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COLUMN-Cricket-High on excitement, low on atmosphere

By Kunal Pradhan

RAWALPINDI, Pakistan, April 14 - Virender Sehwag
cracked an Indian record 309 and newcomer Umar Gul produced an
unlikely golden spell of five for 31.

Inzamam-ul-Haq struck a masterly century and Sachin
Tendulkar was left stranded on 194 by a surprising declaration.

India's historic test tour of Pakistan, tied 1-1 with the
ongoing decider looking likely to produce a result, has not been
short on excitement.

But the stands have still been deserted.

The reason? All of the above.

India's first full series in Pakistan in over 14 years,
accompanied by strong political overtones, has produced such
superlative cricket that the general consensus in Pakistan is
that it is being played to a script.

There is no tangible evidence to prove the charge, nor is
there any indication that it might be true.

But it is the major reason for Pakistanis, who normally wear
their hearts on their sleeves during encounters with India,
staying away from the grounds in the test series.

The "fixing' allegations, which players from both sides have
taken exception to, were first made by former captain Rashid
Latif in a television interview during India's 3-2 one-day
series win in five thrilling encounters.

Though the Pakistan board condemned his comment and denied
the charge, it seems to have struck a chord with the public.

In Multan, where India won the first test following Sehwag's
heroics, a senior bureaucrat openly highlighted the impact of
the charge on the low turnout at the stadium.

"One big reason for people not coming for the match is
because there is a feeling among the people that the matches are
fixed," Mohammad Ejaz Chaudhary, Multan's district coordination
officer, told reporters.

"Not for money, but in order to build goodwill among the
countries."

SENTIMENT REPEATED

People repeated the sentiment across the country, right from
Karachi carpet-seller Shakeel Ahmed to Lahore businessman Junaid
Mian to Rawalpindi bookseller Abdul Shakil.

India and Pakistan have fought three wars against each other
since 1947 and were close to a fourth conflict two years ago.

Relations have thawed over the last year and the current
tour is seen as the biggest symbol of the stuttering peace
process between the nuclear-armed neighbours.

"The two countries have already decided the result of the
matches to make each other happy. India won the one-day series
and I'll be surprised if Pakistan don't win the tests," said
Multan taxi driver Abdul Karim.

The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) says a bigger reason for
the crowds staying away is that the more popular one-dayers were
played before the tests.

"When India insisted on playing the one-day internationals
before the test series, we were always apprehensive it would
reduce interest in the tests," the board's chief executive
Rameez Raja said.

After packed stadiums for the one-day series, only a few
thousand turned up for the Multan test and there were sometimes
only a few hundred at Lahore.

At Rawalpindi, the scenes were more encouraging but the
stands on the first two days were, at best, only a third full.

India won the first test by an innings and 52 runs but
Pakistan hit back with an emphatic nine-wicket victory in the
second and the attitude on the field, however, has been of "no
quarter given and none asked for".

"If I wasn't playing the matches, I wouldn't have missed
them for anything in the world," said one Indian player.

"The tests have been intense, charged and have produced some
great cricket. If you don't come to the ground, it's simply your
loss."

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