All set for Champions Trophy start after India-Pakistan row, boycott calls
KARACHI: The Champions Trophy begins Wednesday after a turbulent buildup that saw the tournament split between Pakistan and Dubai, and with England facing calls to boycott their match against Afghanistan.
The event, regarded as second only to the World Cup in the one-day game, runs until March 9 and is the first global cricket tournament hosted by Pakistan in nearly three decades.
India’s matches will however be played in the UAE after the sport’s financial superpower refused to visit their neighbor over long-standing political tensions.
A month-long impasse ended in December when the International Cricket Council said that India would play their games in Dubai.
It raises the prospect of the final of the eight-nation showpiece taking place there, rather than in Pakistan, if India get that far — a good chance given they are favorites to lift the trophy.
Arch-rivals India and Pakistan, who only face off in international competitions because of the politics, clash in Dubai on Feb. 23 in the group phase.
England play Afghanistan three days later in Lahore in a match that has been met with a backlash in some quarters in Britain.
More than 160 British politicians called for a boycott in response to the Taliban government’s ban on women in sport.
England Cricket Board chairman Richard Thompson vowed the match would go ahead, saying a “coordinated international response” by the cricket community would achieve more than unilateral action.
The Champions Trophy will be Pakistan’s first ICC event since co-hosting the 1996 World Cup with India and Sri Lanka.
Karachi and Rawalpindi are the other Pakistani cities that will stage games.
Pakistan became a no-go area for foreign teams after the visiting Sri Lankan squad were