Thursday, February 5, 2026

Aminul Islam’s Necessary Stand

The Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB), under the leadership of Aminul Islam, has taken a decisive and long-overdue step to protect the integrity of Bangladesh cricket. Under the new framework, media access to the national team will be strictly regulated, limited to match days, official press conferences, formally invited events, and designated practice sessions as communicated by the board.

Predictably, this move has triggered outrage from sections of the Bangladeshi sports media. But outrage was inevitable. Because this decision does not merely restrict access, it dismantles an ecosystem of entitlement, manipulation, and long-standing media excess.

What the New Rules Say and Why They Matter

According to reports from Star News, the BCB formally informed the Bangladesh Sports Press Association (BSPA) that:

Media accreditation will be issued only to outlets registered under Bangladesh’s ICT Ministry

Unlicensed YouTubers and TikTokers will be barred from unrestricted access

The BSPA has rejected the decision outright

The backlash was instant. Yet, from the perspective of professionalism and national interest, this is one of the most productive decisions the BCB has taken in years.

The Rot of the “Open Access” Era

For over a decade, particularly during what many now describe as a fascist era, Bangladesh’s sports journalism ceased to resemble journalism at all. Cricket venues became open playgrounds where certain media personalities functioned less like reporters and more like personal aides, image managers, and ideological mouthpieces for powerful players and political interests.

This culture insulted journalism itself.

Journalists followed players into dressing rooms, hotels, and private spaces. Sensitive team information leaked freely. Cult figures were manufactured to distract public scrutiny. Syndicates emerged, quietly, gradually, until Bangladesh cricket began to decay from within. The damage was not sudden; it was necrotic. Slow. Internal. Devastating.

A Media With No Moral Authority

Bangladesh’s mainstream media has no credibility left to lecture institutions about ethics. The nation has watched how these outlets behaved over the last 15 years, how they aligned themselves with authoritarian power, how they reshaped narratives overnight after 2024, and how they continue to serve foreign interests while attempting to destabilize domestic institutions to resurrect discredited politics.

This is not speculation. It is record.

No one understands this better than Aminul Islam. He has lived through it, from inside the system. His decision is not impulsive. It is corrective.

Why Aminul Islam Refuses to Bend

Whether it was the Mustafizur Rahman issue, the T20 World Cup controversies, or now media access restrictions, Aminul Islam has remained firm. That firmness is precisely what irritates the media.

Instead of acknowledging the need for reform, they have chosen to attack the man enforcing it.

That tells us everything.

The Hathurusingha Parallel: Media Versus Authority

The current backlash mirrors an older pattern. During the Bangladesh–South Africa series, reports from Prothom Alo highlighted how the national team, under head coach Chandika Hathurusingha, restricted media access, conducted closed training sessions, and declined interviews.

Hathurusingha has faced relentless hostility from sections of Bangladeshi sports journalism since 2014, despite transforming Bangladesh into a competitive international side. Players like Shakib Al Hasan, Tamim Iqbal, and Mahmudullah Riyad have consistently backed his methods. Yet the media preferred to label him “autocratic” and “rude.”

Why?

Because he refused to play their game.

A coach enforcing discipline, privacy, and professionalism threatens a media culture built on proximity, gossip, and leverage.

Journalism or Superiority Complex?

The deeper issue is entitlement. A section of Bangladesh’s sports media believes access is a right, not a privilege. When denied, retaliation follows: twisted quotes, hostile headlines, character assassination.

We have seen this with administrators, players, and coaches alike. Nazmul Hassan’s comments, Mushfiqur Rahim’s silences, Soumya Sarkar and Liton Das avoiding certain journalists, all were weaponized into narratives of crisis.

One must ask honestly: what has this media contributed to Bangladesh cricket beyond noise?

There are excellent journalists in Bangladesh, but they are drowned out by those who lack technical knowledge, ethical discipline, and professional restraint.

The Syndicate Culture Must End

The unhealthy intimacy between certain journalists and powerful cricketers created a media-player syndicate that thrived on access and manipulation. This culture distorted public discourse, destabilized team environments, and undermined coaches, from Heath Streak to Thilan Samaraweera.

Aminul Islam’s intervention directly challenges this structure.

That is why it hurts.

This Is Leadership, Not Suppression

A free press does not mean an unaccountable press.

Aminul Islam’s decision is not anti-media; it is anti-corruption, anti-manipulation, and pro-professionalism. Bangladesh cricket cannot progress while being held hostage by entitlement masquerading as journalism.

