Monday, January 12, 2026

A Game That Refused to Behave

There are matches that follow logic, and then there are clásicos. This Spanish Super Cup final belonged firmly to the latter category: a game that resisted structure, mocked prediction, and reminded everyone why football, at its most unhinged, is still unmatched as spectacle.

Barcelona won. That much is simple. Everything else requires interpretation.

For long stretches, Barcelona were not merely better; they were authoritative. They moved the ball with the ease of a team convinced of its own correctness, reducing Real Madrid to reactive figures, sprinting after shadows. And yet, somehow, the scoreline refused to reflect that certainty. This was not a contest decided by momentum but by moments, fleeting, violent, often irrational moments.

Madrid arrived in Jeddah with compromise written all over them. No Kylian Mbappé from the start, Gonzalo García instead. A system that hovered awkwardly between a back five and a defensive four, its intention obvious: survive, then release Vinícius Júnior into open space like a controlled detonation. It was a plan built on fear and faith in equal measure.

For half an hour, it almost worked.

Barcelona monopolised possession to the point of absurdity, nearly 80% by the first cooling break, yet created little of true consequence. Control without incision. A familiar paradox. Madrid, for all their passivity, carried the sharper threat. Vinícius’ runs were warnings rather than chances, reminders that dominance can be overturned in seconds.

And then the match lost its mind.

What followed at the end of the first half was football stripped of restraint. Chances stacked upon chances, structure dissolving into instinct. Barcelona struck first, Raphinha finishing the move he had just wasted minutes earlier. Madrid looked ready to unravel. Instead, they revolted.

Vinícius’ equaliser was not just a goal; it was a statement. A sprint from halfway, defenders reduced to obstacles, a nutmeg that felt almost disrespectful. It was football as individual rebellion against collective order. Barcelona barely had time to absorb the insult before Lewandowski restored their lead, capitalising on Madrid’s chronic inability to defend moments of transition.

That should have been that. It rarely is.

Deep into added time that arguably no longer existed, Madrid were level again. A header, a bar, a rebound, chaos distilled into a single, scrappy act of survival. Four goals in fifteen minutes, three in four. The game had abandoned reason entirely.


The second half pretended to calm down, but the tension never truly left. Barcelona resumed control, Madrid waited for rupture. Vinícius continued to terrify, Rodrygo threatened, Courtois and Joan García traded interventions that felt increasingly decisive.

The winner, when it came, was fittingly imperfect. Raphinha slipped. The ball deflected. Football shrugged. Barcelona led again, this time for good.

Madrid chased, desperately, emotionally, almost admirably. Mbappé arrived to a roar but into a match already tilting away from him. Frenkie de Jong’s late red card added spice rather than substance. The final chances fell to Álvaro Carreras and Raúl Asencio, symbols of Madrid’s night: opportunity without execution.

At 96 minutes and 43 seconds, Asencio’s header went straight at Joan García. No drama left. The keeper held the ball as Barcelona held on to a match they had both controlled and nearly lost.

This was not a clásico of purity or tactical elegance. It was chaotic, contradictory, and at times illogical. Barcelona may ask how they ever felt threatened. Madrid may wonder whether their resistance was evidence of decay or resilience. Xabi Alonso’s future will be debated not because Madrid lost, but because they refused to collapse.

And that is the paradox this match leaves behind.

Barcelona lifted a trophy, minor in prestige, significant in symbolism. Madrid left with questions, but also proof that even in dysfunction, they remain dangerously alive. Pedri collapsed with cramp as the whistle blew, an image that felt appropriate: brilliance exhausted by its own intensity.

For half an hour it was not much of a clásico. For the rest, it was unmistakably one.

Chaotic. Unreasonable. Compelling.

Football, at its most honest.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar 

Friday, January 9, 2026

When Heroes Go Quiet: Tamim Iqbal’s Moral Collapse

Tamim Iqbal’s greatest achievement in Bangladeshi cricket may not be his runs, but his mastery of timing - political timing, narrative timing, and most importantly, self-preserving timing.

For nearly two decades, Tamim cultivated the image of the defiant batsman, the man of the people, the torchbearer of Bangladesh’s cricketing pride. Yet when the people themselves needed voices of moral clarity, that image dissolved into studied silence. This silence was not accidental. It was strategic.

