HomeNewsOpinionCan India-Pakistan cricket matches really overcome bilateral political problems?

Can India-Pakistan cricket matches really overcome bilateral political problems?

For cricket administrators, India-Pakistan matches are a commercial necessity. That’s on account of their complex history of political engagement which cannot be disentangled from cricket, making for one of sport’s greatest rivalries. A Netflix docu-series explores the many-layered rivalry without eliciting a consensus on the larger question of can sport overcome deep-rooted distrust

February 10, 2025 / 08:35 IST
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India vs Pakistan
While cricket triggered a wave of co-operation and friendship between the countries, the 2008 terror attacks in Mumbai brought an abrupt end to the bonhomie.

The venom created through political differences has to be lowered and that can only be done through cricket, says Ramiz Raja, a former cricketer, commentator and former chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB).

The problem between India and Pakistan cannot be solved by cricket matches, counters Sunil Gavaskar, India’s former opening batsman and now commentator.

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The difference in opinion highlights the complex relationship between the two nations, even when seen through the lens of cricket—not politically—though the two can oftentimes not be separated. It’s the political garnish that makes this (cricket) rivalry world class, adds Raja in a new three-part docu-series, The Greatest Sporting Rivalry – India vs Pakistan, which dropped on Netflix on 7th February.

The series, directed by Chandradev Bhagat and Stewart Sugg, captures some aspects of this rivalry, but condenses a long, complex relationship into just 110 minutes.