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India Vs Pakistan in the final of ICC Champions Trophy 2017

Champions Trophy, Cricket match, India, Pakistan, London, Sports NewsPhoto of India and Pakistan fans cheering there team.

London: It is fantasy cricket time after all, India versus Pakistan in the final of a Champions Trophy. It’s amazing that in the 42 years starting with the first World Cup in 1975 that ICC has organised world events for 50-over cricket, this dream finale has always eluded them.

India are favourites to retain the Champions Trophy on Sunday but they would probably have preferred to face different opponents than arch-rivals Pakistan in what is sure to be a highly-charged final.

The neighbouring countries have moved on from years of political conflicts but emotions will run high as millions of supporters around the world watch the first major cricket final between the teams since the 2007 Twenty20 World Cup.

No wonder, everyone wants to be there for the mother of all battles, now with a trophy at stake. It’s not just the average fan who’s pulling all stops to be at the Oval before 10.30 am on Sunday morning. It’s learnt that BCCI officials spent most of Friday and Saturday haggling with ICC organisers for extra tickets with a number of luminaries from the political and Bollywood world expected to turn up.

In a coincidence, Virat Kohli and Sarfraz Ahmed will not be the only captains leading their respective sides out for an India-Pakistan sporting contest, or “war” as fans would prefer calling it, in London on Sunday. Some 9.8 miles north of the Oval, the two countries will be facing each other in the Hockey World League (HWL) semifinal at the Lee Valley Hockey and Tennis centre, around the time the second innings of the final reaches the halfway mark. And contrastingly, while fans are ready to pay exorbitant prices to catch a piece of the cricket, those with tickets for the hockey are trying to dispose them off.

 

“I bought mine for just 10 pounds and I’m ready to give it to anyone even if he pays me 5 quid. All I want is a ticket for the Champions Trophy final,” said an Indian fan, who turned up outside The Oval while the team went through their routine on the eve of the match.

The Indian captain said despite the enormity of the occasion, and the fanfare around it, the two teams tried to play it down, Kohli in particular. “As the tournament goes on, at some point we will reach the final stage. We will still take it as another match. We haven’t spoken about this game in any different way. We have practised the same way from the first day we came here. There’s no over-excitement.”

 

Mickey Arthur, the Pakistan coach, sounded more realistic in how he expected his team to react to the moment they would have dreamt about all their lives. “We finished our preparation today with a good chat just before we came to the ground. The guys are under no illusion as to what the expectation is on them, but they are excited,” he said. And that expectation from the thousands who will turn up at the Oval and the millions back home and around the world, as the ICC prepares for its cricketing El Dorado, will be the same  win at all costs.

sonalika arya
the authorsonalika arya