-Ramphal Kataria
Athletes are not diplomats, and cricket grounds are not war rooms
Sport was invented to civilise rivalry. When it is instead conscripted into ideological theatre, it ceases to be sport and becomes spectacle—loud, hollow, and morally vacant.
At a moment when India seeks global leadership in sport and actively presses for cricket’s inclusion in the Olympic Games, its conduct on the cricket field tells a troublingly different story. Handshakes are avoided, trophies refused, courtesies withdrawn—not because rules demand it, but because political signalling now intrudes where sporting ethics once prevailed.
This is not strength. It is short-sightedness.
As Nelson Mandela famously said:
“Sport has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire. It has the power to unite people in a way that little else does.”
The Universal Grammar of Sport
The Olympic movement distilled the philosophy of sport into a single proposition: excellence is indivisible from solidarity. The updated Olympic motto—“Faster, Higher, Stronger – Together”—adopted by the International Olympic Committee in 2021, did not dilute competition; it clarified its moral boundary. Achievement, it insists, cannot come at the cost of shared humanity.
Cricket internalised this ethic long before Olympic committees codified it. The Preamble – The Spirit of Cricket, enshrined under the International Cricket Council, explicitly demands respect for opponents, umpires, and the game itself—above the letter of the law.
To play hard is mandatory.
To play hateful is forbidden.
Players Are Human Beings, Not Ideological Props
Athletes are not designed for permanent emotional hostility. Expecting players to perform elite sport while suppressing basic human decency is not patriotism; it is psychological coercion.
Sport allows aggression within boundaries, not perpetual animus. To demand visible disdain—refusal of handshakes, symbolic snubs, performative coldness—is to violate the very objective of play.
That is why moments of instinctive humanity resonate so deeply. When Rohit Sharma and Wasim Akram were seen embracing at the same venue where India had just won, that image eclipsed every statistic. It revealed what spectators intuitively know: people crave reconciliation, not ritualised hostility.
Equally telling was the casual public interaction between Jay Shah, ICC chairman, and Shahid Afridi during the Asia Cup—an exchange no reasonable observer found offensive. Selective outrage, then, is not moral; it is political.
India–Pakistan Cricket: Rivalry Without Enmity
Few rivalries are as intense as India–Pakistan cricket. Yet, paradoxically, few rivalries have produced such deep personal camaraderie among players.
From Sunil Gavaskar, Kapil Dev, and Sachin Tendulkar to Imran Khan, Javed Miandad, Wasim Akram, and Waqar Younis, generations of cricketers have demonstrated that on-field rivalry need not translate into off-field hatred.
The standing ovation for Pakistan after their win in Chennai, the viral image of Virat Kohli tying a Pakistani player’s shoelaces, and the enduring respect between former opponents are not aberrations—they are cricket’s natural order.
As C. L. R. James wrote in Beyond a Boundary:
“What do they know of cricket who only cricket know?”
The Appeal for Imran Khan: Sportsmanship Beyond Borders
The most compelling recent defence of sporting ethics did not come from governments, but from cricketers themselves.
Fourteen former international captains—among them Sunil Gavaskar and Kapil Dev—signed a joint appeal urging the Government of Pakistan to ensure humane medical treatment and dignified detention for former Pakistan captain and prime minister Imran Khan.
Their letter was unambiguous:
“Imran Khan’s contributions to the game are universally admired… Regardless of political perspectives, he holds the honour of having been democratically elected to the highest office in his country. We respectfully urge that he be treated with dignity and basic human consideration.”
This was not politics. It was moral continuity—the extension of cricket’s spirit beyond the boundary rope. To malign such an appeal as “anti-national” is to redefine nationalism as hostility to compassion.
As Albert Camus, himself a goalkeeper, once observed:
“Everything I know most surely about morality and obligations, I owe to football.”
Diplomacy Once Understood Sport—Why Not Now?
India’s own political history offers a corrective.
Atal Bihari Vajpayee, during the Lahore peace initiative, understood cricket as people-to-people diplomacy, not ideological combat. His message to Indian cricketers before the 2004 Pakistan tour—“Khel hi nahi, dil bhi jeetiye”—remains unmatched in moral clarity.
Likewise, the 2005 visit of Pervez Musharraf to watch an India–Pakistan ODI was not frivolity; it was an attempt to thaw history through shared spectatorship.
Contrast this with today’s climate, where even neutral professional decisions—such as the mishandling of issue of Bangladeshi fast bowler Mustafizur Rahman’s IPL engagement—are allowed to spiral into diplomatic embarrassment, contributing to Bangladesh’s boycott of a global event. Sport suffers, fans lose, and politics gains nothing.
The Current Drift: When Pseudo-Nationalism Enters the Field
What we are witnessing today is a rupture.
Refusals of customary handshakes, visible avoidance of basic sporting courtesies, and public snubs—such as declining a trophy from Mohsin Naqvi in his capacity as ACC chairman—are not acts of strength. They are performative hostility, choreographed for domestic political consumption.
This behaviour is particularly alarming because it appears directionless yet deliberate—suggesting political pressure without institutional ownership. The Board of Control for Cricket in India, despite being the world’s most powerful cricket body, seems unwilling or unable to assert the game’s ethical autonomy.
As George Orwell warned:
“Serious sport has nothing to do with fair play. It is bound up with hatred, jealousy, boastfulness, and disregard of all rules.”
What we are seeing now is precisely this Orwellian degeneration.
Beyond Cricket: The Pattern Repeats
The same reflexive hostility surfaced when Olympic champion Neeraj Chopra was falsely accused of inviting Pakistan’s Olympic gold medallist Arshad Nadeem to the Neeraj Chopra Classic 2025 in Bengaluru. The manufactured outrage forced a clarification that should never have been necessary.
The most dignified response came not from institutions, but from Chopra’s mother, who remarked with disarming simplicity:
“He is like my son. I am happy.”
That, too, is sport speaking—softly but powerfully.
Tennis had already shown the way. The partnership between Rohan Bopanna and Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi, celebrated globally as the “Indo-Pak Express”, reached a US Open final and became a symbol of peaceful rivalry without surrender of national pride.
The Central Contradiction
India cannot credibly argue for cricket’s Olympic inclusion while eroding Olympic values at home. The Olympics demand neutrality of play, respect for opponents, and insulation of athletes from political vendetta.
A nation confident in its stature does not fear a handshake.
A civilisation secure in itself does not need to choreograph resentment.
Conclusion: Save Sport from the State
Sport is one of humanity’s last remaining moral commons. To convert it into an arena of pseudo-nationalism is to poison a shared inheritance.
Cricket, in particular, was never meant to extend conflict—it was meant to contain it, ritualise it, and finally dissolve it in mutual respect.
If the spirit of the game is lost, no victory will matter.
And no nation—however powerful—will escape the ridicule of having mistaken hostility for honour.
Selected Footnotes & Sources
1. International Olympic Committee, Olympic Motto Update, 2021.
2. International Cricket Council, Preamble – The Spirit of Cricket.
3. Open letter by former international captains on Imran Khan’s health, reported by The Age (Australia), 2024.
4. Nelson Mandela, Speech at the Laureus World Sports Awards, 2000.
5. George Orwell, The Sporting Spirit, Tribune, 1945.
6. C. L. R. James, Beyond a Boundary, 1963.
7. Records of India–Pakistan cricket diplomacy, 1999–2005.
8. ATP Tour archives: Bopanna–Qureshi partnership, US Open 2010.
1.