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[VIDEO] From Lyari (Karachi) with Love for Football...

MenInG

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We may not have a football team that can conquer the world but when it comes to love for the game, Lyari stands head and shoulders above all!

The Lyari Boys have a #FIFAWorldCup Balochi rap song out and it's really good.


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KARACHI: Football fans in Karachi’s Lyari were ecstatic after Argentina defeated Mexico on Saturday to stay alive in the ongoing FIFA World Cup 2022.

It was a must-win match for Argentina after they suffered a shock defeat against Saudi Arabia in their opening match.
 
Karachi similar to India and Kerala with regards football?.

Think Lyari has a population of Makranis (of African descent from the Balochistan coast) who have historically been interested in Football
 
Just a week ago, millions of Pakistanis came out of the cricket fever with their team standing second in the Twenty20 World Cup held in Australia. Now, sports fans are looking ahead, with a raging football fever gripping the otherwise cricket-crazed country as the 2022 FIFA World Cup rolls on in Qatar.

In Siddique Goth, a suburban locality of the country's commercial capital Karachi, streets are festooned with man-sized portraits, and posters of soccer stars like Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel Messi, and Neymar Jr.

A couple of streets are also dotted with posters of Egyptian wing wizard Mohamed Salah, although the North African nation could not qualify for the finals.

Flags of leading football nations like Brazil, Argentina, Germany, England, Portugal, and the host Qatar can be spotted in the locality.

A large screen has been set up by residents at a busy square to watch the slogs together.

Nestled in the outskirts of Karachi's Malir district, the remote neighborhood is also known as mini-Qatar because hundreds of area youths – ethnic Balochs – are working in the wealthy Gulf state.

Brazil is by far the favorite squad of local football lovers, while European sports juggernaut, Germany stands second.

"Neymar is going to rock this time," Nasir Baloch, a local footballer, told Anadolu Agency.

Meanwhile, Sagheer Baloch, a schoolteacher, sees Germany as a favorite.

"The professionalism and coolness that the game of football requires, German players are embedded with them,” Sagheer, a fan of Spanish horsepower, Barcelona, opined.

Speaking to Anadolu Agency, he counts on captain and goalkeeper Manuel Neuer, Kevin Trapp and Marc-Andre ter Stegen to turn the tables in favor of Germany.

Mini Brazil

Football is a popular sport in the otherwise cricket-loving Pakistan, particularly in rural areas. Yet, the national team is ranked 200th in the FIFA world rankings.

Straddling the edge of the Arabian Sea, Lyari, a small shantytown south of Pakistan's commercial capital Karachi, has long been a poster child for gang wars and drug trafficking.

However, it is also known as "mini Brazil" among soccer fans for the talented male football players that this run-down locality has produced over the decades.

"Lyari has always supported Brazil. They (locals) consider it their own team," Ahmad Jan, who coaches Lyari's girls' football team, said.

Speaking to Anadolu Agency, Jan said Argentina is another favorite team in Lyari but "of course nowhere close to Brazil."

"Football runs in our blood. We will congratulate any team that would win the title but our inclination towards Brazil is unchangeable," he maintained, smiling.

At present, he said, Neymar, Salah, and Messi are most popular among the local youths.

T-shirts plastered with the faces of the three players are in high demand nowadays in Lyari, where drum-beating youths took out a rally last week to celebrate the beginning of the event.

The Brazilian national flags can also be spotted fluttering on the roofs of dozens of houses across Lyari.

Home to 1.5 million people, mainly Baloch, the area has over the last 74 years produced a large number of players who have won many titles for the country, especially between the 1950s and 1960s, known as the golden era of Pakistan's football team.

Nonetheless, lacking glamor and government funding, while having to deal with intra-federation schisms and land-grabbing mafia who have been sweeping up sports grounds, football in Pakistan has gradually declined from its previous rank as fourth on the Asian continent in the 1960s.

In April last year, FIFA suspended the Pakistan Football Federation's membership for six months, citing a hostile takeover of the federation's head office by a rival group.

The action was taken when the group refused to vacate the office and hand it over to a FIFA-approved group.

The membership, nonetheless, was restored by FIFA after a period of over a year in July this year.

Pakistan-made football to shine in event

Aside from their love for the sport, Pakistanis will have a special reason to rejoice, although their team is not participating in the event.

Together with China, Pakistan is supplying soccer balls to be used in the forthcoming mega event, which this time will be held in the winter instead of the summer due to the hot weather in the Qatari capital.

Named “Al-Rihla,” an Arabic word for "The Journey," the official match ball for the 2022 World Cup was unveiled in March by Adidas in Doha.

Nestled on the outskirts of the northeastern city of Sialkot, Forward Sports, which also makes footballs for the German Bundesliga, the French league, and the Champions League, has manufactured Al-Rihla for the mega event.

