Before and after Lahore 2009: Pakistan's cricket in numbers

A look at the decade before the team were forced into exile in the UAE, and the one since

Osman Samiuddin03-Mar-2019Ten years. Ten long years, when you drift and start to log all that has gone down in this time: the PSL, the Misbah-ul-Haq era, Mohammad Amir banished, Mohammad Amir returned, not one but two ICC titles. Ten not-so-long years also, when you pause and consider, as two instances, that Shoaib Malik and Mohammad Hafeez are still here and probably going to the World Cup too.Hands up if you thought, sometime around 10am Pakistan time on March 3, 2009, that Pakistan cricket could – would – soon be dead? So much had already happened – and Lord’s was still to come – and now this? Younis Khan said it: kill cricket, create terrorists. Forget the consequence and causality of that equation – he did think that the attacks and ensuing exile could kill cricket in Pakistan. Likely he wasn’t alone.It’s not dead, that’s for sure. Has it been changed in some irretrievable way? Of course: how could it not be? But perhaps a decade is still not long enough to really know in what way – consider for one that the PCB’s annual reports show the board making money than before. Infrastructure has taken a hit. The quality of domestic cricket has been ever more diluted. ‘A’ tours have disappeared. Let’s be real, though. Any or all of this could have happened without the game being in exile.