The media had years to reform itself. It chose not to.

Now the institution has stepped in.

And for once, Bangladesh cricket is better for it.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar 

When Cricket Becomes a Dictatorship: Nasser Hussain Calls Out India’s Power Play

Cricket has always carried a moral mythology. It was meant to be the Gentleman’s Game, a sport where rivalry ended at the boundary rope and politics stopped at the pavilion door. That mythology is now collapsing. And when Nasser Hussain publicly questions the selective morality of global cricket governance, it is not an off-hand remark, it is an indictment.

Hussain’s intervention exposes an uncomfortable truth: international cricket is no longer governed by rules, reciprocity, or sporting ethics. It is governed by money, leverage, and fear. And at the center of this imbalance sits the Indian cricket establishment, operating with the confidence of a regime that knows it cannot be challenged.

What Nasser Hussain Really Said (and Why It Matters)

Hussain’s critique is devastating precisely because it is simple. He asks the question everyone in cricket whispers but no institution dares to confront:

Would the ICC ever punish India the way it punishes others?

By raising this hypothetical, Hussain unmasks the double standards of the International Cricket Council. Bangladesh and Pakistan face swift disciplinary consequences. India, by contrast, enjoys negotiated exceptions, “neutral venues,” and moral exemptions.

This is not leadership. It is immunity.

The IPL as a Political Weapon

The most chilling example is the quiet removal of Mustafizur Rahman from Kolkata Knight Riders. This was not an injury call. It was not a cricketing decision. It was a signal.

When a domestic franchise league becomes an instrument of geopolitical pressure, cricket crosses a red line. Players stop being professionals and become hostages to national mood swings. Hussain rightly identifies this as the moment when sport gave way to coercion.

In any democratic sporting order, a legally contracted international player cannot be removed because of diplomatic discomfort. In cricket’s current ecosystem, however, Indian domestic politics now outranks international sporting law.

The Illusion of “Cricket Diplomacy

For decades, India projected cricket as a bridge, between nations, cultures, and conflicts. Today, that bridge has become a checkpoint.

Refused handshakes. Avoided trophy ceremonies. Matches cancelled not by weather or logistics, but by ideology. What Hussain calls “depressing” is in fact something more serious: the normalization of hostility inside the dressing room.

Cricket diplomacy once softened borders. Indian cricket now hardens them.

Power Without Responsibility

The Board of Control for Cricket in India, the Board of Control for Cricket in India, commands unparalleled financial power. With that power should come stewardship. Instead, it has produced domination without accountability.

The consequences are self-defeating:

Commercial erosion: No India–Pakistan rivalry means no global spectacle. Everyone loses.

Sporting insecurity: If Mustafizur can be discarded overnight, no overseas player is safe.

Moral decay: The message is clear, compliance is rewarded, independence is punished.

This is not hegemony with vision. It is control without consequence.

The ICC’s Moral Collapse

The ICC’s role in this drama is the most damning of all. By enforcing rules rigidly on weaker boards while bending endlessly for India, as seen repeatedly in tournament arrangements like the Asia Cup, the ICC has forfeited its claim to neutrality.

A governing body that cannot govern its most powerful member is not a regulator. It is a subcontractor.

In practice, global cricket now operates on an unspoken hierarchy: some members are equal, but one member is indispensable.

A Lonely Empire at the Top

If cricket continues down this road, India may well stand alone at the summit, financially dominant, politically unchecked, and competitively isolated. But it will be a hollow peak.

The beauty of cricket lies in its pluralism: Bangladesh’s rise, Pakistan’s unpredictability, the shared chaos of rivalry. Strip those away, and the game becomes a closed circuit, loud, lucrative, and spiritually empty.

Nasser Hussain did not attack India. He defended cricket.

The real question now is whether the game still has the courage to defend itself.

Thank You

Faisal Caesar 

When England Mistook Conditions for Excuses: Christchurch 1984 and the Cost of Arrogance

There are defeats that expose technical flaws, and then there are defeats that expose culture. England’s collapse at Christchurch in 1984 belonged firmly to the latter category. Bowled out cheaply twice on a pitch that demanded discipline rather than bravado, England did not merely lose a Test match, they revealed a mindset unprepared for a changing cricketing order.

At the center of that reckoning stood Richard Hadlee, a cricketer whose greatness England neither fully respected nor adequately planned for. By the end of the match, Hadlee had scored a brutal 99 and taken eight wickets for 44, orchestrating an innings victory that still resonates as one of New Zealand’s most emphatic statements of self-belief.

