Nepal takes game to new heights with T20 league

٥ مشاهدات

Glamorgan all-rounder Dan Douthwaite was not alone among the foreign players in being unsure what to expect when he headed to the Himalayas to take part in the inaugural Nepal Premier League (NPL) late last year.

Taking up a playing contract in the mountainous nation of 30 million was always going to be a novel challenge for the Englishman, not least because the Twenty20 league was staged at a ground some 1,350 metres above sea level.

I thought I was going to be constantly out of breath or struggling, but it wasnt actually as bad as I thought it was going to be, the 28-year-old recalled of his time playing for the Kathmandu Gurkhas.

I think I noticed it more so with sixes. When they got the ball it absolutely went miles. A lot of balls ... kept going and going and going.

When you think youve hit one straight up and its a 70-metre six.

Apart from the extra flight of the ball at the Tribhuvan University International Cricket Ground near Kathmandu, Douthwaites other big takeaway from the experience was the enthusiasm of the Nepali fans.

Cricket in Nepal is probably like the Premier League in England ... theres a kind of almost Indian cricket feel about the way people appreciate and love the game, he told Reuters.

This was the third attempt by Nepal, which became an ICC associate member in 1996 and has qualified for the T20 World Cup twice, to follow in the path of the Indian Premier League (IPL) by launching its own Twenty20 league.

The NPL hopes the passion of the fans, combined with the countrys unique geography and society, will carve out a niche in a landscape dominated by the likes of the IPL and Australias Big Bash League.

Were rich in terms

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