SAM MORSHEAD AT TAUNTON: There was still substantial partisan support for Sarfraz's side. But gone were the taunts and leers, the bitter swipes in the name of banter, the head-splitting sound of sandpaper being scratched between palms
Sarfraz Ahmed called it.
“I don’t think Pakistani people will be doing it like that,” he said, 24 hours before his team’s game against Australia, when asked whether Steve Smith and David Warner would be subjected to jeers and jibes once again at Taunton.
“Pakistan people love cricket and they love to support it, and they love the players.”
He was right. And the atmosphere was all the better for it.
The treatment of Smith and Warner has veered from ‘pantomime villain’ to ‘suspected witch’ over the course of the first fortnight of this World Cup, their respective returns to the international arena greeted with cacophonous boos and red-faced uproar wherever they have been.
David Warner made a century for Australia against Pakistan
At Bristol, the noise was borderline aggressive, the sort of reception you might expect of the accused arriving at court on charges of a heinous crime.
At The Oval, Virat Kohli - hardly a drinking buddy of either player - felt compelled to step in and ask the Indian supporters to tone down their tantrums.
Here, though, nothing.
Not from the Pakistanis who pitched up in the West Country in their droves, and not from the cricket-mad locals making the most of the chance to actually see some cricket during the English winter’s curious summer staycation.
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It was still loud, very loud, from well before the first ball. And there was still substantial partisan support for Sarfraz’s side. But gone were the taunts and leers, the bitter swipes in the name of banter, the head-splitting sound of sandpaper being scratched between palms.
The gobby chorus of “cheat”, which echoed around Bristol on Australia’s first outing of the tournament with the rhythm and class of a cat coughing up a furball, was gone too.
“Pakistan Zindabad. Pakistan Zindabad. Pakistan Zindabad.”
Sarfraz obviously knows his people. Now it’s time for supporters of other nations to take their lead.
It is more than 14 months since Smith and Warner created, and then covered up, a plan to alter the condition of a cricket ball in Cape Town. It was a callous act, but not isolated in the sport’s history.
Pakistan fans at Taunton
They have since served substantial sentences - much greater than those demanded by the game’s code of conduct. They have been penitent, and they have reintegregrated themselves within the Australia setup under new leadership without the slightest hint of commotion.
For as long as they play professional cricket, Smith and Warner will forever have the spectre of that Newlands scandal peering over their shoulders, nibbling away at their subconscious.
They do not need us doing that job for them. They, like us, are human, and fallible. And they, like us, will be affected by constant abuse.
Yes, they cheated that day in March 2018, but can any cricketer - from the village green upwards - honestly claim not to have sought some form of dubious advantage over the course of their career?
Do we believe in second chances and rehabilitation?
Does the sport not need to move on, celebrate its own spectacle, and live in the moment once again?
That was the case in Taunton on Wednesday; three-quarters of the ground wearing Pakistan green and channeling their voices behind their own players, rather than heckling themselves hoarse dragging up ghosts.
And it was wonderful.
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Posted by Jaws on 14/06/2019 at 22:56
Brendon Johnson you understand urdu?? Seems to me a lame Indian using western name to sound authentic
Posted by Peter Marshall on 14/06/2019 at 21:25
Well said, Sam. You're right, it's in the past, the players involved have "served their time" (which, as you say, were massively greater than the ICC's penalty for the offence). But it's a sad reflection on modern society that doubtless the hate will continue.
Posted by Murray Hedgcock on 14/06/2019 at 12:53
Thanks Sam - and Kohli and the Pakistani fans - for a reminder of "the spirit of cricket". Smith and Warner cheated - as an Aussie I went on record as saying Warner should not play for Australia again, but authority has decreed otherwise. So it is time to move on, to offer the chance of rehabilitation - and for heaven's sake, to forget those endless, boring, un-funny sandpaper jibes.
Posted by Rao Amjad Ali on 13/06/2019 at 12:48
They lost the match but their moral victory should be celebrated and is worthy of emulation by all cricket playing nations.
Posted by Brendan Johnson on 13/06/2019 at 07:58
A good article but not true. I agree with the point made, that fans should move on, and they will, but the abuse directed (at Warner mainly) was still there but a) was drowned in the general noise the fans were making and b) in Urdu.