Sharjah Cricket Stadium

Sharjah

Hi guys my name is Faisal I am big fan of cricket and today I am taking about Sharjah cricket ground

This cricket stadium holds a Guinness  World Record that shocked even me.
Over 300 international matches hosted in  the middle of a desert – more than Lord’s,
more than the MCG, more than anywhere on Earth.But what nobody tells you about  Sharjah Cricket Stadium is that
it almost destroyed international  cricket forever. And the man who
built it? He did it for the most  unexpected reason you’ll ever hear.
What I’m about to tell you is the untold story  of how a businessman’s impossible dream became both cricket’s greatest stage and its biggest  nightmare. You’ll discover why India banned their team from playing here, what really  happened during cricket’s darkest scandal, and the shocking truth about how  this venue came back from the dead.
But first, let me tell you about the land  this stadium was built on – because what
was here before will completely  change how you see this place…
The land where Sharjah Cricket  Stadium stands today wasn’t always
a cricket paradise. It was an oil refinery.  Workers had to install special isolation
layers before they could even think about  laying a pitch. They literally transformed
industrial wasteland into what would  become cricket’s most famous desert oasis.But here’s what’s even crazier – the man who  did this wasn’t even a cricket official…
Abdul Rahman Bukhatir wasn’t your typical cricket  administrator. This Emirati businessman had one
thing that changed everything – he’d attended  school in Karachi, where cricket fever infected  his soul. By 1981, he noticed something the  cricket boards completely missed. The UAE was filling up with South Asian expat workers  who were desperate for just a taste of home.

And that’s when he made a decision  that would change cricket forever…
Bukhatir faced a massive problem. The ICC and  national cricket boards showed zero interest in his desert dream. So he did something that  had never been done before – he created the Cricketers Benefit Fund Scheme in 1981. He offered  players massive purses: fifty thousand dollars for
current players, fifteen thousand for retired  legends. In the 1980s, this was serious money.But would anyone actually show up to  play cricket in the middle of a desert?
The inaugural exhibition match in  1981 featured Gavaskar’s XI versus
Miandad’s XI. The response was electric.  Fans packed the rudimentary stadium,
paying premium prices to watch cricket in  the desert. Bukhatir had cracked the code.

