Kuwait hope ILT20 link up will mark ‘momentous' shift in cricket landscape in the region
There is already a scenic, well-appointed cricket venue in Muscat, where Oman have one-day international status.
Saudi Arabia, too, has big plans for the sport, and a rapidly growing expat community of cricket lovers, albeit without a stadium with grass as yet.
Doha has an international cricket venue that has hosted star names of the international game in the past. It also has a ready audience of fans, particularly from South Asia.
Instead, the UAE franchise competition's first link up is with a country whose entire programme has to schedule playing time on its one grass cricket facility.
Last week, the ILT20 announced an agreement with Kuwait Cricket. It said it will organise matches in the country which will be aimed at identifying and developing players.
That includes plans to stage a development tournament similar to the one in Dubai which helps the six ILT20 franchises select local players for their squads.
The organisers also stated that, 'in the coming years, the league will also aim to host ILT20 matches in Kuwait'.
'Kuwait is very important to us; it is a great country and keen on promoting and further developing cricket,' Khalid Al Zarooni, the chairman of the ILT20, said.
'Kuwait and the rest of the Gulf countries are all one. [Cricket playing] communities are residing throughout the region and our aim with the DP World ILT20 is to grow and develop the game in the entire region.'
The link up is an acknowledgement for the strides the country has made in the sport. Imperceptibly, Kuwait have been making a mark in the game in recent times.
They have reached number 23 in the T20I world standings. That is the third best of any side in the Gulf region, behind the two most established sides – the UAE and Oman.
It also puts them above sides like Hong Kong, Kenya and Bermuda, who have held ODI status in the past.
Last winter, they fell two runs short of what would have been a statement win, when they lost to the UAE in the final of the Gulf T20I Championship at Dubai International Stadium.
Frustrated as they were by failing to close out what would have been their biggest success to date, coach Qasim Ali said that game was a sign of the progress they are making.
'It would've been great for the lads and great for the country because UAE are a powerhouse in the GCC,' Qasim said.
'To beat them in their own backyard in their stadium, which the lads have never played in, would've been a momentous achievement for our side.
'Obviously, it was a little bit personal for me as well, but that comes secondary in terms of what we're trying to achieve. It would've been brilliant, but I think UAE have realised that we've gone up a few gears as well.'
It was 'personal' for Qasim because he has a strong affinity with UAE cricket himself. He helped develop a number of the leading players in the country in his former role at head coach at the ICC Academy in Dubai, and remains a resident of the city.
Over the past 18 months he has helped push Kuwaiti cricket forward. Now he believes the link up with the ILT20 can help fast forward the progress.
'Without a shadow doubt, this is a huge moment in the landscape of GCC cricket,' he said. 'This is fantastic for Kuwait Cricket, and everybody associated with Kuwait, past, present and future.
'It really sets the milestone for where we are headed strategically, to partner with ILT20. It allows our players to come and demonstrate their skills in a professional franchise environment, which none of our lads have been involved in.
'To have a development programme in Kuwait itself, backed by ILT20, is a huge achievement. We cannot overstate how important this will be for our players locally.'
The coach said the partnership is the result of 'a lot of hard work' by Kuwait Cricket's president Haider Farman and secretary general Sajid Ashraf.
'It opens the door to a long-awaited dream: enabling our Kuwait players to pursue full-time professional cricket careers on the international franchise stage,' Ashraf said.
Ashraf hopes it will help drive investment, saying there is a cricket-loving community of two million people in Kuwait, in a country of five million.
'This initiative provides a unique opportunity for Kuwaiti brands to expand their footprint regionally, starting with the UAE,' Ashraf said.
'We are deeply passionate about our Kuwaiti businesses becoming an integral part of both [Kuwait Cricket] and the DP World ILT20.
'These well-established corporations in Kuwait have so much to offer in supporting the continued growth of cricket across the region.'
While the facilities for the sport in Kuwait are some way behind the UAE and Oman at present, Qasim is hopeful they will see ILT20 matches there at some point soon.
'It would be fantastic for our fan base, players, administrators, local businesses to see some of the best stars coming over to Kuwait,' the coach said.
'We're a little way off from that, but I would love to see that sooner rather than later. Obviously there are other countries in the region who've probably got a ready-made set-up.
