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Meet Japan cricket star Shizuka Miyaji

“It was not easy when I was a girl. I wanted to join the local baseball club, but they didn't allow me to join because I was a girl,” says Japan’s Shizuka Miyaji’s about her journey into cricket. Her sports journey can be parallel to any Pakistani woman who is trying to make her mark in sports, especially when it comes to mainstream sports. At the end of the day, the common thread is about women taking the space in sports and ultimately paving their way into making the world a more equitable place, one match at a time. The 40-year-old left-arm slow orthodox bowler and batter simply believes that it was a simple ambition of being better and having fun that attracted her to sports, and even though she grew up playing baseball, Shizuka is a part of the first privately held franchise T20 event in the history now. She was capped in 2006 for the Japanese cricket team. She is a part of the incredible roster of women from more than 30 countries who will be competing in the FairBreak Invitational Tournament starting May 1 in Dubai. The aim of the tournament and the FairBreak movement is to help explore equal opportunities for women through cricket. Here is her insight into a fast growing cricket community globally and in Japan, along with her experience of playing against Pakistan. Tribune: How did you start playing cricket? Shizuka: I started playing cricket when I was a university student at the age of 20. It looked like a fun sport which was similar to baseball. Tribune: As a girl, was it easy for you to play sports? Shizuka: It was not easy when I was a girl. I wanted to join the local baseball club, but they didn't allow me to join because I was a girl. Tribune: Did your parents support you in choosing to be an athlete? Shizuka: Yes, they supported me to play my sport of choice. Tribune: In which city did you grow up? Shizuka: Nishinomiya-city which is known as the home of high school baseball in Japan. It is also one of the cities severely hit by the Hanshin-Awaji Great Earthquake in 1995. Tribune: Was becoming a full-time athlete easy? Shizuka: No, because it is difficult to get sponsors for many women athletes. Tribune: Do you have any other job besides playing cricket? Shizuka: Yes. I work in the Tea Room at the Sano International Cricket Ground. Tribune: Is cricket a popular sport in Japan? Shizuka: Cricket is getting bigger especially in cities like Sano-citywhere I live. It will still take more time to become a national sport, but I am excited about the future of cricket in Japan. Tribune: What was your experience of playing with Pakistan and do you have any favourite players from Pakistan? Shizuka: We played Pakistan in 2009 in Shanghai, in 2010 at the Asian Games, and also in 2012 in Sano, Japan. They were always a very good team and a huge challenge for us. We learned a lot through the experiences. My favourite player from Pakistan is Sana Mir because she is a good captain and is also a very good all-rounder. Tribune: How do you think cricket helps in empowering women and how did it empower you? Shizuka: Sport has given me energy, confidence, and courage. I think sport can do the same to anyone regardless of their gender or where they live. Tribune: Where do you see the future of Japan women’s team in women’s cricket internationally? Shizuka: I hope we will play in World Cups in the future. Tribune: Are balancing a sports career and also being a mother, wife or fulfilling any of the roles as a woman easy? Shizuka: It is definitely easier if the people around you support you. Tribune: Your most memorable match? Shizuka: Winning the East Asia-Pacific tournament in 2010 was the most memorable as it gave us our first chance to play at a global qualifier in 2011 in Bangladesh. Tribune: Your message for women reading your interview? Shizuka: Even if you face tough situations, I hope you keep trying to archive your goals and I hope you can find people who understand and support you. Tribune: What are your expectations from the FairBreak Invitational Tournament in Dubai? Shizuka: I am excited to meet and play with all the players coming from around the globe. I would like to learn a lot from them and I hope my experience inspires the girls playing cricket in Japan. Tribune: How are you preparing for FairBreak Invitational Tournament? Shizuka: I broke three cricket bats during the winter hitting millions of balls.

