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Archive for February 23rd, 2008

Nepal’s guiding light

Posted by Prabin the सोभित on Saturday, February 23, 2008

This post is originally written by George Binoy, Cricinfo staff 

When Roy Dias, the former Sri Lankan batsman, first came to coach in Nepal through the Asian Cricket Council, he thought he had made a mistake. On his second day in charge, he watched a 40-overs a side practice match between the Under-19 boys; the game was over so quickly that they had enough time to complete another game. His first thought was that these boys couldn’t play. That was back in 2001. Cut to 2008, and Dias is still around for his fourth Under-19 World Cup with Nepal.

In 2001, the Nepal board gave him a two-year contract to keep him on for longer. Dias has been the coach of both the senior and the junior side since, and his tenure has seen Nepal produce remarkable results. They were Plate runners-up at the U-19 World Cup in 2002, beating Pakistan and Bangladesh before losing in the final to Zimbabwe. They won the Asian Cricket Council (ACC) Youth Asia Cup in Karachi and qualified for the U-19 World Cup in 2004, and memorably beat South Africa and New Zealand to lift the Plate Championship in Sri Lanka in 2006.

“When we started, I felt the standard was not there but I realised the challenge was to make the players believe that they were good enough,” Dias told Cricinfo. “I could see improvement with every tour especially at the age-group levels.”

Dias felt the sides he had coached in previous U-19 World Cups were better than the present one. “The best side was in 2006 and also 2002. The batting is thin in this team but I won’t blame them because, to improve, you have to play a lot of cricket and there’s a lack of that in Nepal.”

The weather in Nepal is hostile for cricket. It’s bitterly cold in the winter and it rains heavily between June and September, making practice very limited. Dias has taken many teams to Sri Lanka to prepare before a tournament. In the build-up to this U-19 World Cup, they were invited by Bangladesh for three one-dayers. One was washed out and Nepal were defeated in the other two.

While there is a need to develop infrastructure, Dias said that there is no dearth in interest in cricket in Nepal and believed it had overtaken football as Nepal’s most popular sport. “We just need to have regular tournaments to bring the talent out,” Dias said. “Most of the boys are more interested in their studies because that is their career. Cricket won’t take them far but you do see young kids playing cricket.”

Cricket is played all over Nepal but the main centre is the capital Katmandu. It has the only really good turf facility in the country. “Most of the other regions don’t have grounds,” Dias said. “They have to come to Kathmandu to play with decent facilities. Other grounds [in other places] are being developed but that’s only in preparation for a tournament. They are not permanent facilities.”

There isn’t a structured domestic or club tournament in the country either. Nepal is geographically divided into six regions - Biratnagar, Birgunj, Kathmandu, Bhairahawa, Nepalgunj and Baitadi. The regions select their side from their districts and they come to the capital to play in a tournament. It is from that tournament, which involves roughly 70 cricketers, that Dias picks his national and junior teams. He says he used to travel to the regions to look for talent but it’s become hard to do that because of the political situation in the country.

However, one massive problem that Nepal must tackle if it is to develop further - and countries like Malaysia face similar issues - is keeping the young talent within Nepal cricket after they finish with the junior levels. Dias says he’s lost several promising players because they have left Nepal to secure their futures.

“Kanishka Chaugai, the captain in the 2006 World Cup, was a brilliant batsman but he got a scholarship to go to the US to study,” Dias said. “You can’t stop these kids because what can cricket get them. I miss him especially in the senior team. I’ve lost about four or five players like that from 2002. One is B Chalise, a utility player, who played in 2002. Monick Shrestha also went to the US. If they had stayed back we could have built a good first team.”

Dias also fears Paras Khadka, the current U-19 captain who’s playing his third World Cup, will also be lost in a few months time.

With the interest growing at the junior levels, Dias said the most important thing was the players’ finances. Most of the players in the senior team don’t have regular jobs and it was vital to give them a monthly salary so that they could support their families.