'If we could get something in Kuwait to back up the development programme, and some of our players going into the auction and being picked by the franchises, maybe some of the coaches, that would be a big success for us.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Khaleej Times
19 hours ago
- Khaleej Times
Third edition of ILT20 Development Tournament begins on August 24
The third edition of the DP World International League T20 Development Tournament will begin on August 24 at the ICC Academy Oval 1, Dubai. The 18-match tournament will feature six teams, and the tournament will be conducted in a single-league, round-robin format. Defending champions Gulf Giants Development will be joined by Abu Dhabi Knight Riders Development, Desert Vipers Development, Dubai Capitals Development, MI Emirates Development, and Sharjah Warriorz Development. The six tournament squads will be chosen via Player Selection Draft, which will be conducted on 18 August at the Dubai International Stadium. Each team will consist of 15 players from the UAE. The tournament is an opportunity for aspiring cricketers in UAE to showcase their talent and grab the attention of the six DP World ILT20 franchises ahead of Season 4 which will be played in December-January 2025-2026. With UAE Men's participation in the Sharjah Tri-Series (29 August to 7 September) and the ACC Men's T20 Asia Cup 2025, the DP World ILT20 Development Tournament will be a golden opportunity for UAE's emerging players to dazzle in front of the franchise selectors and earn a spot in the main event. Each of the six DP World ILT20 franchises will need to pick minimum of four UAE players per squad for tournament's Season 4 which will begin on December 2. 'The DP World ILT20 Development Tournament is one of the most sought-after events in the Emirates Cricket Board's domestic calendar. The platform is ideal for young and emerging players from all over the country to showcase their talent and stake a claim for a place in the DP World ILT20," said Andrew Russell, Tournament Director - DP World ILT20 Development Tournament. 'Last year, fast bowler Farhan Ahmed was discovered by Dubai Capitals at the development tournament, Farhan went on to dazzle at the DP World ILT20 Season 3 with the Capitals winning the tournament. Saghir Khan is another player who excelled in the development tournament last year and got his chance in the big event representing the Gulf Giants. 'This particular edition is potentially the biggest opportunity for new talent to shine especially with a lot of slots up for grabs in the absence of UAE's national players who will be competing in the Tri-Series in Sharjah and the ACC Men's T20 Asia Cup.' The DP World International League T20 Player Auction for Season 4 will be held a few days after the ACC Men's T20 Asia Cup. The six tournament teams will each get the opportunity of adding 13 players each (a total of 78 players) to their Season 4 squads at the auction.


Khaleej Times
20 hours ago
- Khaleej Times
Rashid Khan proud to join Ben Stokes, Kagiso Rabada in 'Red Bull family'
Afghanistan captain Rashid Khan is delighted to join talismanic England all-rounder Ben Stokes, South African pace spearhead Kagiso Rabada and Indian star KL Rahul as a Red Bull athlete. 'I'm so proud to be with Red Bull, it was a kind of a dream for me to be an athlete with Red Bull. I am the second (third) player from Asia to be associated with Red Bull, it's huge for me,' he said. 'Players like KL (Rahul), Ben Stokes and KG (Kagiso Rabada) are part of them. So it's an amazing feeling, I'm so excited to be joining this family, and I'm looking forward to it.' As part of the partnership, the 26-year-old bowling all-rounder will visit the Red Bull Athlete Performance Center (APC) in Salzburg, Austria. Rashid, who is now playing the Oval Invincibles in The Hundred, will lead Afghanistan at the Asia Cup in the UAE next month.


Khaleej Times
21 hours ago
- Khaleej Times
From refugee to role model: Rashid Khan eyes Olympic glory for Afghanistan
When Kabul Express hit theatres in 2006, Rashid Khan was a cricket-obsessed eight-year-old living as a refugee in the Pakistani city of Peshawar. Today, Rashid is an Afghan cricket superstar and the greatest white-ball spinner on the global stage. But each time Rashid and his free-spirited Afghan teammates go toe to toe with the big guns in cricket, a heart-melting scene from Kabul Express comes flooding back. In the Bollywood thriller, John Abraham and Arshad Warsi play the roles of television journalists who have an assignment that is not for the faint-hearted — they must travel to Afghanistan for a 'big interview' with a Taliban leader and give their viewers a first-hand account of life in a war-ravaged country. In one of the opening scenes of the movie, Abraham warms up for his first day in Afghanistan by doing push-ups at the entrance of a building that was shattered by American bombing in a place where none of the buildings escaped the brunt of missiles and bullets. Abraham then notices a young boy enjoying the quiet morning. He poses and gets up to smile at the boy before playfully asking him to join in. The boy responds, but as he rises, the smile on Abraham's face fades. With his left leg amputated, the boy is on crutches and yet stands with poise, greeting Abraham with a bright smile on his face, leaving the audience battling a whirlpool of emotions. Gladiatorial spirit That uplifting smile on that boy's face echoes the gladiatorial spirit of Afghan cricketers who continue to defy the odds in international cricket. Next month, when Rashid leads Afghanistan at the Asia Cup T20 tournament in the UAE, his team will no longer be viewed as underdogs. Having reached the 2024 Twenty20 World Cup semis, barely a few months after they were just one win away from reaching the semifinals of the 2023 ODI World Cup, Afghanistan will be a strong contender for continental glory. It's remarkable to see the meteoric rise of Afghanistan, the world's only cricket team that has never played an international match on home soil due to the myriad conflicts that have crippled the country. The irony was not lost on cricket statistician Mazher Arshad when the Rashid-led team launched a giant-killing run at the T20 World Cup last year to reach the semifinals. '16 years ago, Afghanistan were in Division 5 of ICC World Cricket League and were playing against the likes of Japan, Singapore, Botswana etc,' Arshad wrote on X, formerly Twitter. 