, the unwanted guest, spoiling that party thanks to the determination of a
few good men.Some people will begrudge Pakistan this moment, highlighting the
peculiarities of the Test ranking system. They shouldnt. The rankings are worked
out consistently for all teams, whatever you think of the method of
calculation.Some people will ask: where are the wins in Australia and South
Africa? They shouldnt. No. 1 isnt to be confused with all-conquering. Only a few
teams in cricket history were all-conquering, the others, the vast majority,
merely made it to the top despite failing in certain places.Some people will
bemoan the fickleness of the weather and the inadequacy of Caribbean ground
preparations. They shouldnt. Yes, this is bad luck for India, but cricket is a
game of luck - and Pakistan need all the luck they can get.Indeed, a Pakistan
team has never appeared more worthy of good fortune since the Test rankings were
launched in 2003. If the rankings are extrapolated back to the 1950s, Pakistan
were briefly top only once before, in 1988, to break up a decade of domination
by the greatest West Indies team. Then we guessed at Pakistans status. Nobody
else went so close against those phenomenal cricketers.In 2016, though, we dont
need to guess. Pakistan are the worlds leading Test team. They are top - and
they earned it. The players didnt have it easy. Nobody did them any favours
other than the rain gods of Port-of-Spain. They did it with grit and
bloody-mindedness. They also did it with talent and some exceptional
performances in England, Sri Lanka and UAE. They did it for the people of their
country and for pride in a nation that they still believe in. They did it to
show what Pakistan can be.Misbahs men might not be at the top of Test cricket
for long, but that doesnt matter. The symbolism of this moment is enough. To
rise from nothing, against all adversity, and reach the pinnacle, that is a
dream that is as powerful today as it has ever been. These men of Misbah lived
that dream.Test cricket is now Pakistans sport. It is something to be cherished
and celebrated not just by Pakistan supporters, for the romance in Pakistans
glory touches the heart of cricket lovers of all leanings.Olympians are marked
by their heroics, their endeavour, their struggle against the odds. Pakistan has
no Olympians of note, yet the achievement of Pakistans Test team, the team of
Misbah-ul-Haq, is worthy of the greatest Olympians. It is a story of heroism. Of
endeavour. Of struggle against the odds. Above all, it is a story to inspire the
pragmatic dreamers of the world.
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. Pierce was ejected in the third quarter of Indianas 103-86 win Monday.
George Hill stole a bad pass and was going in for a layup, and Pierce hustled
back and appeared to be trying to wrap him up.
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. Dallas hasnt ruled out the star quarterback for Sunday nights game against
Philadelphia, but all signs point to Romos back injury pushing Kyle Orton into
the starting role after two years of limited play as the backup. Surely Ortons
name isnt the first that comes to mind for fans wanting a change after years of
damaging interceptions, fumbles or, most infamously, the field goal flub when
Romo dropped the snap on a kick that could have won his first playoff game in
2006.
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. -- There were so many positives from the Orlando Magics first victory of the
season that it was hard for coach Jacque Vaughn to stop praising his players.
THE MOST FEARSOME FINALISTS?North Melbournes win over St Kilda means the AFLs
top eight is all but finalised. However, competition for the right to host
finals and a coveted top-four berth is ongoing and fierce. To come up with a
form guide as September approaches, AAP has ranked the contenders based on
results against fellow top-eight teams (despite the protests of coaches, beating
Essendon is probably less meaningful than beating Hawthorn).1. GEELONG (W:8 L:2,
126.5 per cent)2. SYDNEY (W:5 L:4, 112 per cent)3. HAWTHORN (W:5 L:3, 92.9 per
cent)4. GWS (W:4 L:3, 116.5 per cent)5. ADELAIDE (W:4 L:5, 101.2 per cent)6.
WESTERN BULLDOGS (W:3 L:5, 86.2 per cent)7. NORTH MELBOURNE (W:2 L:5, 83.5 per
cent)8. WEST COAST (W:1 L:5, 91.8 per cent)WHAT ELSE?*Geelong are guaranteed of
finishing minor premiers on this ladder. The next time they face a top-eight
side will be in week one of the finals*Sydney are the only top-eight team to
have tackled both Hawthorn and GWS twice.
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Billigt Sverige. Theyre 1-1 against each premiership
contender*Hawthorns defeats came in rounds one, six and nine. Two of them were
at the MCG*The Giants are yet to drop a game at home against fellow top-eight
sides*Discounting two defeats to Geelong, Adelaides average losing margin
against fellow top-eight clubs is nine points*The Bulldogs average winning
margin in their three triumphs listed here is also nine points*North have lost
their past five matches against top-eight teams, a slump that started with their
first defeat of the season (against Sydney in round 10)*West Coasts sole win
over a fellow top-eight side was in round 16 at home against North. They face
GWS, Hawthorn and the Crows in a tough run to September.
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The Wall