The First Misreading: Bowling Without Thoughts

England lost this Test on the first day, long before the scorecards became humiliating. After New Zealand won the toss, England’s bowlers responded not with patience but with impulse. On a pitch that offered swing and seam, they chose aggression without control, long-hops, half-volleys, and an obsession with bounce.

The advice attributed to Ian Botham,“bounce them all,”was less strategy than reflex. It reflected an England side still clinging to intimidation as a default mode, even when conditions demanded restraint. The result was predictable: New Zealand raced to 307 at more than four an over, aided by 42 boundaries that told a story of excess rather than enterprise.

Hadlee’s 99 was not an act of reckless hitting; it was punishment. He merely accepted what was offered. England bowled as though reputation might substitute for execution. It did not.

The Illusion of a “Bad Pitch”

In the days that followed, the pitch became England’s preferred alibi. It cracked. It moved. It was “dangerous.” But this explanation collapses under scrutiny. New Zealand did not self-destruct on it. They adapted. England did not.

When Bob Willis shortened his run-up and focused on line and length, he immediately became more effective. The lesson was there, written plainly. England as a collective chose not to read it.

The pitch did not force England to pad up to straight balls, nor did it compel reckless shot selection or mental retreat. Those were decisions, born of doubt, seeded by early fear, and magnified by a refusal to recalibrate.

The Psychological Crack

The decisive moment did not come via a wicket, but through hesitation. When David Gower padded up to a Hadlee delivery that was never missing the stumps, it sent a tremor through the dressing room. That single lapse of judgment did more damage than any ball that beat the bat.

By stumps on the second day, England were 53 for 7. Skill had been undermined by uncertainty. Technique by mistrust. This was not a batting collapse caused by violence; it was one caused by erosion.

A Team That Knew Who It Was

New Zealand, by contrast, were a side secure in their identity. Under Geoff Howarth, they did not overthink the contest. They trusted preparation, exploited conditions, and backed Hadlee with seamers who understood their roles, Ewen Chatfield, Lance Cairns, and the recalled Stephen Boock, whose selection spoke to quiet confidence rather than desperation.

This was a New Zealand team no longer content to compete politely. The underdog mentality had hardened into expectation. England, still viewing New Zealand as plucky rather than potent, paid for that miscalculation.

Follow-On, Followed by Inevitable Collapse

When England were forced to follow on, the outcome felt less like a possibility than a formality. Hadlee removed senior players with ruthless efficiency. Mike Gatting and Botham departed for ducks. Resistance was fleeting, almost embarrassed.

To be bowled out for around 100 twice on that surface was not an accident. It was evidence of a side that had mentally conceded long before the final wicket fell. 

Beyond Conditions: A Judgment on Attitude

Hadlee was correct to dismiss England’s post-match explanations. You cannot blame a pitch for boundary catches, run-outs, or padded-up lbws. You cannot blame conditions for lack of focus. England were not unlucky; they were out-thought and out-prepared.

This match mattered because it marked a shift. New Zealand were no longer content to be measured by England’s expectations. They imposed their own. England, meanwhile, were caught between eras—experienced, talented, but culturally adrift.

Respect, or Be Ruined

Christchurch 1984 endures not because England were bowled out cheaply, but because they were exposed intellectually. Cricket, especially away from home, punishes those who rely on instinct when insight is required.

New Zealand respected conditions. England resisted them. Hadlee mastered them.

And in that difference lay one of the most comprehensive defeats England have ever suffered, one that could not be explained away, only learned from.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar 

Ashes, Authority, and the Cost of Joy - Australia’s Efficiency, England’s Fragility, and a Tour That Lost Its Soul

Australia needed just ten sessions to extend an unbeaten Ashes run that had quietly hardened into dominance: eight victories and four draws since the Sydney Test of 1986–87. The margin was not merely numerical. It was philosophical.

England’s resistance, such as it was, flickered briefly on the first afternoon. At tea on day one, the scoreboard read 212 for three, and for a moment the Ashes seemed to wobble. Allan Lamb and Robin Smith, unshackled and adventurous, exploited Australia’s loosest bowling of the series on Perth’s lightning-fast outfield. Boundaries flew, confidence surged, and hope—England’s most fragile currency—briefly inflated.

Then, as so often on this tour, the collapse arrived not as an inevitability but as a consequence.

A moment’s excess ambition.

A dubious lbw decision.