“The companies - hotels, airlines and banks - should recruit at least one person. If you don’t have a job then you look elsewhere. That’s why I don’t blame any cricketer for going abroad. For them cricket is secondary because they can’t make a living out of it.”

Several players aren’t from very well-to-do families and the cricket board has to provide them with boots. High quality cricket equipment isn’t manufactured locally either, so bats and pads have to be imported and often it’s beyond the players’ means. The Sri Lankan board has been of tremendous assistance.

“When Thilanga Sumathipala was the chairman [of Sri Lanka cricket], he asked me what I wanted,” Dias said. “I said ‘can you start an academy or indoor nets?’ He said that was out of the question but asked if I wanted equipment? So we got cricket gear worth Rs 250,000 [approx US$2300].”

Dias has been involved with Nepal cricket for so long that he knows his young players. The selectors, too, pay heed to his advice. He provided anecdote from his greatest moment as Nepal’s coach.

Basanta Regmi, the Man-of-the-Match in Nepal’s historic win over New Zealand in 2006, had suffered a head injury in a motorcycle accident and the doctors had advised him not to play. He missed the national tournament in 2006 and therefore the selectors did not pick him in the squad for the U-19 World Cup in Sri Lanka. He had been part of the squad for the 2004 tournament and on Dias’ insistence, he was later included for Sri Lanka as well. Regmi had scored 75 runs up until the final but against New Zealand, with Nepal struggling at 75 for 6, he scored a crucial 66 from No. 8, and paved the platform for a memorable win.

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‘Let’s hope for the best’

Posted by Prabin the सोभित on Saturday, February 23, 2008

       Nepal’s players leave the field after completing a tight three-wicket win

This post is originally written by George Binoy, Cricinfo staff 

Nepal finished third in Group C after a thrilling three-run victory against Namibia at the University Sains Malaysia. It was a finish meant for packed stands yet there were only a few Nepal supporters cheering on every dot ball towards the end of the Namibian run-chase. Overs were not an issue but the pressure had been mounting because the Namibian batsmen were simply not able to get Nepal’s spinners away. They were chasing a target of 165 and the equation had boiled down to six runs to win with two wickets in hand.

Morne Engelbrecht, the No. 9 batsman, swept the spinner in the air towards midwicket but the ball fell safe. The batsmen ran one but wanted another, the second run was fraught with risk. The throw at the bowler’s end was good and No. 10 batsman Elandre Oosthuizen was run out. The last pair added two more but with three runs to get, Engelbrecht was bowled by Gyanendra Malla. Nepal’s players converged on each other and celebrated in a heap before getting up to shake hands with the Namibians. As the jubilant Nepal players walked off, it was hard not to feel for their young opposition.

And right through it all, Paras Khadka, the Nepal captain, was egging his team-mates on. After each dot ball you could hear him clapping hard and shouting encouragements in Nepalese. He’s been in such situations before, most memorably during the 2006 Under-19 World Cup Plate Championship semi-finals against South Africa, when Paras bowled the last over with ten runs to defend.

“The batsmen didn’t get enough runs today,” Paras said. “But we needed two wickets and there were ten runs left. We knew if we could get one wicket the pressure would be on them rather than us.”

Paras is 20 years old [Associates countries can field players a year older than Full Members] and a veteran by U-19 standards; this is his third World Cup appearance. “I qualified for this World Cup by one-and-a-half or two months [within the age limit],” he says. “I just made the cut off date.”

What has been the most memorable moment of his career so far? “Winning the Plate Championship [in 2006],” he says without a moment’s hesitation.

“The reception was huge [when they returned to Nepal]. The boys were really felicitated well. There were lots of people and we were made to go around the city in a vehicle. The people were really proud of us. The sport has given me a lot of recognition and fame.”

Roy Dias, the Nepal coach, said Paras was an extremely bright student and feared he would leave Nepal to pursue higher studies. Paras was understandably hesitant while answering the question. “I would like to play cricket but you have to study because we’re not so professional in our country. We have to think of our careers. I don’t know, let’s hope for
the best.”

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