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Meet Japan cricket star Shizuka Miyagi

“It was not easy when I was a girl. I wanted to join the local baseball club, but they didn't allow me to join because I was a girl,” says Japan’s Shizuka Miyaji’s about her journey into cricket. Her sports journey can be parallel to any Pakistani woman who is trying to make her mark in sports, especially when it comes to mainstream sports. At the end of the day, the common thread is about women taking the space in sports and ultimately paving their way into making the world a more equitable place, one match at a time. The 40-year-old left-arm slow orthodox bowler and batter simply believes that it was a simple ambition of being better and having fun that attracted her to sports, and even though she grew up playing baseball, Shizuka is a part of the first privately held franchise T20 event in the history now. She was capped in 2006 for the Japanese cricket team. She is a part of the incredible roster of women from more than 30 countries who will be competing in the FairBreak Invitational Tournament starting May 1 in Dubai. The aim of the tournament and the FairBreak movement is to help explore equal opportunities for women through cricket. Here is her insight into a fast growing cricket community globally and in Japan, along with her experience of playing against Pakistan. Tribune: How did you start playing cricket? Shizuka: I started playing cricket when I was a university student at the age of 20. It looked like a fun sport which was similar to baseball. Tribune: As a girl, was it easy for you to play sports? Shizuka: It was not easy when I was a girl. I wanted to join the local baseball club, but they didn't allow me to join because I was a girl. Tribune: Did your parents support you in choosing to be an athlete? Shizuka: Yes, they supported me to play my sport of choice. Tribune: In which city did you grow up? Shizuka: Nishinomiya-city which is known as the home of high school baseball in Japan. It is also one of the cities severely hit by the Hanshin-Awaji Great Earthquake in 1995. Tribune: Was becoming a full-time athlete easy? Shizuka: No, because it is difficult to get sponsors for many women athletes. Tribune: Do you have any other job besides playing cricket? Shizuka: Yes. I work in the Tea Room at the Sano International Cricket Ground. Tribune: Is cricket a popular sport in Japan? Shizuka: Cricket is getting bigger especially in cities like Sano-citywhere I live. It will still take more time to become a national sport, but I am excited about the future of cricket in Japan. Tribune: What was your experience of playing with Pakistan and do you have any favourite players from Pakistan? Shizuka: We played Pakistan in 2009 in Shanghai, in 2010 at the Asian Games, and also in 2012 in Sano, Japan. They were always a very good team and a huge challenge for us. We learned a lot through the experiences. My favourite player from Pakistan is Sana Mir because she is a good captain and is also a very good all-rounder. Tribune: How do you think cricket helps in empowering women and how did it empower you? Shizuka: Sport has given me energy, confidence, and courage. I think sport can do the same to anyone regardless of their gender or where they live. Tribune: Where do you see the future of Japan women’s team in women’s cricket internationally? Shizuka: I hope we will play in World Cups in the future. Tribune: Are balancing a sports career and also being a mother, wife or fulfilling any of the roles as a woman easy? Shizuka: It is definitely easier if the people around you support you. Tribune: Your most memorable match? Shizuka: Winning the East Asia-Pacific tournament in 2010 was the most memorable as it gave us our first chance to play at a global qualifier in 2011 in Bangladesh. Tribune: Your message for women reading your interview? Shizuka: Even if you face tough situations, I hope you keep trying to archive your goals and I hope you can find people who understand and support you. Tribune: What are your expectations from the FairBreak Invitational Tournament in Dubai? Shizuka: I am excited to meet and play with all the players coming from around the globe. I would like to learn a lot from them and I hope my experience inspires the girls playing cricket in Japan. Tribune: How are you preparing for FairBreak Invitational Tournament? Shizuka: I broke three cricket bats during the winter hitting millions of balls.

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Australia win, but Pakistan learn lessons

