Thursday, February 5, 2026

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 


Tuesday, February 3, 2026

When Cricket Stops Pretending to Be Neutral: India, Power, and the ICC’s Double Standards

Pakistan's decision to boycott its T20 World Cup match against India has been framed by much of the global media as an act of politicisation. That framing is misleading. What the boycott actually exposes is a far more uncomfortable truth: international cricket has long ceased to be neutral, and the International Cricket Council (ICC) now operates within an ecosystem structurally tilted in India’s favour.

The immediate trigger for Pakistan’s decision was security and diplomacy. Following deadly, coordinated attacks in Balochistan, attacks Pakistan’s interior minister publicly attributed to India, Islamabad chose not to proceed, with a high-profile sporting encounter against its rival. Whether or not one accepts Pakistan’s allegation, the principle involved is not novel. National governments have repeatedly exercised discretion over participation in ICC events based on security and political considerations.

What is novel is the selective outrage.

Bangladesh, Neutral Venues, and Selective Fairness

Tensions had already been building before Pakistan’s announcement. In January, Bangladesh requested that its World Cup matches be shifted away from India, citing security concerns. The ICC rejected the request outright and then went further, removing Bangladesh from the tournament altogether and replacing it with Scotland.

This decision was extraordinary. Historically, the ICC has accommodated such requests. India itself has refused to play in Pakistan for years, with its matches routinely shifted to neutral venues. England, Australia, and New Zealand have all declined tours or fixtures in the past without being expelled from tournaments or financially penalised.

Yet when Bangladesh sought identical consideration, it was denied. The principle of “neutral venues for security reasons,” long treated as legitimate when invoked by India, suddenly became unacceptable when invoked against India.

This asymmetry is the real scandal.

The ICC–BCCI Blur

The controversy has also reignited scrutiny over the increasingly blurred line between the ICC and the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI). The perception, fair or not, is that global cricket governance is now effectively anchored in New Delhi.

That perception matters because money matters.

An India–Pakistan World Cup match is not merely a fixture; it is the tournament’s financial engine. Advertising slots during such games sell for astronomical sums. Broadcasters price entire tournament valuations around this single matchup. When Pakistan withdrew, panic followed, not in cricketing circles, but in boardrooms.

This reaction reveals the structural dependency of the ICC on India-centric commercial logic. When India advances deep into tournaments, revenues soar. When India exits early, as in the 2007 World Cup, broadcasters panic and financial models collapse. That dependency has quietly reshaped governance priorities.

Fairness, under such conditions, becomes conditional.

Precedent Matters And Pakistan Is Within It

The charge that Pakistan is “politicising cricket” collapses under historical scrutiny.

In 1996, Australia refused to play matches in Sri Lanka. In 2003, England and New Zealand declined tours citing security concerns. Zimbabwe skipped the 2009 T20 World Cup. None faced revenue sanctions. West Indies continue to receive full ICC distributions despite repeated failures to qualify for global events.

These are not exceptions. They are precedents.

ICC revenue allocation has always been structural, not punitive. Participation has never been enforced through financial coercion. To suggest otherwise now—implicitly threatening Pakistan with “long-term consequences” marks a dangerous departure from established norms.

The India Exception

What truly undermines the moral argument against Pakistan is India’s own record. India has unilaterally suspended bilateral cricket with Pakistan for over a decade without consequence. Entire Future Tours Programme cycles have been disrupted. The ICC did not intervene. No fines were imposed. No lectures were delivered about “the global game.”

Political selectivity, in other words, has already been normalised, primarily when it serves Indian preferences.

Pakistan’s response, therefore, is not radical. It is reciprocal.

Power, Not Principle

It is also worth noting that Pakistan is no longer institutionally dependent on ICC revenue in the way it once was. The Pakistan Super League has created an independent commercial base, placing the PCB among a small group of boards with financial leverage outside ICC distributions.

That reality alters the power equation. The implicit assumption that Pakistan must comply to survive is outdated.

The Real Question

This episode forces cricket to confront an uncomfortable question:

Is the ICC a multilateral sporting body, or a revenue management arm of Indian cricket?

If neutral venues are acceptable for India but unacceptable for Bangladesh, that is not governance; it is a hierarchy.

If political discretion is legitimate for some but condemned for others, that is not neutrality; it is power.

Pakistan’s boycott does not politicise cricket.

