‘Records meant to be broken’: Skipper Babar Azam shrugs off India’s World Cup stranglehold

Pakistan's captain Babar Azam attends a practice session ahead of their ICC Cricket World Cup match against India in Ahmedabad, India, on October 12, 2023. (AP)
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Updated 13 October 2023
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‘Records meant to be broken’: Skipper Babar Azam shrugs off India’s World Cup stranglehold

  • Pakistan broke a T20 World Cup sequence of five defeats against India with a 10-wicket rout under Azam in 2021
  • Azam admits Ahmedabad crowd will only support India, saying Pakistani fans should also have been allowed

AHMEDABAD: Defiant Pakistan captain Babar Azam declared Friday that “records are meant to be broken” as his team looks to break free of India’s World Cup stranglehold when the bitter rivals clash on Saturday.

India boast a 7-0 record over their neighbors in World Cups despite Pakistan having a healthy 73-56 overall advantage since their first one-day international clash back in 1978.

“I don’t focus on the past,” said Azam on Friday. “Let’s focus on the thing to come as we know records are meant to be broken.”

“We will try to play well and it all depends on how you play on the day, just like we did in the first two matches,” added the skipper whose side have two wins from two at the World Cup after seeing off the Netherlands and Sri Lanka.

Azam said he has told his players that Saturday’s clash inside the 132,000-capacity Ahmedabad stadium is a “golden opportunity” to write their names into World Cup folklore.

“The India-Pakistan match is a big game, high intensity. Every such game is challenging,” added Azam, a survivor of the 2019 World Cup clash in Manchester which India won by 89 runs.

“I have told (the players) it’s the best opportunity to perform. It is a big stadium that can accommodate many fans, it’s a golden opportunity for us to perform in front of these fans.”

Under Azam, Pakistan broke a Twenty20 World Cup sequence of five defeats (from 2007 to 2016) against India with a 10-wicket rout at Dubai in 2021.

“Didn’t we break the Twenty20 record? I am not worried about the past.”

Azam also shrugged off the prospect of having virtually all of the 132,000 spectators screaming support for India with no Pakistan fans having been successful in securing visas to cross the border.

“It’s not pressure,” said Azam. “We have played at big stadiums like at the MCG (Melbourne Cricket Ground).

“But, yes, all the support, I think, in Ahmedabad will be for India. It would have been better had Pakistan fans been allowed.

“But I expect fans will also support us as well.”

Pakistan fans from around the world have faced visa glitches due to strained relations between the two countries, who have not played a bilateral cricket series since 2007.

Pakistan did tour India for limited-over matches in 2012 but that did not revive full tours which stalled in the wake of the Mumbai attacks in 2008.

Azam admitted conditions in Ahmedabad are different from those at Hyderabad where Pakistan played two warm-up matches and their first two World Cup games.

“Yes, the conditions here are different,” said Azam whose team beat the Netherlands by 81 runs and Sri Lanka by six wickets.

“You are better off at a venue where you have spent a few days but we will adapt.”

Azam admitted Pakistan will look for wickets from pace spearhead Shaheen Shah Afridi who has yet to fully fire at the tournament.

Shaheen has just two wickets from two matches at a cost of 113 runs.

“He is our main bowler. Shaheen himself has a belief that he is a big match bowler,” said the captain.


Pakistani migrant’s death in UAE shatters economic future of families back home

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Pakistani migrant’s death in UAE shatters economic future of families back home

  • Pakistani driver killed by falling debris during missile interception in Abu Dhabi amid escalating Middle East conflict
  • Death leaves more than a dozen dependents in Pakistan without income after eight years of overseas work

ISLAMABAD: For days, Nazar Ali told his daughter-in-law a gentle lie: authorities in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) had confiscated all mobile phones and her husband, Mureeb Zaman, would call home as soon as he got it back.

In reality, Zaman, a 40-year-old Pakistani driver who had spent eight years working in the UAE to lift his family out of poverty, had already been killed by missile fragments during an aerial interception over Abu Dhabi amid an escalating conflict in the Middle East.

The conflict began on Feb. 28 after the United States and Israel launched strikes on Iran following weeks of escalating tensions between Tehran and its regional adversaries. The attacks triggered retaliatory drone and missile strikes by Iran targeting commercial and US-linked interests across the Gulf region, prompting air defense systems in several countries to intercept projectiles in the skies above major cities.

As interceptors met incoming missiles over the Emirati capital that night, falling debris struck Zaman, ending years of work he hoped would secure a better future for his five children in one of Pakistan’s most volatile regions.

“I found out the same day because nowadays it is the age of the Internet,” Ali, Zaman’s father, told Arab News during a condolence gathering at his residence last week.

“I myself was in the market at that time when I received the news [of his death], but I did not tell the family.”

Zaman had been supporting three households in his hometown in Pakistan’s northwestern Bannu district, including the family of his late younger brother. The region, located in the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa near the Afghan border, has witnessed a surge in militancy and counterinsurgency operations in recent years.

The 40-year-old was one of millions of Pakistani migrant workers in Gulf countries whose remittances are a vital source of foreign exchange for Pakistan’s fragile economy.

He is also among the first reported Pakistani casualties of the recent escalation. Two Pakistani nationals have been killed so far in aerial interceptions in the UAE, while another Pakistani died last week in a similar incident in Iranian waters off Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province, according to authorities.

Zaman’s life abroad was measured in long-distance phone calls and carefully saved earnings, while his wife, four daughters and one son lived in a single room at their family home in Bannu.

“He used to say that ‘When I come on Eid, God willing, I will build a room for you’,” Ali, his grieving father, said.

For Zaman, working in the UAE represented an escape from the insecurity and economic hardship that have long plagued his hometown, where militant attacks targeting security forces and civilians have periodically disrupted daily life.

Family members said he had hoped to return home for the upcoming Eid Al-Fitr holiday, encouraged by military operations against militant groups in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa that had raised hopes of greater stability in the region.

Adnan Gul, Zaman’s nephew, remembered his uncle as a warm and optimistic man who often spoke about building a better future for his family.

“His wish was to have a good home, a settled family, and a good, peaceful life,” Gul said.

Recalling Zaman as a cheerful man who loved food and rarely lost his temper, Gul added: “With younger people he behaved like one of them, and with elders he behaved like an elder.”

“He had many wishes, but unfortunately all those wishes remained unfulfilled.”

Now, Zaman’s death has left his extended family facing an uncertain future.

Relatives fear the loss of his income could disrupt the education of his children, who attend school while also memorizing the Holy Qur’an.

“He used to say these things and tell me ‘Not to tire yourself too much because you have already done a lot of hard work’,” Ali, his father, said, his voice trailing off.

“But such a day came that Allah Almighty once again left us [helpless], and we don’t know what will happen next.”

Buried in his hometown, Zaman is remembered through the photographs he shared with family members on WhatsApp and the Eid gifts he had already purchased before his death.

“When a person leaves this world, only memories remain,” Gul said.