Hyderabad:"This is a sport which brings Afghans together," a concerned Lalchand Rajput, who coached Afghanistan from 2016 to 2017, said when asked about the future of cricket in a Taliban-controlled region.
At the same time, Rajput hopes for "cricket to continue as it brings a lot of happiness to the entire nation".
From practicing at the refugee camps in Pakistan to donning white Test cricket shirts in 2017, the team has taken inspirational strides in the last decade with players like Rashid Khan, Mohammad Nabi and Mujeeb Ur Rahman becoming global superstars and household names in their country.
"The people of Afghanistan are passionate about cricket. This brings a lot of happiness to them. It's a sport that has brought the country in the world map as they have world class bowlers in Rashid khan, Nabi and Mujeeb. It brings the whole country a lot of happiness," Rajput told Etv Bharat over the telephone.
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Cricket is fairly new to Afghanistan. To start off, they were introduced to the sport back in the early 19th century by the British but it couldn't gain much ground like it did in its neighbouring nations -- India and Pakistan. The game got the push when Afghans, fleeing from the war against Soviets in the 1980s, held the bat and ball for the first time at Pakistan refugee camps. Rashid, one of the best in T20 cricket, and Nabi grew up in these camps.
But what gives hope to the cricketing fraternity is that the game came into being in Afghanistan under Taliban's rule. The Afghanistan Cricket Federation, now known as the Afghanistan Cricket Board, was established under their regime in 1995. But it wasn't until 2001 that the national team was established with its cricket board acquiring membership of the International Cricket Council (ICC).
It is a predicament that sometimes even local Afghans and the promoters of the game find themselves in as Taliban had banned other sports like Football and Athletics, which according to them were un-Islamic. Cricket somehow survived as it was seen as a gentleman's game. It also helped that many Talibanis had got the feel of the sport during their time spent at Pakistani camps.
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