It merely exposes who has been doing so all along.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar 

Tony Greig in the Caribbean: A Storm Foretold

Some cricketers captivate, and then some provoke. Tony Greig belonged to both categories, a towering figure whose presence on the field was as commanding as it was controversial. When he arrived in the Caribbean, he did so not merely as an English cricketer but as a character in a larger drama, a man whose competitive instincts would etch his name into cricket’s most fraught encounters.

His early exploits on the tour, particularly against Trinidad, were spectacular. With an elegant 70 and an unbeaten century, he seemed to charm the spectators with his blond-haired exuberance, his broad strokes, and his theatrical flair. But charisma alone was never enough for Greig; he thrived on confrontation. His overzealous appeal against local hero Deryck Murray soured the goodwill, and by the time Trinidad Guardian headlined, “Greig loses popularity at Oval,” the seeds of discord had already been sown. This was but a prelude to the storm that awaited at Queen’s Park Oval.

The Moment of Infamy

The first Test began inauspiciously for England. Put in to bat on a humid, overcast day, they crumbled to 30 for 4. Greig, ever the fighter, counterattacked with daring strokes, including two powerful swings over mid-wicket. Yet his defiance was short-lived; his 37 was the top score, but England managed only 131. The following day, the West Indies, anchored by Alvin Kallicharran’s imperious batting, built an imposing lead. As he piled on the runs, Greig found himself not just outplayed but also humiliated—his bowling dispatched for three successive boundaries.

The final over of the second day remains one of cricket’s most notorious moments. As Derek Underwood bowled, Bernard Julien dead-batted the deliveries, and Greig inched closer and closer at silly point, a predator waiting for the opportune moment. The last ball of the day was pushed wide of him, and in that instant, Greig acted on pure impulse, or so he later claimed. He seized the ball and, seeing Kallicharran walking towards the pavilion, hurled it at the stumps. The bails flew.

The appeal was made. The umpire hesitated but, bound by the laws of the game, raised his finger. Kallicharran, unbeaten on 142, stood momentarily stunned before storming off in fury. The stadium erupted.

The Aftermath: Between Laws and Spirit

What followed was a maelstrom of outrage. The English press condemned the act as unworthy of a sportsman, while the Caribbean media saw more than just an overzealous cricketer; they saw a South African-born player, a reminder of a past and present stained by apartheid. In the stands, tempers flared; had the match been in Jamaica or Guyana, violence might have been unavoidable. The England team, sensing the severity of the situation, convened in a desperate attempt to quell the rising storm. By nightfall, after protracted negotiations, the appeal was withdrawn. Kallicharran was reinstated, and the crisis was, for the moment, averted.

Greig, for his part, vacillated between regret and defiance. At first, he claimed it was instinctive, an act of reflex. Years later, his apologies were tempered by justification. “It was straightforward,” he insisted, “definitely not premeditated.” And yet, the shadow of doubt lingered. Even his captain, Mike Denness, would later admit, “To a certain extent, I think Tony had thought about it.”

A Series Marked by Tension

The tensions never truly dissipated. Kallicharran, reinstated, added a mere 16 to his tally before falling to Pat Pocock. Yet the match had already shifted from cricket to something more elemental—a battle of pride and perception. England, despite a valiant 174 from Dennis Amiss, collapsed under the pressure of Lance Gibbs and Garry Sobers’ spin. The West Indies claimed victory by seven wickets.

Off the field, relations between the teams were fraught. Pat Pocock recalled it as the most hostile atmosphere he had ever experienced. Every exchange with Kallicharran was personal, an attempt to provoke. But the taunting ended the moment Garry Sobers strode in. “It would have been like swearing in a church,” Pocock reflected. Some figures simply transcend the need for gamesmanship.

The Legacy of a Moment

Greig’s act at Queen’s Park Oval remains one of the most infamous incidents in cricket history. Some saw it as a cunning exploitation of the rules, others as a betrayal of the sport’s very ethos. Mick Jagger, ever the provocateur, congratulated him: “Good work, I don’t blame you.” But the majority, from the English press to the Caribbean faithful, viewed it differently. Henry Blofeld called it “indefensible,” while Christopher Martin-Jenkins lamented it as an ungracious act from a man who, off the field, could be utterly charming.

Yet Greig was never a cricketer for half-measures. His game, his personality, and his approach to competition were all uncompromising. His time in the Caribbean was not merely a chapter in his career but a reflection of who he was: a man who could enthral and alienate, dazzle and disrupt, often in the same breath.

