Is there a winner in Pakistan withdrawing its boycott of the India match?
By K.R. Nayar
From Arun Jaitley Stadium
Delhi. Soon after Pakistan
announced that they have withdrawn the boycott of their match with India, the
question doing the rounds is whether there is a winner following this huge
drama. The answer is a resounding no. The constant flip-flop inconvenienced
thousands of fans and journalists who had to cancel flights and even scrap
hotel reservations. In short, the indecisiveness only created chaos.

India-Pakistan fans will together enjoy watching the contest again.
Knowing that Pakistan has, over the years,
been an unpredictable team, and that their decision can change any moment,
this reporter did not cancel any flight or hotel bookings. For a
reporter, whether a match is played or abandoned, there is always a story— and
hence, presence matters.
Only loss and nothing to gain
A boycott would have achieved nothing
but huge financial losses for everyone. Pakistan officials now admit they
withdrew the boycott after several nations flagged the severe financial impact
and the inevitable dip in overall tournament revenue. What remains baffling is
why the inconvenience to fans, journalists, cricket boards, and even the host
nation’s tourism, was not considered before the boycott announcement was made.
It seems like it was more an emotional decision, rather than a strategic
one. Had the boycott remained, Pakistan risked earning a dangerous label
— an unreliable participant in global events. In international sport, such a
reputation can be more damaging than a defeat on the field.
Money speaks in modern cricket
In modern cricket, money speaks, and it
is a fact that all nations will be united when it comes to revenue. It is also
a known fact that an India-Pakistan match is the financial engine of any
ICC tournament. Broadcasters, sponsors, and even neutral boards will only
support a decision that brings them money. There is a famous saying that
‘ideology bends when the balance sheet looms large’. A boycott may have
offered temporary emotional satisfaction, but it would have choked funds vital
for the development of Pakistan cricket and even hurt players from associate
nations who rely on such tournaments for survival.
Lesson from this boycott call
Any form of protest can be made in
boardrooms and not by stopping cricketers from playing. Politically motivated
decisions such as withdrawing from a match will only benefit politicians, and
hardly benefits cricketers nor cricket as a whole.
A lesson to be learned from this
incident is participation in an event is the real exhibition of power, and
winning matches elevates its credibility. Skipping matches, however, results
only in the scoreboard not moving, and lost opportunities.
National
anthems of Namibia and Netherlands
Away from the noise of the
India–Pakistan boycott saga, Delhi’s Jaitley Stadium offered a refreshing
reminder of why cricket matters. The Namibia–Netherlands clash brimmed with
enthusiasm, heart, and unfiltered joy. For Namibia, it was not just their first
match of the tournament but also their maiden international appearance on
Indian soil. Their national anthem echoed with pride: “Namibia, land of the
brave. Freedom fight we have won. Glory to their bravery, whose blood waters
our freedom.”
The Netherlands’ anthem, dating back to
1572 and regarded as the oldest national anthem in the world, followed. For
many in the Delhi crowd, it was a moment of quiet discovery amid a tournament
dominated by boycott headlines and related hype.
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