Tamim belongs to a powerful trinity, alongside Mashrafe Bin Mortaza and Shakib Al Hasan, that transformed Bangladeshi cricket from a sporting institution into a carefully managed ecosystem of influence, patronage, and selective outrage. Cricket, already weakened by syndicates and opaque power structures, became further politicized, not through resistance, but through compliance.

What separates Tamim from the fans who sustained him is not class or fame, but conscience.

In 2024, when innocent lives were lost amid national turmoil, the silence from Bangladesh’s most powerful cricketing voices was deafening. Long before that, when a prominent and widely admired figure was murdered in broad daylight, Tamim and his contemporaries chose discretion over dissent. In moments when moral neutrality itself becomes a political act, silence is not innocence, it is alignment.

Throughout his career, Tamim demonstrated a consistent pattern: confrontation only when it is safe, emotion only when it benefits him, and rebellion only when it can be theatrically contained. His much-publicized emotional episodes, particularly the 2023 retirement drama, were not acts of protest but performances of control, designed to redirect public sympathy while leaving entrenched power structures untouched.

This is where Tamim’s opportunism becomes undeniable.

Like Mashrafe and Shakib, Tamim learned early that in Bangladesh, sporting stardom can be leveraged into political capital without ever paying the price of political responsibility. He learned that remaining useful to power is safer than being accountable to the public. And so, even today, he continues to serve interests larger than cricket and far removed from the fans whose devotion built his legacy.

Harsh criticism, therefore, is not cruelty, it is consequence.

When public figures enjoy extraordinary privilege while refusing moral accountability, they invite scrutiny. When they benefit from systems that suppress dissent, they become collaborators—willing or otherwise. And when they repeatedly choose self-interest over solidarity, history remembers them not as heroes, but as enablers.

Tamim Iqbal’s tragedy is not that he failed Bangladesh cricket. It is that, when Bangladesh itself was tested, he chose comfort over courage.

And for collaborators of authoritarian systems, silence, no matter how polished, is never neutral.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar 


Bangladesh: When Turning Off the Screen Becomes an Act of Resistance

If Bangladesh’s decision to suspend the broadcast of the Indian Premier League (IPL), followed by its reluctance to travel to India for the upcoming T20 World Cup, is dismissed as an emotional reaction or a cricketing tantrum, then we have failed to read the deeper grammar of South Asian power politics. This was not an impulsive gesture born of wounded pride. It was a calculated, understated, and dignified act of resistance, polite in form, political in substance.

No slogans were shouted. No diplomatic ultimatums were issued. Instead, symbolism was deployed. And in politics, particularly in unequal relationships, symbolism often carries more weight than confrontation.

The government justified the move in simple terms: Bangladesh’s premier fast bowler, Mustafizur Rahman, was dropped from the Kolkata Knight Riders squad without any explanation. On the surface, this might appear to be routine franchise management. But the absence of explanation is precisely where the politics begin. Silence, in such contexts, is not neutrality. It is a hierarchy made visible.

In modern cricket, to exclude without explanation is not merely to sideline a player; it is to disregard a country’s cricketing dignity. It is to say that some questions do not deserve answers, because not everyone is entitled to ask them.

The Board of Control for Cricket in India has long ceased to treat cricket as a sport alone. It is now a multi-billion-dollar corporate ecosystem, where bats and balls are ornamental, and real decisions are made in boardrooms shaped by capital, political proximity, and strategic leverage. Cricketing logic is optional. Performance is negotiable. Power is not.

The IPL is marketed as the world’s greatest meritocracy, a carnival where talent triumphs above all else. In reality, it resembles a gated community: open to many, owned by a few. You may play, entertain, and generate revenue, but you may not ask questions. If you do, you are reminded—quietly but firmly, of “how things work.”

For Bangladeshi cricketers, this reality is particularly unforgiving. Their presence in the IPL is never framed as a right; it is extended as a favour. A privilege that can be granted today and withdrawn tomorrow, without explanation. To seek clarity is to risk discomfort.

Contrast this with how Australian or English players are treated. Scheduling conflicts are negotiated. Security concerns are delicately managed. Calendars bend. Justifications soften. Global cricket suddenly becomes flexible.

Is this what “global cricket leadership” now looks like?

In this lexicon, leadership means imposition. Cooperation means compliance. And the much-celebrated “cricketing family” exists only as long as everyone understands their place.

Mustafizur Rahman is not an anonymous journeyman. His cutters, variations, and composure under pressure have earned him global recognition. He is not new to the IPL. His credentials are well established. Yet neither the franchise nor the governing power felt compelled to explain his exclusion. Because power does not explain itself. It announces decisions and expects acceptance.

