The week in sport has offered Pakistan a study in contrasts. The government has ordered an inquiry into the Athletics Federation’s lifetime ban on Olympic coach Salman Butt. The Afghan cricket board has abruptly withdrawn from the upcoming tri-series in Pakistan. At the same time, the junior hockey side earned rare acclaim for a spirited 3-3 draw against India at the Sultan of Johor Cup. Together these moments illuminate how Pakistani sport continues to balance promise with the persistent weight of disorder.
The hockey result was a reminder of what remains possible when discipline meets heart. Young players such as Hamza Fayyaz and Sufyan Khan showed courage and poise, their performance praised as “no less than a victory.” Yet their success highlights the larger irony that achievement now occurs despite, rather than because of, the system meant to sustain it. The Pakistan Hockey Federation remains mired in audit disputes and unpaid allowances. The players’ determination only underlines the resilience that bureaucracy has failed to nurture.
The turmoil in athletics reveals a deeper malaise. The lifetime ban on Salman Butt, imposed through an opaque process later deemed worthy of federal inquiry, has turned a professional matter into a contest of personal power. Governance, not talent, remains the weak link, echoing a familiar pattern: accountability arrives only after reputations have been damaged and opportunities lost.
Cricket’s latest controversy lies beyond the boundary line as Afghanistan’s decision to withdraw from the tri-series has disappointed both players and spectators, not least because Pakistan had provided every assurance of safety and hospitality. The withdrawal says more about Kabul’s instability than about Pakistan’s readiness as a host. Over the past year, Pakistan has revived international fixtures, strengthened logistics, and reopened venues once written off by foreign teams. It deserves credit, not suspicion, for creating an environment where sport can continue amid regional uncertainty.
Across federations, however, the structural flaws remain. Patronage still trumps planning, and politics still displaces professionalism. Pakistan’s athletes keep faith where their institutions falter, yet their perseverance cannot substitute for reform. Until integrity, transparency, and merit become routine rather than exceptional, every bright performance will stand alone against the gloom. The scoreboard may record occasional victories, but the truer contest is against decay, and that is one Pakistan must not concede. *