
Timesofindia.com in Dubai: The competition in India-Pakistan is a place where legends are produced and the heart is broken. In addition to clear skills, it is a temperament, nerves and the ability to entertain the defining moments that decide the winner. Every duel on the pitch is a battle in battle. Captains, Suryakumar Yadav and Salman Ali Agha have already indicated that their teams will play with fire. Former Pakistani crickets have already sharpened their swords. Shoaib Akhtar at PTV Sports said, “Emotions run really high, we meet with India after the war.” In Dubai, however, there is no such hostility in the air. Mohammad Shehzad, who comes from a multan, has been working as a cricket coach at the Academy of ICC Cricket Academy over the last decade. It is proud to be called “Multan Ka Sultan” and his students are adored. “Yahaan India-Pakistan Bhai Bhai Hai (there is no hostility among the Indians and Pakistani). We live here as one community. Most of my students at the Academy are Indians.
SHUBMAN GILL is hit in networks before the decisive match against Pakistan in Asia Cup
He says that in the past, India-Pakistani matches were not ideal for the weak heart, but now he believes that this match could prove to be a unilateral affair. “We are no longer tigers. I think India is too strong. I’m afraid it will be unilateral,” he says. Shehzad is also responsible for the organization of fast -mounted team training at the ICC Academy, and most of the fast pitchers they get come from Pakistan. One of them, Sufiyan, from the Khyber then Haptunkhwa, was also for dinner and politely disagrees with Shehzad. “Babar Ko Drop Kar Kahut Badi Galti Kar Di Hai (by falling Babar, made a big mistake),” he jokes. Razzaq, another fast pitch from Bahawalpur, rang: “Let’s finish dinner, we have to capture the shuttle for Sharjah.” But he disagrees with his boyfriend: “Without Babar we are better.” Shehzad, smiling and offers Biryani to this reporter, reveals the fight of Pakistan’s expat. “It’s hard for them. They both work as a guard in the Dubai center in the morning. In the evening they come here to train. The cricket is in their veins. There are many like those who played cricket at the U-19 level in Pakistan and then had to stop or move abroad to make money,” he says. India clearly goes to the match as popular. Can the team turn the tables against the powerful Indians, the well-known team Salman Ali Agha-cuddly, known as Kricte’s permanent “tigers in the corner”? On paper it looks like a one -way traffic, but it can never take the Pakistani cricket team easy. The current group of crickets was convicted, rejected and ridiculed. Selectors, coaches and captains have recently changed as a game of musical chairs. Saim Ayub, one of the brightest stars on the current side of Pakistan, takes an Indian match like any other game. “It will be a big match for people. We don’t see it as a team. The young man also pointed out that this team is not bothering the past. “I think this is the message of our team leadership in the last 3-4 months. The most important thing is to learn from the past and move forward. We do not want to remember the past and do not want to focus too much on the future,” he said. “The memories don’t care. This tournament matters most. “We do not only exist on the Pakistan-India match. We look forward to winning the tournament,” he added. Saim is fearless, a mystery that the size of the game cannot stop talking about. But the burning question remains: can it convert raw talent into a timeless size? And what bigger scene scripting to the fate than under the blinded lights against arched rivals? Prepare, on Sunday we get all the answers.