Biryani on plate and boundary length on mind for Pakistan’s Babar

Pakistan's captain Babar Azam speaks during captain's press conference on the eve of ICC Men's Cricket World Cup in Ahmedabad, India, on October 4, 2023. (AP)
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Updated 05 October 2023
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Biryani on plate and boundary length on mind for Pakistan’s Babar

  • Babar and his team mates were surprised by the support they received since landing in Hyderabad last week
  • Short boundaries at some Indian venues might reduce Pakistani bowlers to cannon-fodder over next six weeks

AHMEDABAD, India: The biryani in Hyderabad has lived up to Babar Azam’s expectations but the Pakistan captain is worried the contest between bat and ball at the 50-overs World Cup may not be as spicy because of short boundaries in most Indian venues.

Babar’s men were accorded a warm welcome in Hyderabad in what is their first tour of India since the T20 World Cup in 2016.

Thanks to a soured political relationship, bilateral cricket remains suspended between India and Pakistan, and the bitter neighbors play each other only in multi-team events.

Babar and his team mates were surprised by the support they received since landing in Hyderabad, where they played both their warm-up matches.

They will launch their bid for a second 50-overs World Cup title at the same southern Indian city against the Netherlands on Friday.

“I think the hospitality has been quite nice — we were not expecting this,” Babar said during his pre-tournament media interaction along with nine other captains on Wednesday.

“It’s been a week in Hyderabad, and it is not like we are in India. It is like we are at home.”

A Pakistan support staff member took to social media to praise Hyderabad’s famous biryani and, after one of the warm-up matches, all-rounder Shadab Khan quipped gorging regularly on biryani had rendered them slower on the field.

“We had heard a lot about Hyderabadi biryani and we loved it,” Babar, currently the top-ranked ODI batter, said in his appreciation of the popular dish.

He was less impressed by the short boundaries at some Indian venues though, which, he feared, might reduce bowlers to cannon-fodder over the next six weeks.

“The boundaries are small. There is no margin for the bowlers,” he said.

“If the bowling is a little bit off, the batsman utilizes it. So, there will be high scores.”

Babar’s concerns are understandable considering Pakistan’s bowling lost considerable sting after speedster Naseem Shah was ruled out of the World Cup with a shoulder injury.

Babar still had high expectations from his bowling unit led by left-arm quick Shaheen Afridi.

“It’s more or less the same team playing the last three years together, and I think bowling remains our strength,” added Babar.


India has told Pakistan to control ‘drone intrusions,’ Indian army chief says

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India has told Pakistan to control ‘drone intrusions,’ Indian army chief says

  • Indian army ‌chief General Upendra Dwivedi says at least eight drones ‌from Pakistani have been ​sighted since ‌Saturday
  • Ties between nuclear-armed neighbors have been frozen since May last year when both sides engaged in fierce fighting

NEW DELHI: India’s army chief said on Tuesday that the head of Pakistan’s ​military operations had been told to control what he said were drone intrusions from Pakistan into India, months after the nuclear-armed rivals engaged in their worst fighting in decades.

An Indian military source said there were five drone intrusions on Sunday evening on the frontier in the Jammu region of Indian Kashmir.

In another incident on Friday, a drone from Pakistan was suspected to have dropped two pistols, three ammunition magazines, 16 bullets and one grenade that were recovered following a search, the source ‌said.

Indian army ‌chief General Upendra Dwivedi said at least eight drones ‌had ⁠been ​sighted since ‌Saturday.

“These drones, I believe, were defensive drones, which want to go up and see if any action was being taken,” Dwivedi told reporters at an annual press conference ahead of Army Day on January 15.

“It’s possible they also wanted to see if there were any gaps, any laxity in the Indian army, any gaps through which they could send terrorists,” he said, adding that the directors of military operations of the two ⁠sides spoke by phone on Tuesday.

“This matter was discussed ... today and they have been told that this ‌is unacceptable to us, and please put a ‍stop to it. This has been conveyed ‍to them,” Dwivedi said.

Indian media reports cited army officials as saying the incursions ‍were by military drones.

There was no immediate reaction from Pakistan to his comments.

MAY CONFLICT WAS WORST IN DECADES

Ties between the nuclear-armed rivals have been frozen since a four-day conflict in May, their worst in decades, that was sparked after a militant
attack on Hindu tourists in ​Kashmir killed 26 men. New Delhi said the attack was backed by Pakistan, allegations which Islamabad denied.

The two sides used fighter jets, missiles, ⁠drones and heavy artillery, killing dozens on both sides before agreeing to a ceasefire.

In the past, there have been reports of civilian drone intrusions from Pakistan into Indian states along the border, with Indian security agencies telling local media that they had shot down drones that were seeking to drop light arms or drugs.

Pakistan has dismissed these accusations as baseless and misleading.

India also accuses Pakistan of helping what it says are “terrorists” to enter into the Indian side of Kashmir, where tens of thousands of people have been killed in a revolt against New Delhi’s rule that began in 1989 and lasted decades until the violence ebbed.

Pakistan denies the Indian accusations and says that it ‌only provides political and diplomatic support to Kashmiris fighting against New Delhi.