Lower-order batting that folded along familiar fault lines.

And finally, the arrival of Craig McDermott, bowling with venom sharpened by timing.

The McDermott Interval

McDermott’s figures before tea were misleading. Eighteen overs for eighty runs suggested generosity. But cricket rarely rewards surface reading. After tea, McDermott produced one of those spells that compresses matches, and tours, into minutes: five wickets for seventeen runs in 6.4 overs. England’s innings disintegrated with astonishing speed.

The pivotal moment came immediately after the interval. Lamb, who had mastered the under-pitched ball throughout a 141-run third-wicket stand, attempted to pull once too often. The ball was outside off stump; the shot was unnecessary; the result terminal. Allan Border, alert and sprinting from mid-on, completed the catch behind the bowler. It was cricket’s most brutal lesson: what is profitable before tea can be fatal after it.

From 212 for three, England were dismissed for 244 in just over an hour. The promise of 400 evaporated into familiar English self-reproach. McDermott’s eight wickets, his second such haul in ten Tests, echoed Old Trafford 1985 and reaffirmed his role as England’s recurring nightmare.

The Difference That Matters

Australia’s reply illustrated the series’ defining distinction: lower-order resilience. Where England fractured, Australia absorbed. Reduced to 168 for six midway through day two, they might have been vulnerable against a team equipped to press advantage.

England were not that team.

Bruce Matthews, unglamorous but unyielding, anchored the innings with a typically adhesive three-and-a-quarter-hour vigil. He marshalled the tail, added 139 crucial runs, and even exercised tactical authority by extending play past 6:00 pm, sensing England’s fatigue in 82-degree heat. It was subtle captaincy, absent elsewhere in the contest.

Australia finished with a lead England could almost see but never truly challenged.

Numbers Without Mercy

There was movement on day three—more than Perth had offered in years—but England’s misfortune compounded its inadequacy. Merv Hughes, relentless in line and hostility, claimed four for 37—figures that understated his control. The milestone fell quietly: his 100th Test wicket. Moments later, Terry Alderman joined him, claiming his 100th Ashes victim.

Australia required just 120. They lost one wicket. The rest was routine.

The winning runs, ironically, came from a defensive prod by David Boon, who scampered for two. Even in retreat, Australia advanced faster than England ever could.

April Fool’s Day: When Authority Turned on Talent

Yet the tour’s most enduring moment occurred away from the pitch.

Something was fitting, almost cruelly symbolic- about David Gower and John Morris sharing an April 1 birthday. For it was during this tour that a harmless act of joy became a disciplinary spectacle, revealing England’s deeper malaise.

At Carrara Oval on the Gold Coast, England finally tasted victory. Morris scored a long-awaited hundred. Gower followed. Spirits lifted. And during lunch, watching biplanes drift lazily overhead, the two did something unthinkable in the England of that era: they chose enjoyment.

A short flight.

A pre-war Tiger Moth.

A buzz over the ground at 200 feet.

Cricket, briefly, became fun.

Discipline Without Discretion

What followed was not leadership but theatre.

Warned by tipped-off photographers, management reacted with institutional fury. Peter Lush, the tour manager, summoned inquiries, panels, and hearings. Gower, already England’s most gifted batsman, was treated not as a senior professional but as a delinquent schoolboy.

The punishment was maximal: £1,000 fines each. For Morris, earning £15,000 for the entire tour, it was punitive. For Gower, it was something worse—alienation.

No allowance was made for context. No distinction between senior and junior. No room for human judgment. This was England cricket at its most doctrinaire: one rule, no discretion, zero empathy.

Ironically, the same management had shown indulgence in Pakistan three years earlier amid far more serious diplomatic fallout.

The Price of Joy

Gower never truly recovered. His form collapsed in the final Tests. Relations with Graham Gooch fractured permanently. The incident became an unspoken line of exile. He played only three more Tests. His omission from the 1992–93 India tour provoked public protest—but authority prevailed.

Morris never played for England again.

Christopher Martin-Jenkins lamented a culture where enjoyment became a crime. David Frith, with sharper wit, noted that England players might henceforth fear even looking up from their crosswords.

Conclusion: A Tour Explained

This Ashes series was not lost solely through technique or tactics. It was lost through temperament, rigidity, and a misunderstanding of leadership.

Australia trusted strength.

England enforced obedience.

Australia absorbed pressure.

England punished personality.