Cricket, like all great sports, is played on the margins, between what is legal and what is right, between instinct and intention. Greig’s run-out of Kallicharran may have fallen within the former, but the jury of cricketing history has never quite absolved him of the latter.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar 

Sachin Tendulkar’s Perth Masterpiece: A Lone Warrior Amidst the Ruins

India arrived in Perth battered and bruised, trailing 0-3 in the five-match series. Facing an Australian pace quartet at the peak of its powers on a treacherous WACA wicket was a daunting prospect. The pitch, notorious for its trampoline bounce, promised little respite for a lineup already struggling against relentless hostility. The Australians had posted 333, a total that, in the given conditions, was neither intimidating nor insubstantial. India’s response soon unfolded into a familiar pattern of capitulation.

When Krishnamachari Srikkanth miscued a pull against Craig McDermott, sending the ball spiralling into David Boon’s waiting hands at short-leg, India’s scoreboard read 69 for 2. The impending collapse seemed inevitable. Yet, in this bleak moment, history was about to be written.

The Arrival of a Prodigy

The 18-year-old Sachin Tendulkar strode out at No. 4, a position he would make his own in the years to come. A diminutive figure in his cricket boots, he appeared almost incongruous amidst the towering presence of Australian fast bowlers. But any reservations about his ability to cope with the ferocity of Perth’s conditions were quickly dispelled.

The first boundary was a statement of intent—a deft steer between slips and gully. What followed was a masterclass in technique and temperament. He let the bouncers go when needed, cut fiercely when width was offered, and drove with pristine timing when the bowlers over-pitched. Against an unrelenting attack, Tendulkar batted with an authority that belied his years.

For a fleeting moment, with Sanjay Manjrekar providing able support, the scoreboard read a respectable 100 for 2. It was, however, a mere illusion of stability.

A Lone Warrior in a Losing Battle

Merv Hughes, burly and bustling, found his mark. He induced an edge from Manjrekar, lured into an on-drive, and Dean Jones flung himself horizontally to complete a stunning catch. Soon after, Dilip Vengsarkar perished in an eerily similar fashion, Mark Taylor completing the dismissal at slip.

Even as wickets crumbled around him, Tendulkar remained an immovable force. Hughes was square-cut with venom, McDermott was dispatched with a regal drive, and Paul Reiffel was subjected to an exhibition of precise stroke play. But the resistance was solitary.

At 130 for 5, Mohammad Azharuddin’s reckless pull before the end of play epitomized India’s batting frailties. The scoreboard read 135 for 5 at stumps, with Tendulkar on 31—undaunted, unshaken.

A Fight Against Fate

The next morning, nightwatchman Venkatapathy Raju perished without troubling the scorers. Tendulkar responded in kind, a fierce cut off Hughes bringing up his half-century. But even as youth displayed resilience, experience floundered.

Kapil Dev’s ill-judged hook landed safely in the hands of long leg, and two balls later, Manoj Prabhakar slashed straight to gully. At 159 for 8, India seemed on the brink of complete disintegration. The field closed in as Allan Border sought a swift end.

Yet, Tendulkar refused to succumb. He drove Whitney down the ground with elegance, guided Hughes to the fine-leg boundary, and square-drove Reiffel with pristine precision. Kiran More, dogged in defence, provided invaluable support. A partnership of 81 was stitched together, remarkable in both circumstance and quality.

At 96, a brace of runs brought Tendulkar closer. Then, in an act of poetic symmetry, McDermott over-pitched, and a sumptuous straight drive sealed his hundred. Helmet off, bat raised, the boy revealed his youth to the world. He had played one of the most luminous innings ever witnessed on that treacherous surface.

Having reached his hundred, Tendulkar sought quick runs, unfurling daring strokes over the slip cordon. But Whitney had the final say, extracting steep bounce from a good length, forcing a fend to second slip. He departed for 114 off 161 balls, his innings spanning 228 minutes and decorated with 16 boundaries. From 159 for 8, he had propelled India to 240, but his disappointment at dismissal was palpable. As the WACA crowd rose in admiration, he struck his bat against the ground, knowing that this was just the beginning of a journey.

The Verdict of the Match, The Verdict of History

India’s innings folded at 272, with More contributing a gritty 43. Australia, relentless in their pursuit of victory, piled on the runs and set India an insurmountable target. The final act was brutal—a surrender to Mike Whitney’s precision, sealing a 300-run defeat. Australia clinched the series 4-0.

Yet, amidst the ruins, India had unearthed its future. Tendulkar’s innings was more than a hundred; it was an announcement. Against the best attack in the world, on the hardest pitch imaginable, a teenager had showcased a brand of batting that would define an era. This was not just the arrival of a prodigy; it was the birth of a legend.

Thank You

Faisal Caesar