Waugh says game is on the verge of crisis
Sydney: Any disruption to cricket in India in the wake of the terror attacks in Mumbai will have widespread implications for the international game, according to former Australia captain Steve Waugh.
"The danger to cricket is that the game needs India and any long-term interruption will have major ramifications," Waugh wrote in an Australian newspaper column, yesterday.
"At present we have Pakistan cricket crippled by the threat of terrorism, Sri Lanka regularly blighted by a civil war and Zimbabwe mismanaged by corrupt administrators and government.
"The game is on the verge of a crisis and clear, concise thinking will be required from the various cricketing bodies to make sure that the correct decisions are made."
The International Cricket Council has 10 full test members - four of those are in South Asia. Another, Zimbabwe, is currently suspended from test-match cricket due to political turmoil.
Waugh said that when he was Australia captain, he often defied security briefing advice and took strolls down the streets "to see the real India and capture it through my lens to give me a sense of freedom and reality.
However, Waugh was confident the coordinated terror attacks that claimed at least 195 lives in India's financial hub this week would cause only a brief respite in cricket in India.
Bouncing back
"My gut feeling is that cricket will see an interruption in the short term but business will resume as normal shortly afterwards," Waugh said.
"The game of cricket in India is a way of life and a symbol of hope and, as such, it has the ability to restore faith and instill confidence."
Waugh said the abandonment of a limited-overs series by England and postponement of the Twenty20 Champions League, featuring the top provincial teams from five countries, were short-term reactions.
"Perversely, after such a major incident India will probably be a much safer place to be than previously, for security will reach unprecedented levels at airports, five-star hotels and places where people congregate," Waugh said.