Who knew that the Pakistan-Australia Test series, which started on March 4, will be decided on the last day, March 25, of the last Test and in the very last session? People who believe that Test cricket is a dying format and short-form, quick action cricket is the future had to bite their tongue during the three-Test series between Pakistan and Australia. The first Test in Rawalpindi may have been a bummer, with a ‘dead pitch’ ruining the start of a historic tour by Australia. However, expecting Pakistan to just lay down a green turf for the Australian bowling attack to exploit against the home team wouldn’t have been right too. But when the action reached Karachi’s National Stadium for the second Test, the balance between bat and ball was achieved. The match may have ended in a draw, but Pakistan’s nearly two-day long fight to not give up against Australia was the sweetest cherry on the top. Babar’s brilliant 196 and later Rizwan’s ton in testing circumstances towards the end of the match made Pakistan believe that the momentum is shifting towards the hosts to bag a win in the third Test. However, Australia won the toss and piled up a first innings total of 391 to push Pakistan on the back foot from the word go. Babar and co tried their best to come as close as they can to Australia’s 391, but the hosts were sent packing for 268. Then Australia came out to bat and added to their lead, courtesy opener and player of the series Usman Khawaja’s century, and with a 352-run target on the board, asked Pakistan to walk in at the end of day four to bat. Pakistani openers scored 73 runs comfortably till stumps on day four and gave a clear signal that they were going to go for the kill on day five in order to bag the series. Australia too were gunning for a win as the match entered day five, with only 278 runs remaining to take the 10 wickets. Australian captain Pat Cummins, before day five started, may have wondered if he declared too early with a small, achievable target. Pakistan must have been licking their lips too at the prospect of scoring the remaining runs and lifting the Qadir-Benaud Trophy. None of them was thinking about the draw, which means someone’s heart was going to break on Friday. Pundits and experts will agree to the fact that a day five pitch is never in favour of the batting side, especially when they are chasing and not just playing the day away. Pakistan’s intent to chase the target was right, but their execution needed adjustment, the very first lesson that they must have learned after the series loss. The fine balance between offence and defense while chasing a target on a day five or even a day four pitch is a skill that separates a great Test team from a regular one. No one is saying that Pakistan cannot be a great team because they lost the third Test, but they need to take this defeat to heart and prepare for a better reply next time they are asked to bat and win in the fourth innings. And with the return of cricket in Pakistan, the Men in Green will have to learn to bat better on their own pitches to make full use of the home advantage. Meanwhile, in the bowling department, Pakistan were only able to dismiss the complete Australian team only twice in the six innings. One when Australia scored 459 in the Rawalpindi Test and second when they scored 391 in the third Test in the first innings. Meanwhile, Pakistan’s all 10 batsmen were sent back to the pavilion by Australia on three occasions. Once in the second Test and twice in the third Test. This goes on to show that our bowling failed to produce the flare, in home conditions, which was expected and hence our strength, our spin and pace battery, never actually showed up. Australian players will be happy to take a Test series victory back to their country, with words of appreciation for the Pakistani crowd and also the management which kept them safe and entertained. However, Pakistani players have received a reality check that playing at home doesn’t necessarily equate to comfortable wins. With a world class opposition against you, putting up a fight is compulsory, wherever you’re playing them. The Test series loss against Australia is not the end of the world for Pakistan surely, so Babar and co will have to learn their lessons from the series loss so they are not struck down again and again, at home, when other big teams come to play Tests in Pakistan.

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Australia outclass Pakistan to claim Benaud-Qadir Trophy

Nathan Lyon took five wickets to help Australia beat Pakistan by 115 runs in final session of the deciding third Test

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CWC22: Pakistan women register historic win against West Indies

Women's World Cup, Pakistan, West Indies

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PAKvAUS: Limited-overs series shifted to Lahore, confirms Sheikh Rasheed

Lahore

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Sana Mir, others to play in Fairbreak Invitational

Pakistan’s top cricketers Sana Mir, Diana Baig, Fatima Sana and Aliya Riaz are confirmed to play the Fairbreak Invitational Tournament 2022, a franchise league featuring players from more than 30 countries starting May 1 in Dubai. The tournament features an array of players from all over the world, while South Asia is represented by a stellar line-up of women from India, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Bhutan. The event will be played by six teams in 19 games over the course of 15 days. The Invitational tournament is an International Cricket Council (ICC) sanctioned venture, taking place in Dubai in conjunction with Cricket Hong Kong. There is a good number of players from Hong Kong that will be featured in the tournament as well. Meanwhile countries like Japan, and island nation of Vanuatu will also be showcased in the tournament to assure inclusivity and equal opportunity for all. According to the FariBreak website the tournament is the first private franchise league in women’s cricket. FairBreak had also launched the Women’s International Cricket League in Australia back in 2014. “We envision a world where people have fair and equal access to opportunities that enable them to succeed in their chosen endeavour, independent of gender or geographical location. Our mission is to progress gender equality and equity on a truly global scale, using cricket as our primary vehicle to launch FairBreak,” reads their official statement on their motivation behind holding the league. Ebba Qureshi, who is working on the tournament with FairBreak confirmed the participation of the Pakistan favourites in the event last week.

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