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Pitch Politics

by Blitz India Media
February 13, 2026
in Opinion
Pitch Politics
Blitz Bureau

NEW DELHI: CRICKET once prided itself on being a gentleman’s game, governed as much by restraint and fairness as by written laws. That ideal has steadily eroded as the sport has transformed into a permanent spectacle, driven by commerce, confrontation, and increasingly, political calculation. The recent controversy surrounding Pakistan’s stance on playing India, its abrupt U-turn, and the International Cricket Council’s muddled handling of the episode has exposed how deeply politics now intrudes into cricket’s governance – and how uneasily the game carries that burden.

Pakistan’s initial refusal to play India at neutral venues, followed by a swift reversal under pressure, created confusion and embarrassment. The ICC, instead of acting as a firm and neutral arbiter, appeared reactive and uncertain, struggling to reconcile competing pressures from member boards, broadcasters, and governments. The result was prolonged uncertainty for players and fans alike, and a dent to the credibility of cricket’s apex body. When rules appear elastic and decisions contingent on geopolitical moods, institutional authority weakens.

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India’s response has been notably restrained. New Delhi neither escalated the issue nor publicly moralised. Instead, it adopted a wait-and-watch posture, allowing Pakistan’s indecision to speak for itself. This was less indifference than calculation. By avoiding public confrontation, India positioned itself as the more predictable actor, adhering to stated policies while letting the contradictions in Pakistan’s stance play out. In effect, India chose not to rescue the situation, but neither did it exploit it theatrically.

The ICC, instead of acting as a firm and neutral arbiter, appeared reactive and uncertain

The approach reflects a broader shift in India’s sporting diplomacy. Rather than framing every dispute as a moral battle, India has increasingly relied on institutional process and market weight. Its silence reinforced the message that participation is governed by clarity and security, not improvisation. Whether this restraint should be read as principled detachment or strategic patience is open to interpretation. Cricketing greats have long warned against politicisation. Sir Garfield Sobers once remarked that cricket “owes its soul to fairness, not force.” Sunil Gavaskar has cautioned that when administrators blur the line between sport and politics, “players are left carrying burdens they were never meant to bear.” Rahul Dravid has argued that uncertainty corrodes trust faster than defeat.

The episode also reflects the costs of cricket’s transformation into a year-round spectacle. Broadcast imperatives and attention economics leave little room for disruption. Yet when politics intervenes without clear rules, the spectacle falters. Schedules wobble, narratives fracture, and fans are left unsure whether matches will be played, postponed, or repurposed as bargaining chips. Aggression and brinkmanship, once marginal, are now packaged as intensity. Administrators defend disorder as passion, but as former England captain Mike Brearley observed, cricket’s greatness lay in self-control. That restraint is now scarce, particularly in governance. The ICC’s inability to communicate decisively has reinforced the perception that the authority has shifted away from institutions towards power blocs. This is not an argument for nostalgia.

Cricket has always reflected its times, and professionalism has widened its reach. But when politics enters the game, and regulators appear hesitant rather than principled, reputational damage becomes inevitable. India’s stance, cautious and calibrated, has avoided short-term noise but raises a larger question: can strategic silence coexist with moral leadership? For cricket to recover credibility, the ICC must restore clarity and consistency. Otherwise, the gentleman’s game will continue its slide into a permanent spectacle – lucrative, politicised, and increasingly untrusted.

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