Inzamam backs India-Pakistan cricket revival, says rivalry can surpass Ashes
Doha, Qatar: The soft-spoken giant, who once caressed the ball through the covers with effortless grace, still carries the calm of his batting days. Even in retirement, Inzamam-ul-Haq speaks in measured tones, choosing diplomacy over drama, but when the conversation turned to India and Pakistan cricket, conviction replaced caution.
While speaking to media in Doha during a private visit, one of Pakistan’s greatest batters leaned on nostalgia and possibility, imagining a rivalry restored to its full theatre. ipl-today.in
“If Pakistan and India play a Test series, then the Ashes between England and Australia will be much less popular – there would be at least a 50 percent gap,” Inzamam said, his voice carrying the certainty of a man who experienced cricket’s fiercest rivalry from the middle.
“Politics should be kept aside. At least Pakistan and India must play in ICC [International Cricket Council] events in good spirit. There should even be bilateral series.”
For a generation, few embodied Pakistan’s batting resilience like Inzamam. Blessed with velvet timing rather than visible urgency, he often appeared untroubled even against the quickest bowlers. Where others fought pressure, Inzamam absorbed it. The languid drives, soft hands and ability to find gaps made him one of the most elegant middle-order batters of his era.
By the time he retired, he had piled up 8,830 runs in 120 Tests and 11,739 in 378 ODIs, numbers that placed him among Pakistan’s batting royalty. He struck 25 Test centuries and for years sat just behind mentor Javed Miandad among Pakistan’s leading Test run-scorers before later generations rewrote the record books.
Yet his legacy stretches beyond numbers. As a 21-year-old, Inzamam announced himself on the grandest stage, blasting a breathtaking 60 off 37 balls against New Zealand in the semi-final of the 1992 World Cup – an innings that changed Pakistan’s destiny and paved the way for their only ODI World Cup title.
But for Inzamam, cricket’s most magnetic rivalry has lost part of its soul. Political tensions have confined India and Pakistan to ICC and continental events, with no bilateral cricket since 2012-13.
The rivalry, however, remains unmatched in emotion and expectation. The recent Asia Cup handshake controversy and the trophy presentation row involving India’s captain Suryakumar Yadav and Asian Cricket Council President Mohsin Naqvi again highlighted how even routine moments between Pakistan and India are magnified beyond the field.
“Pakistan and India players shared cordial relations in the past. We used to visit each other’s rooms in the team hotel, but on the field we were rivals,” Inzamam recalled. “This is how it should be.”
Pakistan’s struggles against India in ICC tournaments, particularly at World Cups, have frustrated their supporters. Pakistan have lost all eight matches against India in the ODI World Cup and won only one match while losing eight in the T20 World Cup, but Inzamam dismissed theories of technical inferiority.
“It’s all about pressure. There is a lot of pressure on players when Pakistan and India are playing. Even when we play veterans cricket, there is pressure,” he said with a smile.
“We are waiting for the jinx to be broken, and it will end one day.”
The conversation soon shifted to Pakistan’s current troubles – a side searching for consistency after painful Test setbacks, including a recent defeat against Bangladesh.
Inzamam’s diagnosis was blunt as he said Pakistan are drifting away from the foundations that once made them formidable.
“We need to play four-day cricket. The more we play four-day cricket, the more we can improve our performances in Tests,” he said.
“It’s not that Pakistan do not have talent. The only reason is that they have not played enough four-day cricket.”
He urged young players to spend time in county cricket, arguing that experience cannot be manufactured in dressing rooms.
“No coach will teach what the ground teaches players,” he said.
For a country once blessed with the menace of Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis, the decline in bowling standards worries him.
“In our times, we had many quality bowlers and some had to sit out because there were so many,” he said.
“Unfortunately, we do not have those fast bowlers or even quality spinners now, but the Pakistan board is working on it.”
Asked to name the most influential cricketers of the last two decades, Inzamam quickly turned to modern greats.
“Virat Kohli inspired a generation,” he said, before also naming Steve Smith, Joe Root and James Anderson – players who, in different ways, redefined longevity and excellence.
Still, one unfinished chapter lingers in memory.
Inzamam ended his Test career agonisingly short of surpassing Miandad’s Pakistan record tally at the time – falling two runs shy of his mentor’s mark.
