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Cricket in
Malaysia
One baby step at a time
Kuala Lumpur—Developing cricket in a country, which isn’t very good at
it, is a tremendous undertaking. There are innumerable problems and yet
all of them are interconnected because one gives rise to another.
Take cricket in Malaysia for instance, the challenges form a vicious
circle: the average Malay has almost no knowledge about the game and
because the awareness levels are low, the player base is tiny. A small
player pool has an adverse effect on the quality of the national team
and the lack of positive results leads to poor media coverage and
limited sponsorship. And because of cricket’s inconspicuousness and low
levels of funding, fewer people are inclined to take it up as a
profession. And so we’re back where we started: at a miniscule player
base. To put it crisply, cricket in Malaysia suffers from everything a
country like India doesn’t.
To solve such a complex issue, you need to start somewhere and Malaysia
has begun to introduce cricket widely at the school level. Suresh
Navaratnam, who was the Malaysian captain between 1998 and 2006,
recalled his school days, when it used to be a struggle to put a team
together. “A lot of locals don’t play. The majority of the people are
Malays, Indians are a small percentage of the population and the Chinese
don’t play [either]. We used to pick our friends and sometimes we used
to get hockey players to play cricket,” Navaratnam told Cricinfo. “That
was the only way because it was so difficult to get 16 guys for a team.
It’s better now because we get about 50-100 guys in a school playing
cricket. The Malays are now starting to play.”
A step in the right direction has been made with cricket being included
in four sports schools around the country. These schools have facilities
and were started to target students who were inclined towards sports.
The infrastructure in these schools, which offer other sports as well,
is funded by the government and most of Malaysia’s young cricket talent
emerges from these schools - 18 out of the initial 21-member pool for
the Under-19 World Cup - according to coach Sahidul Alam. However, Alam,
who is from Bangladesh, said there was still a lot of untapped talent.
“Some of the project schools are very good that look for only for very
good students,” Alam said. “So if there’s a cricketer who is not good at
studies it will be hard for him to get into the school though he has
talent. Somewhere or the other the boys miss out and a lot of talent is
lost. So in these schools they have about 25-30 players from different
age groups U-13, U-15 and U-17.
The number of sports schools, although an effort is being made to
increase them, is few and introducing cricket into other schools has
several problems. It’s an expensive game to play - one needs the
equipment, turf pitches and in Malaysia, where it rains more often than
not, indoor facilities become vital. And because of the lack of
facilities, fewer children are inclined to play. A lot of the children,
after their age-group days are over, branch off into higher studies and
take up professions because there isn’t much of a future as a cricketer
because the domestic competition structure is poor and career
opportunities are limited
“Sometimes at the U-17 level, there are seven U-17 boys playing, few who
are 15 and even some 13-year olds because they cannot fill a team with
the same age group,” Alam said. The deputy president of the Malaysian
Cricket Association (MCA), P Krishnaswamy, who is also the chairman of
the organising committee of the U-19 World Cup says that the MCA was
tackling this issue by sponsoring the infrastructure. “The MCA per se is
helping with the equipment, turf wickets, artificial wickets and all the
rest,” Krishnaswamy said. “We’re trying to have a coach at every level
of our junior cricket competition. For the schools we have development
managers going to all the schools, getting more schools to play the
game.”
Alam also feels that there is a need for a coach education program in
Malaysia to train the gradually increasing player base at the school
level. Such a program would also induce former cricketers to train as
coaches and continue to build talent.
So has the player base increased in the last few years? “It’ll take time
but our base of cricketers has increased a lot in the last three years,”
says Krishnaswamy. “If we have 10000 now in five years we want to make
it 30000 people involved with cricket. That’s a big base for us.
“Our junior development program has been good now and we have developed
in the last three or four years. We have a good U-19 side. They’ll
perform well. It’s a very good fielding side, the batting is a bit weak
but we don’t have that kind of exposure. But our U-17 side is very good.
In Asia we’ll be in the top four in the U-13, U-15 and U-17s easily.”
However, much of the development work at the school level in Malaysia is
being undone after the kids leave school. A lot of the children, after
their age-group days are over, branch off into higher studies and take
up professions because there isn’t much of a future as a cricketer
because the domestic competition structure is poor and career
opportunities are limited.
“We have to make people continue with cricket after the age of 18, when
they go to university and start thinking of their career,” Navaratnam
says. “The government needs to support in terms of scholarships and job
opportunities. More private sector companies need to play cricket so
when players go to their company they continue to play. —Agencies |