Tag Archive for Pakistan

I Am The Legend “Pathan”

Pashtun, Pathan, Afghan. Pukhtun, Pakhtoon Traditional sports include naiza bazi, which involves horsemen who compete in spear throwing. Pashtuns living in the northern regions of Afghanistan engage in Buzkashi, which is a popular central Asian sport played by riding on horses. Wrestling (Pehlwani) is often part of larger sporting events. Cricket is largely a legacy of British rule in Pakistan and India, and many Pashtuns have become prominent participants, such as Shahid Afridi, Imran Khan, Misbah-ul-Haq, Umar Gul, Yusuf Pathan, Irfan Pathan, Junaid Khan and Younis Khan. The Afghanistan national cricket team is dominated by Pashtun players.

Football is the other most popular sport among the Pashtuns. The current captain of Pakistan national football team, Muhammad Essa, is an ethnic Pashtun from the Balochistan province. Another top player from the same area was Abdul Wahid Durrani, who scored 15 international goals in 13 games and became the captain of the team. The Afghanistan national football team includes a number of Pashtun players. Other sports in which Pashtuns participate include volleyball, basketball, field hockey, buzkashi, bodybuilding, martial arts, boxing, and others. In recent decades Hayatullah Khan Durrani, Pride of Performance caving legend from Quetta, has been promoting mountaineering, rock climbing and caving in Pakistan.

Squash is a sport in which Pashtuns from Pakistan became legend in. Jahangir Khan and Jansher Khan are former world champions of squash, making it to the Guinness World Records. They are considered to be the greatest professional squash players of all time. Although now retired, they are engaged in promoting the sport through the Pakistan Squash Federation.

Snooker and billiards are played by young Pashtun men, especially in the major cities of Pakistan and Afghanistan. Several prominent international recognized snooker players are from the Pashtun area, including Saleh Mohammed.

Children’s games include a form of marbles called buzul-bazi, which is played with the knucklebones of sheep. Although traditionally less involved in sports than boys, young Pashtun girls often play volleyball and basketball, especially in urban areas. A favourite game of the Pashtuns in southwestern Pakistan is yanda, especially in Pishin, Pakistan.

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FARRUKH ZAMAN PAKISTAN NATIONAL SQUASH CHAMPION SINGING

FARRUKH ZAMAN PAKISTAN NATIONAL SQUASH CHAMPION SINGING

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SQUASH – Jansher ‘the Lionheart’ Khan

A tribute to the great man

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SQUASH – Jahangir and Jansher Khan – the two ‘Lords’ of Squash

A tribute to these two icons and the rivalry they produced. Enjoy !

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Not Cricket – Squash – Part Three

Nawakeli, a small town in NWFP has produced seven squash world champions. Emmad Hameed takes a look at their triumphs and examines the current state of the sport.

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Not Cricket – Squash – Part Two

Nawakeli, a small town in NWFP has produced seven squash world champions. Emmad Hameed takes a look at their triumphs and examines the current state of the sport.

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Not Cricket – Squash – Part One

Nawakeli, a small town in NWFP has produced seven squash world champions. Emmad Hameed takes a look at their triumphs and examines the current state of the sport.

Duration : 0:5:39

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MariaToor – Pakistan’s Female Squash Champion

By Reza Sayah
Courtesy: CNN
21/09/2009
PESHAWAR (Home of Squash), Pakistan (CNN) — As a little girl, Maria Toor Pakay would beat up boys.

Maria Toor Pakay has overcome unusual adversity to rank among the world’s top 100 squash players.
Now, she dispenses of anyone who takes her on within the walls of a squash court.

Pakay, 18, is Pakistan’s No. 1-ranked women’s squash player. But what makes her story remarkable is that she hails from the country’s tribal region of South Waziristan.

The region, along the border with Afghanistan, is home to the Taliban.

There, suicide attacks are a way of life. And the militants, bent on imposing a strict form of Islamic law, punish girls who attend school — let alone play sports.

“They have no future,” Pakay said. “They spend their entire lives in four walls in their home. Their ability is destroyed.”

But Pakay wasn’t like most girls growing up. She sported a buzz cut and mixed with the boys.

“If someone argued with me, I used to beat them up,” she said. “I wanted them to obey me all the time.”

Her father, Shams-ul-Qayum Wazir, knew early on that his daughter was different.

“I didn’t want her talent to go to waste,” he said. “If I would’ve kept her in the village, all she could do was housekeeping.” Watch Pakay talk about her life’s mission ยป

So, Wazir packed up the family and moved to Peshawar, the capital of the North West Frontier Province.

Here, Pakay picked up the racquet and swatted down the competition with ease — first winning the Under-13 championship, then the Under-15, then the Under-17.

In squash, players take turns hitting a ball to the front wall of a court, until one misses.

Pakay, it turned out, rarely did.

“I thought nobody could beat me,” she said. “From the beginning when I played squash, I thought I could be a world champion.”

Today, despite the lack of a sponsor and few resources, Pakay has gone pro — and is ranked 91st in the world.

Her father’s sacrifice, she said, made her success possible.

“I think I have a great father — so broad-minded,” she said.

For his part, Wazir — a teacher — was more circumspect.

“I sacrificed because I want to promote a message of peace,” he said. “If the tribal people pick up a racquet instead of a gun, there would be peace.”

This video report is courtesy of CNN via Reza Sayah (CNN correspondent Peshawar, Pakistan)

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