“I learnt a lot from Javed Miandad,” he said. “Even if I had broken his record, he would still remain a greater batsman,” he added.
Two-time champion Alcaraz withdraws from Wimbledon with wrist injury
Madrid: Carlos Alcaraz's hopes of regaining his Wimbledon title have been dashed with the two-time champion announcing Tuesday he is withdrawing as he recovers from a wrist injury.
"My recovery is going well and I'm feeling much better, but unfortunately I'm still not ready to play, I am obliged to withdraw from both Queen's and Wimbledon," said Spaniard Alcaraz, who lost to Jannik Sinner in last year's final in the All England Club.
"These are two really special tournaments for me and I'll miss them a lot. We'll keep working to come back as soon as possible."
Alcaraz sustained the injury during the first round of the Barcelona Open last month and subsequently pulled out of tournaments in Madrid and Rome and then Roland Garros, where he is the reigning two-time champion.
The world number two became the youngest man to complete the career Grand Slam in January with his triumph at the Australian Open. The 23-year-old holds a 22-3 record this season and also won a title in Doha.
Wimbledon will be only the third Grand Slam that Alcaraz has missed since making his main draw debut at the 2021 Australian Open. The Spaniard withdrew from the 2023 edition in Melbourne with a hamstring injury.
Alcaraz's wrist injury has stopped him continuing his exciting rivalry with Italian world number one Sinner, 24, who is firm favourite to triumph in Paris and London.
He lost top spot following his defeat by Sinner in the Monte Carlo Masters final on April 12.
The seven-time Grand Slam winner triumphed at Roland Garros in 2024 and 2025. He saved three championship points against Sinner last year in the longest French Open final in history.
The Italian, who has never won the French Open, may be able to capitalise on Alcaraz's absence. This year's tournament runs from May 24 to June 7.
Alcaraz won his first Wimbledon trophy in 2023, defeating seven-time champion Novak Djokovic in the final and successfully defended his title against the Serb the following year.
This year's Wimbledon championship runs from June 29 to July 12.
"It's sad news for all of us, me being a competitor you want to play against the best players in the world and he's definitely the best player on this surface," Sinner had said after Alcaraz's withdrawal from the French Open.
"Being that young, like he is and like I am, we need to look at our bodies first before worse things (happen)."
Last month, Alcaraz insisted that he would not risk a premature return.
"I'd rather come back maybe a bit later, but in great shape, than come back quickly and risk making this injury worse," he explained.
"I have a long career ahead of me, so I'm not afraid to miss what I have to miss in order to recover as well as possible."
Cape Verde names squad for World Cup debut
Praia: Cape Verde head coach Pedro Brito on Monday named a 26-man squad for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, as the island nation prepares for its first appearance at football's biggest tournament.
"Today is a historic day for Cape Verdean football," Bubista said during the squad announcement ceremony. "It was a dream for all Cape Verdeans and we always believed it was possible."
The squad features experienced players including Ryan Mendes, Garry Rodrigues, Jamiro Monteiro and Logan Costa.
The Blue Sharks will hold a training camp across several Cape Verde islands from May 20 to 24 before traveling to Portugal for a friendly against Serbia on May 31, and face Bermuda in the United States in their final warmup match ahead of the World Cup.
Cape Verde will open its campaign against Spain in Atlanta on June 15 before taking on Uruguay in Miami and Saudi Arabia in Houston in Group H.
استدعاء فهد يونس لمعسكر العنابي
استدعى الإسباني لوبيتيغي مدرب العنابي، فهد يونس حارس السيلية للانضمام إلى المعسكر التدريبي للعنابي، ضمن التحضيرات المكثفة لخوض نهائيات كأس العالم 2026. ويأتي استدعاء فهد يونس في إطار سعي الجهاز الفني لتعزيز الخيارات المتاحة في مركز حراسة المرمى، والوقوف على جاهزية جميع العناصر قبل الدخول في المرحلة الأخيرة من برنامج الإعداد للمونديال، خاصة في ظل المنافسة القوية بين الحراس خلال الفترة الحالية.
ومن المنتظر أن يشارك الحارس في التدريبات الجماعية للعنابي خلال المعسكر الجاري، الذي يشهد تركيزًا كبيرًا على الجوانب البدنية والفنية، إلى جانب رفع معدلات الانسجام بين اللاعبين قبل خوض المباريات الودية التحضيرية المقبلة.
