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Home Games & Sports

Why Doesn’t India Play Cricket with Pakistan? Unpacking the Controversy

Moslem Rohit by Moslem Rohit
February 23, 2025
in Games & Sports
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Why Doesn’t India Play Cricket with Pakistan? Unpacking the Controversy

Why Doesn’t India Play Cricket with Pakistan? Unpacking the Controversy

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Rivalry Explained: “Why Doesn’t India Play Cricket with Pakistan? Unpacking the Controversy”

The India-Pakistan cricket rivalry is a saga of breathtaking highs and diplomatic lows, a clash that transcends sport to reflect the complex relationship between two nations. As fans gear up for tomorrow’s ICC Champions Trophy 2025 showdown in Dubai—the latest chapter in this storied duel—many are asking: Why doesn’t India play cricket with Pakistan more often? Beyond the boundary, political tensions, canceled bilateral series, and rare ICC tournament meetings like tomorrow’s define this controversy. With every encounter now a global event, here’s why this match is a rare gem—and why it’s a must-watch for fans on both sides.

The Political Divide: A Game Beyond Cricket

At its core, the absence of regular India-Pakistan cricket stems from geopolitics. Since their independence in 1947, India and Pakistan have fought three wars and faced countless border disputes, most notably over Kashmir. Cricket, a unifying passion for millions, hasn’t been immune. Bilateral series—once a staple with 59 Tests, 135 ODIs, and now 13 T20Is—hit a wall after the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks, blamed on Pakistan-based militants. India suspended cricketing ties, and the last bilateral series, a short limited-overs tour by Pakistan in 2012-13, remains a distant memory. Diplomatic freezes, like the 2019 Pulwama attack, further entrenched the divide, with India’s government and the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) refusing to engage unless relations normalize.

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Cancellations and Close Calls: A History of Disruption

The numbers tell the tale: from 1952 to 2007, India and Pakistan played 14 Test series and countless ODIs, often in neutral venues like Sharjah. Post-2008, bilateral cricket evaporated. Pakistan’s 2009 tour to India was scrapped after Mumbai, and India pulled out of a planned 2014 series amid rising tensions. The 2012-13 series—two T20Is and three ODIs in India—was a brief thaw, but even that faced protests. The BCCI cites security concerns and government clearance, while the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has pleaded for cricket to be kept separate from politics, even offering to host India in neutral venues like the UAE. Yet, every attempt—2015 talks for a UAE series, a 2020 revival pitch—has fizzled out, leaving fans yearning.

ICC Tournaments: The Last Bastion of Rivalry

With bilateral ties on ice, ICC events like the Champions Trophy, ODI World Cup, and T20 World Cup have become the only stage for India vs. Pakistan. Tomorrow’s match in Dubai exemplifies this: a Group A clash that wouldn’t happen without the ICC’s neutral framework. Since 2008, all 27 India-Pakistan meetings (across formats) have been in ICC tournaments or Asia Cup events, often in places like England, Australia, or the UAE. These games—think India’s 8-0 World Cup streak or Pakistan’s 2017 Champions Trophy final upset—carry extra weight because they’re so rare. The PCB pushes for inclusion in multi-nation events, but India’s reluctance to tour Pakistan (e.g., the 2023 Asia Cup shifted to Sri Lanka) keeps even those clashes contentious.

Why Tomorrow Matters: A Rare Spectacle

The Champions Trophy 2025 clash isn’t just another game—it’s a fleeting chance to witness a rivalry frozen by politics. India’s last trip to Pakistan was the 2008 Asia Cup; Pakistan’s last bilateral visit to India was 2012-13. With no Test since 2007 and no bilateral ODIs in over a decade, tomorrow’s match is a lifeline for fans. The Dubai pitch, the stakes (India’s momentum vs. Pakistan’s desperation), and stars like Virat Kohli and Babar Azam make it unmissable. It’s not just cricket; it’s a cultural reunion, a proxy for peace or rivalry, watched by over a billion people. The rarity amplifies the hype—making this a bucket-list moment.

The Controversy: Should Cricket Return?

The debate rages on. Supporters of bilateral resumption argue cricket could bridge divides—imagine a Test in Lahore or an ODI in Mumbai healing old wounds. Detractors, including many in India’s establishment, say sports can’t ignore terror threats or political reality. The BCCI’s financial clout gives it leverage, while the PCB’s calls for ICC intervention fall flat. Fans, though, remain split: some crave regular showdowns; others see ICC clashes as enough. Tomorrow’s game proves the appetite exists—but the will to restart doesn’t.

Your Voice Matters!

Should India and Pakistan revive bilateral cricket, or are ICC tournaments the perfect compromise? Share your take in the comments or on our social media—tell us if you’d cheer for a series resumption or if tomorrow’s rarity is thrill enough. This rivalry’s future hangs in the balance, but for now, Dubai 2025 is where history unfolds. Don’t miss it!


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