Remembering Tikanjoo

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

I grew up playing tape ball cricket on Karachi streets. Every evening, I was usually the first one to put a broken chair as wickets in the center of the street, put tape on the balls, mark creases with a chalk, and put a stone as the bowling mark.

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

Slowly other boys from the neighbor hood would come out and the game would start. In those early minutes of set up, a boy from the neighborhood helped me a lot. He was a domestic helper in one of the homes and used to get a permanently bald cut from the local barber. So people started calling him ‘ganjay’. And some with lesser formal education started calling him ‘takloo.’

After a Hajj season our cricket team suddenly got some more bald players who had recently became one after performing the holy ritual.

This caused a big confusion in our local team on how to distinguish between so many bald players.

After serious deliberation in a local ‘shoora’ (cabinet) meeting of neighborhood boys it was unanimously decided to name our original ganja guy as ‘Tikanjoo’.

The logic behind this nomenclature was:

Ganja + Takloo = Tikanjoo

Other guys also got some creative names like Ganja II, Kojak, Bald Eagle etc.

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

Now Tikanjoo had great passion for cricket. Sometimes I used to see 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 other houses in neighborhood to ring call bells and ask the ‘V.I.P cricketers’ who needed a daily invitation to play cricket to come out.

Tikanjoo bowled really fast jerk balls. He had a perfectly smooth run up of a fast bowler. He would run his 32 steps, jump in his stride but then throw tape ball like a stone released from a catapult with out circling his arm over. To get a better picture, imagine Shoaib Akhter bowling in a fluttering ‘shalwar qameez’ and wearing Bata’s ‘hawai chappal’ (flat open slip-ons.) But man o man, Tikanjoo was fast!

(I took this photograph in June 2005. Temperature at that time was 45 degree centigrade in Islamabad. It shows the passion of cricket. These players are using a trash can as the wicket.)

Poet Zameer Jaffri once said a ‘sher’ (couplet) 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 aata hai, khel ka intaqaal aata hai
Hall se pehle ball aati hai, ball se pehle Hall aata hai

If any batsman didn’t get out with technically correct bowling then we used to bring out our secret weapon. the Tikanjoo. Due to incorrect bowling action of Tikanjoo, batsmen would complain but in street cricket it was to no avail. After ‘Tikanjoo’ was unleashed then more often than not, he would get the wicket of the well set batsman.

As a rule of street cricket, a direct hit in neighbourhood homes is 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, pipes, windows, anything and 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.

I hope wherever Tikanjoo is, he is fine and enjoying the cricket as much as he did in our childhood. He must be close to 50 years of age in 2018. At this moment I don’t even recall his real name but I just thought about him and it brought a smile to me and thus I wanted to share above lines with you.

(Photo to the above left is our street in Federal-B-Area, Karachi — 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 shared with me:

jab cricket khela karte the,

osay wicket banaya karte the

hum jis se pani peete the,

woh matka aakhir toot gaya

55 responses to “Remembering Tikanjoo”

  1. Owais Mughal says:

    Harris, I enjoyed reading the definition of ‘Dalda’ :) Must admit, this was new for me.

  2. Harris says:

    Very interesting article. Brought back some long forgotten memories. When I was little, my cousin who was a huge fan of Late Wasim Raja forced me to bat left handed even though I am naturally right handed. As a result I am a fully developed left handed batman now and can’t even touch the ball if I try to play right handed.

    Street cricket will always have the honor of being the primary school for test cricket graduates. In Islamabad where I grew up, we used to have games in many residential streets. We even had “teams” made up of players who lived in neighboring streets and the rule was that in order to play in a specific team, you had to live in the pre-determined geographical area of that team.

    Now I play with a leather ball clad in full kit on grounds dedicated for cricket in America, but the street cricket with tape ball in days when we had to collect donations just to buy a roll of Nitto tape (Rs/- 5) and an Ace ball (Rs/- 10)will always be near and dear to my heart.

    Now that we are all remembering our glory days of street cricket I would like to add some terms that were frequently used in street cricket.

    DALDA: The score added fraudulently to the batting team’s total since it was the batting team’s job to keep the score.

    WATTA: The ball delivered with the jerk elbow action.

    KHAPCHOO: Left handed batsman. Yours truly was the only one in our team.

    TULLAY BAZ: A batsman who tried to hit every ball hard and hoped that one might go for a six. Much like Shahid Afridi.

    SPINNER: A bowler who had no ability to ball fast was a self proclaimed spinner, even though he had no ability to spin either.


  3. The most interesting aspect of street cricket for me was ‘tape ball’.

    Generally tape ball helps to increase pace and “ganji” ball spins a lot, specially leg spin. This is my experience as a former medium fast bowler+leg spinner which could be different than others :-). mY delivery used to leg spin a lot like shane warne :D

  4. Saad says:

    The most interesting aspect of street cricket for me was ‘tape ball’. The way a tape gives weight to an otherwise light tennis ball and allows you to swing and move the ball of virtually any surface using the ‘grip’, makes the game play all the more interesting. And of course night cricket under ‘rented’ flood lights, another essential during Ramadan :D.

  5. Aqil Sajjad says:

    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.

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