Before Pakistan and India met in the FIH Pro League, the Pakistan flag displayed during the anthem ceremony was wrong. The white stripe was missing. The match then went the way too many Pakistan hockey matches now go: India won 4-3, Pakistan fought late, and the result extended a losing streak to 13 matches and relegated the side from the next edition of the FIH Pro League. On Tuesday, minutes after the conclusion of the fixture, International Hockey Federation apologised to the Pakistan Hockey Federation and accepted responsibility for what it called an operational mistake.
The temptation in such moments is to choose between outrage and dismissal. Both are inadequate. There is no need to invent a conspiracy where administrative failure may explain enough. But neither should the incident be reduced to a small design error before a match Pakistan lost anyway. In international sport, the flag is not a backdrop. It is the state’s presence on the field. It is the first protocol obligation before a ball is struck.
This is truer still in a Pakistan-India fixture. No encounter between the two countries is just another match, and certainly not in hockey, a sport whose history on both sides is tied to national memory.
The missing stripe matters. The white bar in Pakistan’s flag is not a border or a graphic flourish. It represents the country’s minorities. Its absence does not merely alter the appearance of the flag; it removes part of the idea the flag is meant to carry. That is why the error cannot be treated as an ordinary broadcast lapse or a careless production choice. It altered a national symbol at the very moment it was meant to be honoured.
The world body must therefore do more than regret. It must show what has changed. Tournament organisers handle national names, anthems, flags, uniforms, accreditation, broadcast graphics and ceremonial order. If the governing body of a global sport cannot guarantee that a national flag will be correctly displayed, its claims of professionalism lose force.
Pakistan’s own officials must also answer a harder question: why was the error not stopped before the anthem?
This is where the flag incident connects to a deeper malaise in Pakistan hockey. It would be comforting to separate the two: one a foreign organiser’s mistake, the other a sporting decline. But institutions reveal themselves in detail.
The decline has been long and measurable. Pakistan is not a minor hockey nation. They are the country that won the World Cup four times, Olympic gold three times, the Champions Trophy three times, and the Asian Games eight times. There was a period when Pakistan did not merely compete in world hockey. It helped shape its architecture. The World Cup and Champions Trophy themselves are tied to Pakistani initiative and ambition. That history is what makes the present so severe.
The flag error should therefore not be used as an excuse to avoid the hockey. It should be used to expose the same culture of looseness. *