'Today, they are in the semifinal of ICC T20 World Cup ahead of the likes of Australia, New Zealand, Pakistan, West Indies etc.' The explosion of cricket talent in the conflict-torn country boggles the mind, as most of their players first learned to play the game at refugee camps in Pakistan. Overcoming the obstacles Rashid, 26, who recently joined Ben Stokes, Kagiso Rabada and KL Rahul as a Red Bull athlete, zeroed in on one factor — motivation — when we asked him how cricket has become a beacon of hope in the face of adversity. 'When you talk about the problems we have back home, the obstacles and everything, those problems give us a huge motivation as players and as a team,' Rashid told Khaleej Times over a Zoom video call from the UK. 'When you look at our country, you see those people. The only happiness for them is cricket — the only thing which gives them an opportunity to celebrate in life is cricket. And that's the biggest motivation for us.' Unable to play at home, Afghanistan played their home matches at Sharjah Cricket Stadium for many years before shifting base to India. Their 'home' ground may have changed, but what hasn't changed is their ability to produce incredibly talented young players. 'We don't have that kind of facility back home, but we have the talent. All the progress we have had over the last five years, especially in ICC events where we were almost in the semifinals in 2023 (ODI World Cup) and 2024 (T20 World Cup), we got into the semifinal against South Africa, this is a massive achievement for us,' Rashid said. 'It shows we have talent in our country. We have got skills, it's just about making sure we get the opportunity to play against the big teams in back-to-back games, which gives you a great learning experience, and then you get better. So over the last four, five years, I think we got that kind of opportunity to play against the big teams back-to-back. 'Initially, we struggled, but we learned from those mistakes, and when we faced them again, we gave them a tough time. And then we won against them. So that's how I feel we have performed really well in the last couple of years in World Cups.' Cricket in every street The streets of Kabul, Kandahar, Jalalabad and every city and town of Afghanistan are now teeming with young children playing the game of bat and ball. 'Everywhere you go, not only in Kabul, but in every city you go to, you will find people playing cricket. And that's a big, big plus point for the country,' Rashid said. In recent years, the rise of Rashid, Mujeeb-ur Rahman, Rahmanullah Gurbaz, Naveen ul Haq, Noor Ahmad and Fazalhaq Farooqi has acted as a catalyst for the Afghan cricket revolution. 'We were not able to see this kind of craze for cricket before because not many people wanted to play — their parents would not allow them to play cricket. We haven't had much future for the kids at that time, we had no superstars that they could follow, they had no role models,' Rashid said. 'And now what we have done as a team so far has inspired all the youngsters to come out to play cricket in the streets and to go to academies and different grounds. It's a massive change for the country.' Rashid, the role model The leg-spinner, a big star in the cash-rich Indian Premier League (IPL), now counts several Bollywood celebrities among his fans. But while growing up with his 10 siblings in Peshawar after the family fled the Afghan war following the 9/11 terror attack in New York, Rashid was the biggest fan of Shahid Afridi, Pakistan's maverick all-rounder. There are echoes of 'Boom Boom' Afridi in Rashid's fearless batting as a bowling all-rounder, but it's in the bowling department that he drew inspiration from the former Pakistan captain. Unlike the traditional spinners, Rashid bowls quicker through the air, bamboozles the batters with his googly and subtle variations. His combination of skills and ice-cool temperament has earned him 405 wickets from just 216 matches across three formats in international cricket. Even more than that astonishing haul of wickets, it's his relentless accuracy in the death overs that has made him one of the world's most feared bowlers — both in international and franchise cricket. No wonder he gets mobbed every time he visits his native country, where almost every kid wants to become the next Rashid Khan. 'It's a great feeling that I have become an inspiration for all the youngsters. Whenever I go back to the country and see all those youngsters, how badly they want to be like me, it reminds me of the time when I was a fan of the players I liked,' he said. 'It gives you so much happiness as well, and a proud moment that what I've done so far for the country and different teams (in franchise cricket), I think it's massive. It's a really great feeling when youngsters come up and they show that kind of love and tell you that they want to be like you in the future. I try my best to share the experience with the kids whenever I get a chance to spend time with them.' Olympic dream Rashid, who is now playing for the Oval Invincibles in The Hundred, his first tournament following an injury layoff, has already set his sights on glory at the Asia Cup and the T20 World Cup next year. 'I am super excited for the Asia Cup. I think that's the best opportunity for us to play against the best teams again, and it's the best preparation (for the 2026 T20 World Cup),' he said. 'And playing the Asia Cup in the UAE means a lot of Afghan fans will come out in big numbers and support the team, and that's something which gives us so much energy and motivation. 'It's always amazing to see how much they love watching us play. And that's so important for us because that inspires us to deliver the best.' Rashid is also hoping to inspire the Afghan team to deliver a medal-winning performance at the 2028 Los Angeles Games, where cricket will make its first Olympic appearance since 1900. 'It's going to be a massive moment for us to be participating in the Olympics. And to win a medal for the country is more than a dream,' he smiled. 'You know we are so excited because for Afghanistan, winning an Olympic medal will be bigger than winning a World Cup.' Indeed, it's not hard to imagine the jubilant celebrations in every street of Afghanistan and the beaming smiles on Afghan faces if Rashid and his men step onto the Olympic podium — a scene straight out of a movie.