1982 first international

The stadium was officially established  in 1982, hosting its first international
matches during the Asia Cup in April 1984. But those early days were nothing like
what you see today – and the stories  from back then are absolutely wild…
Hakim Jariwala, the stadium’s scorer, remembers  the manual scoreboard that required ten boys to
operate. These operators worked in blazing sun,  climbing wooden ladders, finding it virtually impossible to grab food, drinks, or even use  washrooms during breaks. During one Bangladesh  match, player name plates weren’t ready,  leaving fans staring at a blank scoreboard.
But Bukhatir wasn’t done building. What  he did next would make Sharjah the most
technologically advanced stadium in the region… The stadium expanded at breakneck speed. By 2002,
it had electronic scoreboards and floodlights,  with capacity reaching 17,000. The renovations
never stopped. In 2011, workers replaced  8,000 discolored seats and 500 benches,
changed worn-out canopies, upgraded  fencing, and added new screens. The
stadium’s capacity reached 24,000 for PSL 2019. The most significant upgrades were revolutionary.
The pitch was completely relaid to accommodate  six surfaces – four for broadcasting, two for
practice. A new practice facility was built  with four turf and four artificial wickets.
Player amenities included a state-of-the-art  gymnasium, indoor swimming pool, steam room,
and sauna area. Eleven new VIP suites and  an improved grand dining area were added.But all of this was just setting the stage  for what would become cricket’s greatest
theater. What happened next created moments  that still give cricket fans goosebumps…
Sharjah became the neutral ground where India  and Pakistan could unleash their rivalry  without political interference. The matches  were legendary, creating moments that still
send shivers down cricket fans’ spines. But one match in particular changed
everything – and it involved a teenager  who would become cricket’s greatest star…
Sachin Tendulkar’s back-to-back centuries  against Australia in 1998 – the Desert
Storm innings that saved India’s tournament  hopes. But here’s what most people don’t know:
the conditions were so extreme that Matthew  Hayden later described playing in 45-degree heat against Shoaib Akhtar’s fury as one of  the most brutal experiences of his career. But Sachin wasn’t the only one  creating magic in the desert…
Javed Miandad’s last-ball six against India  in 1986 – a finish so dramatic it still sparks
arguments in cricket forums today. But what  happened in 1997 might be even more incredible.
Pakistan collapsed to 51 for 7 against  Zimbabwe. Commentators fell silent.
Fans assumed the match was over. But  what happened next defied all logic…
Wicket-keeper Moin Khan played the innings  of his life, scoring 61 off 97 balls while Saqlain Mushtaq blocked everything for 81  deliveries to score just 20 runs. Pakistan
crawled to 151. Their bowlers then destroyed  Zimbabwe for 119. It was pure cricket theater.
But Sharjah delivered more than  just comeback stories. The records
set here were absolutely insane… In 2006, Sri Lanka and Netherlands
combined for 443 runs in a single ODI. Pakistan  scored 364 for 7 against New Zealand in 2014,
while India was dismissed for just 54 runs  against Sri Lanka in 2000. These extremes showcased the venue’s unpredictable nature. Afghanistan found a home here from 2010 to
2016. Mohammed Shahzad smashed an unbeaten 214,  leading Afghanistan to the ninth-highest victory
chase in first-class history against Canada. But success attracts attention. And the
attention Sharjah was getting was about to  destroy everything Bukhatir had built…
By the mid-1990s, whispers began circulating  about Sharjah’s matches. Betting syndicates had
discovered cricket’s newest goldmine.  The tournament format was perfect for
manipulation – short series, massive television  audiences, and matches that could swing on
individual performances. But the first real red  flag was something nobody expected… The Indian press started asking uncomfortable
questions about the presence of underworld figures  in VIP boxes. The most shocking revelation? The
notorious don Dawood Ibrahim was regularly spotted  at matches. Sharjah became widely perceived as the
hub and epicenter of match-fixing activities. But the man who maintained the pitches for 47
years swore something that would shock you… Mohammad Jameel, Sharjah’s chief curator for an
astonishing 47 years, maintained his pitches were  always honest. He swore no one ever asked him to
prepare surfaces favoring specific teams.  But the pitch was almost irrelevant when
the real game was happening off the field. And then in 2000, everything exploded…
The breaking point came with the  Hansie Cronje scandal. South Africa’s
captain admitted to accepting money for  match-fixing, and investigations pointed
straight toward Sharjah. The venue that had  given cricket some of its greatest moments suddenly became synonymous with corruption. India’s reaction was swift and brutal… India’s cricket board banned the national  team from playing at Sharjah, citing the
presence of undesirable elements. The BCCI’s  withdrawal was devastating. Pakistan and other
nations followed suit. Between 2003 and 2010,  Sharjah hosted almost no major international  cricket. The golden goose was cooked. But here’s the twist nobody saw coming…
Lord Condon, who led the ICC’s Anti-Corruption  Unit, investigated thoroughly. His findings were
shocking: while corruption existed, the  focus on Sharjah was misplaced. Sharjah
had actually contacted the ICC asking  for help installing security systems.
The corruption was global, not venue-specific. But public perception didn’t care about nuance.
Sharjah became the scapegoat for cricket’s sins… The irony was devastating. Bukhati whose genuine love for cricket had created  this desert oasis, watched his life’s work crumble. The stadium that had given millions  of fans their greatest cricket memories became
a symbol of everything wrong with the sport. For nearly a decade, Sharjah stood as cricket’s cautionary tale. But what happened next was  the most unlikely comeback in sports history..Cricket offers second chances, and Sharjah’s  redemption began quietly around 2010 when the
venue started hosting Afghanistan’s home matches.  The nation’s cricket team needed a neutral ground,
and Sharjah provided the perfect solution. But the real breakthrough came when cricket’s biggest tournament made a shocking decision… The stadium’s revival accelerated when the
Indian Premier League chose Sharjah as a venue  in 2014, then again during the pandemic years of
2020 and 2021. Cricket’s biggest stars returned  to the desert under strict bio-bubble protocols.
But even in its comeback, Sharjah’s  demons occasionally resurface…
During the 2022 Asia Cup match between Afghanistan  and Pakistan, passionate cricket turned ugly.
Following Pakistan’s last-over victory,  angry Afghan fans vandalized the stadium,hurling chairs at Pakistani supporters.  Videos of chairs flying through stands
sent shockwaves through the cricket world. But there’s something about this place that  keeps drawing cricket back… Despite ongoing criticism about
batsman-friendly pitches and infrastructure  issues, Sharjah continues attracting large
crowds. The compact size ensures fans stay close  to action, maintaining the intimate atmosphere
that makes Sharjah special. And the future? It’s  brighter than you might think… In April 2023, the West Stand was officially
renamed the Sachin Tendulkar Stand, commemorating  his 50th birthday and the 25th anniversary of
his Desert Storm innings. Plans exist for a  cricket museum within the stadium complex. Sharjah is scheduled to host West Indies  versus Nepal T20Is in September 2025 and  will feature in the DP World ILT20  Season 4 concluding in January 2026.
The story of Sharjah Cricket Stadium is  cricket’s story in microcosm. Passionate vision,  incredible success, devastating scandal,  and hard-fought redemption. From Abdul
Rahman Bukhatir’s impossible dream to  Sachin’s Desert Storm, from the darkest
days of match-fixing to the bright lights of  modern T20 cricket, Sharjah has seen it all. The venue that gave us cricket’s greatest  moments also forced the sport to confront  its greatest demons. Whether you consider  it cricket’s greatest stage or its most  controversial venue, one thing is undeniable –  Sharjah Cricket Stadium changed cricket forever.

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