This is where the mask slips. Unity is celebrated when dominant interests are secure. But when smaller nations ask for parity or respect, they become inconvenient relatives, best ignored.

At this point, cricket bleeds seamlessly into politics. The IPL does not exist in isolation from the broader contours of India–Bangladesh relations, which have long been defined by asymmetry, whether in trade, water sharing, border killings, visa regimes, or diplomatic leverage. Cricket simply offers a softer, more palatable theatre in which dominance can be exercised under the banner of sport.

Bangladesh’s decision to suspend the IPL broadcast is not economic retaliation. It is a moral and political statement. No one seriously believes this will dent the league’s revenue or dull its spectacle. The IPL is too vast, too entrenched, too profitable for that.

But symbolism is not measured in balance sheets.

Suspending the broadcast sends a clear message: Bangladesh is not merely a consumer market. It is a cricket-loving nation that demands respect. Passion can be monetised. Humiliation, however, is remembered.

In India’s political ecosystem, cricket has long functioned as soft power. Fixtures, exclusions, and selective “security concerns” often double as diplomatic instruments. Who plays, who doesn’t, who is deemed indispensable, and who is dispensable—these decisions are rarely apolitical.

Bangladesh’s quiet rebuff forces an uncomfortable question: is cricket still a global game? Or has it become a stage where the largest shareholder decides who plays, who watches, and who is expected to absorb indignity in silence?

The IPL will go on. Cameras will roll. Stadiums will fill. The festival will resume. But outside the glare, some will stand apart, aware that this celebration is not equal for all.

If cricket continues down this path, where power consistently eclipses merit, its future is already visible. The game will cease to be global. It will become a franchised entertainment system, where players are assets, questions are unwelcome, and rules are rewritten without explanation.

In that version of cricket, the “Man of the Match” will no longer be decided by bat or ball. It will belong to institutions that write the rules, bend them when convenient, and never feel obliged to justify themselves.

Bangladesh’s restraint offers a reminder: submission is not the only response to power. Sometimes silence itself is resistance. And sometimes, turning off the screen says more than any protest ever could.

Thank You

Faisal Caeasar

Thursday, January 8, 2026

A Series That Refused to Decide What It Wanted to Be

There was a moment, barely an hour into the Ashes finale at the Sydney Cricket Ground, when the series looked set to end exactly as it had unfolded, abruptly, confusingly, and with a lingering sense of dissatisfaction. England were 57 for 3, the pitch wore its now-familiar green tinge, and the ghosts of Perth and Melbourne hovered over Sydney. Another truncated Test, another half-told story.

Instead, the match, and in some ways the series, changed its mind.

The unbroken partnership between Joe Root and Harry Brook did more than stabilise an innings. It slowed the Ashes down. On a surface that demanded patience after the new ball softened, Root and Brook reintroduced time into a contest that had largely rejected it. In doing so, they exposed the central contradiction of this series: conditions, selections, and strategies seemed determined to rush outcomes, while the best cricket stubbornly insisted on duration and discipline.

The Pitch, the Panic, and the Absence of Spin

Sydney was never meant to be a two-day Test. Yet the pressure on curators in modern Australian cricket has become symbolic of a deeper anxiety: fear of flat pitches, fear of criticism, fear of time itself. With just 5mm of grass left on the surface, the SCG pitch was a compromise, enough life to appease the fast-bowling orthodoxy, but stripped of the character that once defined the ground.

That compromise was mirrored in selection. Australia walked out without a specialist spinner, a decision that would have seemed heretical in another era. By the afternoon of the first day, as Root and Brook milked a seam-heavy attack, the absence felt less tactical than ideological. When variety is removed, control becomes fragile.

Root, Resistance, and the Illusion of Momentum

Root’s eventual 160 was not merely a statistical landmark, his 41st Test century, but a method statement. In a series defined by collapses and counterpunches, his innings was a reminder that domination can be quiet. He played late, trusted angles, and dismantled Australia’s plans without theatrics. If this was indeed his final Test innings on Australian soil, it felt fitting that it was built on restraint rather than rebellion.

Yet even Root could not fully redeem England’s chronic flaw: their inability to capitalise. Time and again across this series, England reached positions of promise only to unravel through ill-judged strokes or lapses in concentration. Sydney followed the pattern. From 211 for 3, they slid, leaving runs unclaimed and pressure unreleased.