In Perth, wickets fell in clusters. On the Gold Coast, careers quietly ended. And in the space between those moments lies the true story of the 1990–91 Ashes: not merely a cricket defeat, but the triumph of control over creativity—and the lasting damage that followed.

Thank You

Faisal Caesar

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Cricket Under Hegemony: How India Turned a Regional Game into a Power Instrument

In South Asia, power has never been exercised only through borders, armies, or treaties. It has flowed through trade routes, water sharing, media, and quietly but decisively through cricket. What we are witnessing today is not a sporting dispute but the consolidation of regional hierarchy, with India at the apex and the rest of South Asia forced into varying degrees of compliance.

Pakistan’s Defence Minister Khawaja Asif’s call for an alternative global cricket body was quickly dismissed by Indian commentators as political theatrics. Yet such calls emerge only when institutional pathways collapse. His accusation that the International Cricket Council has become “hostage to Indian political interests” reflects a deeper South Asian anxiety: that multilateral platforms no longer function as neutral spaces when India’s interests are involved.

From Regional Power to Regional Enforcer

India’s dominance of cricket mirrors its broader regional posture assertive, asymmetrical, and increasingly intolerant of dissent. The Board of Control for Cricket in India is no longer just a sporting body; it is a strategic actor projecting Indian power across South Asia.

Under the current ICC revenue model, India controls nearly 40% of global cricket income. This financial concentration replicates a familiar regional pattern: economic dependency used to discipline neighbours. Smaller South Asian nations, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka are structurally discouraged from challenging Indian preferences because the costs are existential.

In such an environment, “choice” becomes theoretical.

Pakistan: Too Big to Obey, Too Risky to Exclude

Pakistan occupies a unique and uncomfortable position in this hierarchy. Unlike smaller neighbours, it cannot be easily absorbed or ignored. Its boycott threat ahead of the T20 World Cup was not an act of withdrawal but a geopolitical signal, participation without consent.

This is precisely why Jay Shah, wearing both ICC authority and Indian institutional legacy, was pushed into reluctant diplomacy. The India–Pakistan fixture is not just a match; it is the single most valuable commodity in global cricket. Excluding Pakistan would fracture the commercial spine of the tournament.

The ICC’s response, dispatching Deputy Chair Imran Khwaja for quiet back-channel talks, exposed the truth: the institution cannot enforce neutrality when its biggest shareholder is also a regional hegemon.

Bangladesh and the Cost of Defiance

If Pakistan represents resistance, Bangladesh represents vulnerability.

The BCCI’s unilateral decision to release Mustafizur Rahman from the IPL, citing “political developments” - triggered a chain reaction that ended with Bangladesh refusing to tour India and being replaced by Scotland. This was not a scheduling issue; it was disciplined by substitution.

In South Asian terms, the message was unmistakable: defiance invites isolation. This is how hierarchy is maintained, not through overt bans, but through quiet rearrangements that punish without announcing punishment.

Normalising the Unthinkable

Former Indian cricketer Harbhajan Singh openly declared that India does not need Pakistan and can survive without it. Such statements matter not because they are policy, but because they reveal a mindset where exclusion is considered a legitimate option.

This is how dominance becomes normalised. First rhetorically. Then administratively. Finally, structurally.

South Asia has seen this pattern before, in trade negotiations, river water disputes, and regional diplomacy. Cricket is simply the latest arena.

The ICC as a Hollow Multilateral Shell

In theory, the ICC is a global institution. In practice, it resembles many South Asian multilateral frameworks where one power sets the rules while others adapt. When India controls revenue, scheduling, hosting rights, and broadcast windows, neutrality becomes impossible.

The result is a system where:

Smaller South Asian nations hesitate to speak.

Pakistan is managed as a “problem” rather than a stakeholder.

Decisions are framed as commercial inevitabilities rather than political choices.

This is not governance; it is a managed imbalance.

The Long-Term Cost for the Region

India’s approach may deliver short-term control, but it carries long-term risks. A region where sport mirrors political hierarchy will eventually fracture. Associate nations will stagnate. Bilateral distrust will harden. And cricket, once South Asia’s rare shared language, will become another theatre of rivalry and resentment.

You cannot build regional legitimacy on unilateral power.

If the ICC continues to function as an extension of Indian dominance rather than a counterbalance to it, South Asia will not see a golden age of cricket but a familiar story of centralised authority, silenced peripheries, and institutional decay.

Cricket does not need a new empire. It needs a genuinely plural order. Without it, the game will survive, but only as a reflection of power, not as a contest of equals.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar