Remembering Tikanjoo

Posted on March 31, 2007
Filed Under >> Owais Mughal, Sports, Humor, Society
53 Comments
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Owais Mughal

I grew up playing cricket on the street. After asr (late afternoon) prayers, I was usually the first one to put wicket in the center of the street, mark creases with a chalk, and put a stone as the bowling mark. I also used to put new tape on balls and did some other management stuff…

(Photo to the right is of a street cricket player from Chitral, Pakistan.)

…Slowly other boys from the neighbor hood would come out and numbering was done to decide who would bat first. In those early minutes of set up, a boy from the neighborhood helped me a lot. He was employed in one of the homes and used to get a permanently bald cut from the local barber. So people started calling him ‘ganja’. Some with lesser formal education used to call him ‘takloo’ (it means a bald person in local Karachi slang)

After a Hajj season our cricket team suddenly got some Haji players who had recently became ‘ganja’ (bald) after performing the holy ritual.

This caused a big confusion in our local team on how to distinguish between so many bald players while using some kind of slang language. In those days of early youth, using proper literary language was considered so out of fashion……

The above photo is from Dawn newspaper and it shows the popularity of street cricket in Pakistan. Venue shown here is historic Hiran Minar complex in Shiekhupura.

……After many days of deliberation we called a ’shoora’ (cabinet) meeting of neighborhood boys and in that meeting it was unanimously decided to name the original ganja guy as ‘Tikanjoo’.

The logic behind this nomenclature was:

Ganja + Takloo = Tikanjoo

(Photo to the left is from Quetta, Pakistan and it shows ingenuity of players who have built the cricket wicket by stacking up stones.)

Tikanjoo had great passion for cricket. He would come out on the street earlier than me. Sometimes I saw him waiting for me to put wickets on the street so that he can get a break from his employers and come out to play. I would then send him to all the homes in neighborhood to ring call bells and ask the ‘V.I.P cricketers’ to come out.

Tikanjoo bowled really fast jerk balls. Just like Shoaib Akhtar he would run 32 steps and then throw cricket ball like a stone with out circling his arm over. To get a better picture, imagine Shoaib Akhter bowling in a fluttering 9 feet long ’shalwar qameez’ and wearing Bata’s ‘hawaai chappal’ (flat open slip-ons). ….

(I took this photograph in June 2005. Temperature at that time was 45 degree centigrade and I am not kidding. It shows the passion of cricket in Islamabad, Pakistan. These players are using a trash can as the wicket.)

…Poet Zameer Jaffri once said a ’sher’ about the West Indian fast bowler Wes Hall which perfectly fits the way Tikanjoo used to bowl in our steet. It goes like this:

shor uTha ke Hall aatat hai, khel ka intaqaal aata hai
Hall se pehlay ball aati hai, ball se pehlay Hall aata hai

If any batsman didn’t get out with technically correct bowling then we used to bring Tikanjoo to throw few balls. Due to incorrect bowling action of Tikanjoo, batsmen would usually complain that this act was an ‘ochaa hath-kanDaa’ (cheap stunt) on part of fielding side but to no avail. After ‘Tikanjoo’ was unleashed then more often than not, he would get the wicket of well set batsman.

As a rule of street cricket, a direct hit in neighbourhood homes was considered out…

(Photo to the right is from Quetta, Pakistan. It shows multiple cricket games going on at the same street.)

…. If someone got out in such manner, we used to request Tikanjoo to be a useful member of the team and prove his loyalty by bringing back the ball. He would then climb walls, climb window shades, reach roofs in no time and retrieve the ball for us.

Then one day Tikanjoo found work in another neighborhood and left our locality. He was talked about for few days and then everyone forgot about him. We grew up into our current roles of life. Nobody knows what happened to Tikanjoo after few months. Reminds me of this sher:

mohallay waalay na-haq khafa ho gayay warna
woh to ek andaaz tha os kay pyar karne ka

I hope wherever is Tikanjoo, he is fine and enjoying the cricket as much as he did in our childhood. At this moment I don’t even recall his real name but I just thought about him and it brought smile to me and thus I wanted to share above lines with you. Long live cricket and long live Pakistan.

(Photo to the above left is our street in Federal-B-Area, Karachi - Jan 2007 - where Tikanjoo used to bowl his super fast throws. The street looks deserted without a cricket wicket in the center and all the care free boys of yesteryears having grown up into men with responsibilities.)

Before ending this post, I also want to share a ’sher’ which my friend Amjad Hussain first told me:

jab cricket khela kartay the, osay wicket banaaya kartay the
hum jis se pani peetay the, woh maTka aakhir TooT gaya

53 comments posted

Comment Pages: « 7 6 5 4 3 [2] 1 »

  1. Aqil Sajjad says:
    April 1st, 2007 10:10 am

    Another feature of street cricket is that when they use bricks for wickets, they are usually placed much wider apart than they ought to be.

    If you have proper stumps but are playing in the street, you need a red brick, which has holes in it so you can put the stumps in them.

    Lbw rule: generally street cricket does not have lbw, so if you have proper batting technique and cover the stumps while facing, you can really irritate the bowling side.

  2. April 1st, 2007 6:56 am

    Another rule which I remember now was a single side run which was common in numbering format of cricket in which no batsman stands at non-striker end. You just have to run from striker to non-striker end and it’s considered a single run.

    The toss system was also intresting. Instead of coins, we guys used to use pebbles.

    Speaking of street cricket and not talking about knocking doors of people for asking balls. it used to be a wonderful experience,specially if your ball goes to a home where some hitler type aunty or uncle don’t get ready to return ball and you find no way other than cursing the person to mess with whole game :-)

  3. Tamed~. says:
    March 31st, 2007 6:14 pm

    Adnan,

    Block 4 Nazimabad.

    & you are right, maintaining scoring books was my first exposure of statistics (in its mildest form though).

    The other very famous form of cricket in those days was double wicket tournaments, in which two allrounders in each side play against each other, they were given a fix number of overs to bat, every time a player was out a score of 2 or 4 runs was deducted from the score, the final score sometime could be negative as well!!

    My favourite places to play in nazimabad were
    annu bhai park (before MMA, MQM & shadi caterers occupied that very reasonable playing ground) & community centre in Nazimabad block 4.

    I must say Owais, I am really loving this post & I do feel great contributing my commenst.

  4. March 31st, 2007 5:09 pm

    Oh yes another kind of street cricket, Curfew/strike cricket in 80s and mid 90s when deserted roads were the best place to play cricket for long hours in daytime.

  5. March 31st, 2007 5:04 pm

    Tamed: Where block of Nazimabad? I used to be in Nazimabad No.1 and there was a lane[I forgot it’s name] near Azeemi Dawakhana where there were arrangments for scoreboard and commentary. The style of scoring on notebooks was also a very intresting exercise.


    Night cricket, street cricket

    And Ramzan Cricket right after fajr namaz :-)

  6. Owais Mughal says:
    March 31st, 2007 4:52 pm

    Adnan and Aqil Sajjad saheb. Good recall of street cricket rules. I enjoyed reading your messages. One-tip out rule was usually employed when playing in small places like inside the house or when batsmen were too good for the bowling side

  7. Owais Mughal says:
    March 31st, 2007 4:42 pm

    Dear Tamed, thanks for reminding us about the night tournaments. I also remember playing in some tournaments where Live commentary was done on loud-speakers. Night cricket, street cricket and street cricket rules need a dedicated post of their own :)

  8. Tamed~. says:
    March 31st, 2007 4:03 pm

    I grew up in the area of Karachi, which is very famous for cricket (be it tape ball or proper cricket ball). Yes your guess is right, Nazimabad.

    This area has given many cricketers to the national team & innumerous to domestic teams.

    Like all the other readers, I felt very nostalgic as well.

    I am impressed by the last few lines of the article.
    ‘The street looks deserted without a cricket wicket in the center and all the care free boys of yesteryears having grown up into men with responsibilities.)’

    Because of many other forms of positive & negative diversions, I do not see cricket being played with that intensity on the streets of Karachi.

    The author has failed to mention one thing,
    ‘Night tape ball cricket tournament’, which were a very famous happenings on the weekends.

    I still remember, we had to contribute five to ten rupee each to pay for the ‘entry fee’ of the tournament. They were a charisma to play.
    In some of the tournaments, the organizers used to arrange running commentary as well.

    Ah, good olden days.

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