Travis Head and the Australian Counter-Narrative

If Root represented resistance, Travis Head embodied inevitability. His response- 91, then 163, then yet another decisive contribution in the chase- was the defining Australian theme of the series. Head did not merely score runs; he disrupted rhythm. Where England sought control, he imposed chaos, and he did so with a clarity that suggested complete faith in his role.

By the time Australia amassed 567, the highest total of the series, the match had tilted decisively. England had bowled long, fielded poorly, and watched opportunities dissolve. The cracks widening in the SCG surface felt metaphorical, evidence that this contest, for all its moments of intrigue, was drifting toward a familiar conclusion.

Smith, Experience, and the Final Word

In the final act, Steven Smith reasserted something Australia never truly lost: control through experience. His unbeaten 129 in the first innings and calm presence in the chase were less spectacular than Head’s assaults, but perhaps more telling. Where England oscillated between bravery and recklessness, Australia defaulted to method.

The final-day chase was not without drama, wickets fell, reviews were debated, and the surface finally revealed some late turn, but the result never truly escaped Australia’s grasp. A 4–1 series scoreline may flatter them, but it also reflects a deeper truth: Australia were not flawless, but they were consistently clearer in purpose.

What This Ashes Leaves Behind

This Ashes series promised renewal and delivered confusion. It was short when it wanted to be long, chaotic when it needed clarity, and thrilling only in bursts. England improved as it wore on, but improvement without consistency remains an unfinished argument. Australia, for all their own selection dilemmas and batting questions, trusted experience when it mattered.

Sydney, in the end, offered a glimpse of what Test cricket still can be: a game of patience, attrition, and late movement, just as the series concluded. That may be the Ashes’ final irony: its best match arrived only after the narrative was already written.

The contest did not so much end as it exhaled. And in that quiet release, it left behind as many questions as answers about pitches, about spin, about how modern Test cricket balances urgency with endurance.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar 

A Game Resuscitated: Gooch’s Gambit and the Theatre of Sydney

For two days, the Sydney Cricket Ground belonged entirely to Australia—an empire of runs erected brick by brick across 518 in 652 minutes, a monument so large it threatened to obscure the rest of the match. Yet Graham Gooch, part pragmatist and part gambler, refused to read the game’s obituary. His declaration at 469 for eight, still trailing by 49, was not merely a tactical decision; it was a psychological strike that jolted a seemingly settled narrative back into motion.

England’s escape from the follow-on had been laborious, constructed through Atherton’s monastic 105 in 451 minutes and Gower’s cultured 123, an innings that gilded defiance with aesthetic beauty. But once the deficit was narrowed to something negotiable, Gooch’s sudden declaration, audacious in its timing, released a different kind of electricity into the match. The ball had begun gripping, Matthews turning his off-breaks sharply even to the left-handers. Gooch sensed a window flung open by fate, and he hurled his spinners through it.

The Shockwave of a Declaration

The declaration’s psychological tremor was immediate. Marsh and Taylor, men usually anchored in serenity, were whisked away cheaply for the second time. For Taylor—who in nine Tests against England had never failed to reach fifty—this was a rupture in rhythm. Australia entered the final morning visibly diminished, the familiar buoyancy absent, the scoreboard suddenly an unreliable ally.

Yet Test cricket seldom rewards only the bold. Australia survived until two and a quarter hours before stumps. Their resistance left England needing 255 in 28 overs, 9.1 an over in an era when such a chase bordered on fantasy. That they even attempted it was a testament to Gooch’s refusal to concede to the game’s gravitational pull. For a while, as Gooch and Gower carved 84 at seven an over, a miraculous finale shimmered on the horizon, until the dream dissolved.

Two moments conspired against England long before the chase began. First, the night-watchman Ian Healy, whose counterpunching 69 could have ended on the final morning when he offered Gower a difficult, low chance at square leg. Second, Rackemann, Australia’s unlikely pillar, who occupied 32 overs with a left pad seemingly forged from granite. That Gooch believed Malcolm’s back was too fragile to bowl only deepened England’s dependence on the spinners and elongated the Australian tail’s survival.

Tufnell bowled handsomely - five for 61, the ball biting obediently from his fingers. But England’s over-commitment to spin was costly. When Malcolm, finally unleashed after four hours in the field, took the new ball, his sixth delivery uprooted Rackemann. A dismissal four hours too late.

