Cricket is a niche sport in the U.S., which is co-hosting the T20 World Cup and participating in the tournament for the first time.
The U.S. men’s national cricket team delivered a stunning blow to heavyweight Pakistan in Texas on Thursday during a surprisingly close T20 World Cup match that went into the equivalent of extra innings.
The match in the group-stage round of the tournament, which the U.S. is co-hosting with the West Indies, was played in a former minor-league baseball park in the Dallas suburb of Grand Prairie, one of three U.S. venues where the tournament is being held.
Cricket fans around the world are calling the win one of the biggest upsets in the history of the sport. On NPR, “All Things Considered” co-host Juana Summers likened it to “the Boston Red Sox losing to the Durham Bulls,” a Minor League Baseball team in North Carolina.
The crowd was dominated by green-shirt-clad supporters of Pakistan who were disappointed by their team’s performance, but left the grounds impressed with the U.S. side, said fan Aziz Rajwani, a 58-year-old immigrant from Karachi who lives in Colleyville, Texas.
“They had a great respect. The crowd was cheering,” Rajwani told NBC News on Friday. “Yes, they were upset with their team, Pakistani fans were. But at the same time they were appreciating this American team.”
The U.S. team, he said, is now the “talk of the town, talk of the world.”
This historic American triumph is not getting the same reception in the U.S, where cricket is still considered a very niche sport, played mostly among its Caribbean and South Asian diaspora.
“Beating Pakistan, and playing for the first time, the way we played today I’m really proud of the boys,” said USA captain Monank Patel, who was named player of the match. “Of course, beating Pakistan in a World Cup is going to open many doors for us.”
The win against Pakistan is all the more remarkable because the American players, who are on the team part time and have day jobs, were going up against a team that won the T20 World Cup in 2009 and came in second in 2007, the year the tournament began, and again in 2022.
Most of the U.S. players are of South Asian or Caribbean descent, and some of them previously played in India or the West Indies.
USA bowler Saurabh Netravalkar, an engineer at Oracle, is already achieving celebrity status in India, where he formerly played for its junior team.