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World Cup Tour Diary

Spare a thought for climate change

The chartered flights to get all the captains together for the launch event was an extravagance we could probably have done without

Sidharth Monga
Sidharth Monga
04-Oct-2023
Imagine the relief among the organisers of this World Cup at landing in Ahmedabad and seeing young bike riders using protection for their faces and not their heads. Hardly anyone wears helmets in Ahmedabad, but the handkerchief to cover the face are ubiquitous. That can mean only one thing: dust and dry heat. Dry heat. Just the word cricket organisers need to hear, although helmets would be welcome too.
The climate emergency we live in is real, and cricket is not immune. Last year, the T20 World Cup just about winged it past the extreme weather conditions that led to widespread flooding in Australia. This year's IPL final almost didn't happen because of torrential summer rain in Ahmedabad of all places.
Since the start of the Asia Cup in August, we have spent more time looking at weather websites than watching cricket. Four of the ten warm-up matches for this World Cup were washed out by unseasonal rain. The last thing a tournament in the news for the wrong reasons - late announcement of schedules, ticket sales fiascos, visa delays - needs is rain in the tournament proper, which is when we are told the quality of cricket will wipe away memories of all the organisational problems.
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Hello, Mumbai!

Cricket might be numero uno in India, but in the financial capital, there's not a whole lot to tell you there's a World Cup on

Firdose Moonda
Firdose Moonda
04-Oct-2023
If you're looking for a sign, this isn't it. In fact, there aren't many. Apart from the ones at the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj airport, which boldly welcome travellers to "the greatest World Cup ever", if you were dropped into India's financial centre from outer space, you would not know the magnitude of what is about to begin.
Or you would, because the cool kids tell me that billboards don't matter anymore. We all spend more time looking down at our screens than up at our surroundings, but to me, presence matters. At the women's T20 World Cup in South Africa earlier this year, there was advertising at all three host venues, and in a country that is not as cricket-obsessed as this one, it served a purpose. That is obviously not the case here, where there's no doubt that cricket trumps all else as the pastime of choice.
Either way, if you're among those who have been tangled in the interwebs, you'll know that many (perhaps all) aspects of this World Cup have been affected by delays. Fixtures were announced later than any other World Cup - and then some of them were moved - tickets went on sale late, and foreign journalists' visas have been arriving late. You may guess from that that some of the preparations are running a little late too, and you won't be too far wrong.
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'Is there a Cricket World Cup soon?'

Our correspondent experiences the vastness of the Narendra Modi Stadium

Matt Roller
Matt Roller
03-Oct-2023
London Gatwick Airport, Sunday night. One of the two men sitting next to me on the plane wonders how I've found myself on an overnight Air India flight to Ahmedabad. They're from Dresden in Germany, and are flying out for a conference on land reform.
Less than 24 hours later, I'm wandering around the stadium itself. I'm desperately trying to find the Gujarat Cricket Association's offices to pick up the accreditation pass that I will need to guard tightly over the next six or seven weeks, which will let me into the eight different venues that England play in across the country. The stadium is just as big as anticipated, though eerily quiet on a non-match day.
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