Australia’s Early Dominance: A Study in Consistency

If England’s resistance was stitched from grit and opportunism, Australia’s early innings was a study in method. Malcolm struck early, removing Marsh through slip and Taylor via a leg-side glove. But England’s lengths thereafter erred short, allowing Boon and Border to stitch together a partnership of 147 that radiated calm authority.

Boon, in the midst of a personal renaissance at the SCG, played with surgical selectiveness: 17 boundaries in 174 balls, most of them cuts executed with the precision of a craftsman. His ascent from 85 to 97 in four strokes off Gooch promised a fourth consecutive Sydney hundred before he miscued a rare lapse to deep gully.

Then came Matthews, darting feet, restless intent, who unsettled Hemmings and surged to a hundred from 175 balls. Only Malcolm’s stamina prevented Sydney’s heat from melting England’s resolve entirely.

England’s Reply: Atherton’s Ordeal, Gower’s Grace

Rain spared England a hazardous hour on the second evening, and Gooch and Atherton turned that reprieve into a 95-run opening platform. After Gooch’s departure down the leg side and a brief collapse that saw Larkins run out by Border’s pinpoint strike, the stage belonged to Atherton and Gower.

Their stand of 139 was an alliance of contrasting temperaments: Atherton grim-faced, ascetic, chiselling each run; Gower a cavalier brushing strokes across the canvas of the SCG. Atherton’s century, the slowest in Ashes history, arrived with a rare flourish, a cover-drive off Rackemann that seemed almost out of character.

By the time Gower unfurled his first hundred at the venue, and Stewart added a brisk 91, Gooch had enough leverage to declare—and enough daring to make the Test a contest again.

Phil Tufnell: Talent, Turbulence, and the Theatre of Misrule

Phil Tufnell entered international cricket as both artist and anarchist. A left-arm spinner of rare gifts, he possessed an equally rare ability to irritate authority. That he played as much cricket as he did was proof of his talent triumphing over temperament, just barely.

Tufnell relished being the outsider. If I don’t eat muesli at 9:30 like the instruction sheet says, it doesn’t mean I’m not trying, he quipped. It was both a manifesto and a warning.

The 1990–91 Tour: Chaos Embodied

His first major tour, Australia 1990–91, was carnage. Gooch’s England were a regimented unit; Tufnell was a man constitutionally allergic to regimentation. His escapades—a dawn arrival at the hotel after a night with four women, a dispute over being forced to bat in the nets—earned fines and muttered disapproval.

Yet fate, or perhaps desperation, handed him a debut at the MCG. He finished wicketless, but the match would be remembered for something stranger.

During Australia’s victory charge, Tufnell casually asked the umpire, Peter McConnell, how many balls remained. The reply was a verbal grenade:

“Count ’em yourself, you Pommie.”

Even Tufnell was stunned into silence. Gooch was less forgiving. Marching over, he confronted the umpire:

“You can't talk to my players like that.”

For once, Tufnell felt protected. The reprieve did not last.

The Non-Wicket and the Revenge

Moments later, Tufnell induced a thick edge from Boon. Jack Russell caught it cleanly. A maiden Test wicket beckoned.

McConnell simply said:

“Not out.”

Tufnell’s reply was volcanic. McConnell, unfazed, retorted:

“Now you can’t talk to me like that.”

The wicket was delayed a week, arriving at last at the SCG when Matthews miscued to mid-off. Tufnell’s shout to the other umpire—

“I suppose that’s not **ing out either!” - was cathartic as it was reckless.

He finished the innings with 5 for 61, but the series dissolved around him. England lost 3–0, Tufnell left with nine wickets at 38, and McConnell’s career quietly evaporated amid LBW controversies in the months that followed.

A Match of Margins, A Tale of Men

Sydney 1991 was not merely a Test match. It was a dramatic collision of personalities, philosophies, and psychological gambits:

Gooch the militarist, forcing life into a dying match.

Gower the aesthete, painting beauty atop crisis.

Atherton the ascetic, resisting the world for 451 minutes.

Tufnell the rebel, weaving brilliance and chaos in equal measure.

McConnell, the umpire whose authority wavered under scrutiny.

Cricket, at its finest, is less about scoreboards than the fragile human tensions that animate them. This Test—volatile, uneven, unforgettable—was a reminder that the game’s greatest theatre lies not only in the skill of its players but in the psychology, frailty, and fire that each brings to the field.

Thank You

Faisal Caesar