Take me out to the ball game
For the past month, Kathmandu’s notorious traffic has been lighter. Colleges have reported abnormal absenteeism. Cheers have resounded frequently in inner city neighbourhoods.
‘Tis the season to be jolly, and watch cricket. Not just any cricket, but the Nepal Premier League that started on 30 November and ends on Saturday at the Tribhuvan University greens, after 32 matches between eight teams.
The tournament has given a dramatic boost to the game, a nationwide fever matched only by how the popularity of cricket spread rapidly in Nepal with the advent of satellite dishes in the 1990s. Children are hooked at a young age, including those batting near improvised wickets outside the stadium in Kirtipur last week.
Nepalis across the country and abroad watched the broadcasts on TV, while fans of the Chitwan Rhinos, Karnali Yaks, and Lumbini Lions came to Kathmandu to see their team play.
“This is only the second match I’ve been to, but I watch a livestream on YouTube a lot. It’s high quality,” says a Janakpur fan from Mahottari, studying in Kathmandu. “Only a few here have traveled to watch, mostly it is people from that region living in the Valley.”
Despite the steep ticket prices, many splurged to witness a historic moment in Nepali sports. Others were watching not just the game. One spectator told this reporter: “We’re here to have fun, watch cricket, look at girls, although all the cute ones are in the VIP seats.”
The quality of the game and the broadcast has set the NPL apart from any other sporting event in Nepal’s history. The production has been up to the level of international T-20 league games, with multiple angles of the action, drone shots of the crowd, and NBA-style dance cams.
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Cricket came of age in Nepal this past week. Cricket legend Brian Lara attending was a big deal, adding to the legitimacy of the NPL and making it more likely to be organised again.
In future NPLs, decisions have to be made about venues. The Kirtipur ground needs an upgrade, better crowd control and attention to safety. And although playing all matches in one venue made things simpler logistically, in future they will have to be spread out across the country closer to the locations of the franchises and fans. After all, that is one of the main goals of the NPL: to discover and nurture Nepali cricket talent, and give them a chance to demonstrate their skills and break into the national team. “Right now the national team of Nepal is at a decent level, but what it lacks is strength in its bench,” Unmukt Chand, former U-19 World Cup winning captain of India, who played for the Lumbini Lions in the NPL, told Nepali Times. “A good bench raises the level of the whole team.” In the first two out of three playoffs on Wednesday, the Karnali Yaks beat the Chitwan Rhinos by 21 runs in the first of the two games. Three of the Yaks’ foreign players delivered with the bat. Indian Jaykishan Kolsawala and Australian William Bosisto had similar knocks of 53 and 52 each off 39 balls. West Indian Chadwick Walton had a rapid 46 off 23, helping the Yaks post 175, which the Rhinos failed to chase. This was an eliminator between the teams who had finished third and fourth in the group stages. The Rhinos were out, and the Yaks will face Janakpur Bolts who lost the 1 vs 2 qualifier against the Sudurpaschim Royals. That game ended in a strolling victory for the Royals, who bowled first and held the Bolts to only 139. They started strong in the powerplay and anchored the chase around Binod Bhandari’s 58, never letting the required run rate too high.
In the finals the Royals will be firm favourites, with their six wins out of seven in the group stages and dominance in the qualifier. They will also be better rested than the Bolts or the Yaks, who were facing off as Nepali Times went to Press on Thursday.
The Royals also have the psychological edge. If Janakpur gets through, well they have already beaten them before so recently. And if Karnali does, the Yaks will have had to win three tough matches in a row to lift the trophy.
The crowds at TU Ground have been jam packed and raucous in the best sense. With on-site tickets sold out on Wednesday, many looked disheartened outside the box office. Others found ways to get in anyway, brandishing dubious ID cards at the guards. Others burst through the cordons, chased half-heartedly by riot police who were soon watching the game themselves. The police patrol the perimeter with megaphones calling people to get down from trees. ‘DO NOT CLIMB’, ‘HIGH RISK OF CASUALTIES’ signs are posted on tree trunks. In the standard section, where everybody is standing, the crowd is mixed between supporters of both the playing teams but everyone gets along just fine. Unlike the continuous action at a football game, cricket is stop-start with frequent pauses, allowing a lot of time for crowd engagement.
A mix of English, Nepali and songs local to the teams blare in the stadium. There are cheerleaders, dance circles, KFC, and Red Bull. Sometimes a broadcast drone flies over and people try to knock it out of the sky.
Nepal’s cricket carnival is over, and Nepalis can’t wait for the next one.