New York:In a scene reminiscent of classic American sports culture, families are heading to the “game” with palpable excitement. Fathers taking their sons and daughters, while moms enjoy a well-deserved break. But, for the fervent chants of “India Indiaa,” the Tricolour proudly displayed on shoulders, and a wealth of cricket nostalgia, one might think the crowds were heading to a local baseball game.
This is America, a country largely unfamiliar with cricket. However, thanks to the growing Indian diaspora from Jersey, Maryland, New York and other nearby states, there's an undeniable buzz across the sprawling, meticulously manicured lawns of Eisenhower Park. This park, home to the picturesque, but collapsible cricket stadium, also boasts a golf course, fitness trails, walking areas, museums and safety centers, with its aquatic centre proudly positioned at the edge of the greens.
Mention the Nassau County Cricket Stadium, however, and locals draw a blank. Taxi drivers are equally clueless and diners along the park haven’t heard of it either. Even Uber struggles to locate it. High school kids, engrossed in their summer football season, inquire with puzzled expressions, “When you say cricket in India, do you mean baseball?” Josanne’s 13-year-old daughter, Jerena, asks this question, despite her Trinidadian roots in a cricket-loving Caribbean nation.
The American sports culture has primarily confined her to the Super Bowl, baseball, basketball and tennis. With the ICC’s ambitious expansion plans to introduce the fast-paced T20 format to the world’s largest sports market, there’s a stirring of interest on the horizon. The T20 version fits neatly into America’s preference for short-duration sports.
Curious questions abound. Did cricket evolve from baseball? One must clarify that it’s the other way around; cricket was introduced to the Americans by British plantation owners in the 1800s, a genteel pastime played in whites as a respite from laborious work. Are they attending the game? “Not really, unless they’re from the Indian diaspora, able to afford $2000 hospitality tickets, and maintain their passion for cricket via satellite TV.”