The company was also the official football provider for the 2014 and 2018 World Cups in Brazil and Russia.

The city, which borders India, has been famous for producing the finest quality sports goods and has been supplying footballs for mega-events for a long time.

Production of high-quality footballs is not Sialkot's only forte. It also exports sports goods ranging from cricket bats to hockey sticks and from shining (cricket and hockey) balls to other accessories like kits, shoes, and gloves.

The country earns $1 billion annually from sports goods exports, including $350 million to $500 million from footballs alone.

The soccer ball being used in the tournament is technically called "thermo bonded,” which was first introduced in the 2014 World Cup.

Before that, Pakistan had supplied hand-stitched soccer balls for most of the World Cups from the 1990s to 2010.

Thermo-bonded balls are made by attaching the panels through heat – the latest technology adopted by Adidas and transferred to Forward Sports in 2013. There are no stitches.
 
Such amazing talent on display in the video. Amazing.
 
Foreign Minister (FM) Bilawal Bhutto recently met with the head of the international governing body of football - FIFA - to discuss Lyari’s love for the sport and potential people of Karachi’s neighborhood has.

Lyari is that neighborhood in the country’s largest metropolis where football is more popular than cricket.

Despite the fact that the South Asian nation has never qualified for a FIFA World Cup, he spoke highly of Lyari’s football potential with FIFA president.

On Tuesday, at the request of his Qatari counterpart, Bilawal jetted out to the Middle Eastern country to watch the FIFA World Cup.

In his latest Twitter post, FM thanked his Qatari counterpart for inviting him.

Moreover, the widespread love in the neighbourhood has spread across the border and caught the attention of Brasilian media; the program “Reporter Brasil” on TV Brasil did a feature story on the area.

Lyari was recognised as Mini Brazil and the media outlet tweeted about it.

“We think of Brazil, we think of football. And that’s why a small neighbourhood in Pakistan, where the World Cup is as exciting as it is here in our country, was nicknamed ‘mini Brazil’. And there are fans of our national team there,” Reporter Brasil wrote.

https://www.samaaenglish.tv/news/40...-gets-to-hear-about-lyaris-football-potential
 
Thousands of Pakistanis in a Karachi neighbourhood once synonymous with gang violence and poverty will mass together to roar on Argentina in the World Cup final on Sunday.

People poured through the labyrinth streets of Lyari in the early hours of Wednesday to watch Lionel Messi and his Argentina side on a giant screen beat Croatia 3-0 in the semi-final.

Wearing Argentina shirts, some broke into song and dance after the South Americans sealed their spot in the decider in Qatar against France or Morocco. Fireworks lit up the night sky.

“Most of the youth are inspired by them,” Tahir Khan, a 40-year-old football coach, told AFP of Argentina’s World Cup stars.

Messi is inevitably the favourite – but they also like his Paris Saint-Germain team-mate Neymar of Brazil.

“I see most of the youth wearing Messi or Neymar jerseys. Even at Eid they wear their jerseys… instead of traditional dress,” said Khan.

Residents have brought the World Cup to Lyari, painting life-size murals of their favourite players, hanging flags and bunting, and keeping track of progress on bracket boards marked on walls.

The appreciation of Argentina – but also of fierce rivals Brazil – is not purely about their football skills.

“The Latin American countries are not as (developed) as the European countries but their players are acknowledged all over the world,” Khan said.

Argentina or Morocco?

In one battle for Lyari years ago, gangs infamously used rocket-propelled grenades and assault rifles to fight security forces, with the crossfire shutting schools and businesses.

But the worst of the violence has abated and an increase in security has led to flowering of creativity.

The neighbourhood now clings fiercely to its reputation for producing footballers, iron-chinned boxers, and, most recently, socially conscious rappers.

There is good-natured banter between adopted Argentina and Brazil fans.

“We relate to the Brazilians’ (skin) color and style, that is why we like Brazil the most,” said 45-year-old Shahid Saleem.

“My own favourite team is Argentina but my two sons are staunch supporters of Brazil. Quarrels between father and sons is a daily routine.”

Now a fresh argument looms over Lyari: whether to back Argentina or Morocco if the underdogs stun holders France to reach Sunday’s final.

Morocco would be the first Muslim nation to make it to a World Cup final – a source of great pride for Pakistani football fans.

“Earlier we supported Brazil but they were knocked out of the tournament so now we are supporting Marrakesh (Morocco) as it is a Muslim country,” said Abdul Ghafoor, a 20-year-old laborer and football fan.

Saleem summed up the dilemma for many.

“The prayers of all of Lyari are with Morocco and hopefully they will make it to the final,” he said.

“(But) I am an Argentina fan, so from this side I will pray for Argentina.”

AFP
 
Benn to lyari. Interesting but dangerous area to visit. Especially at night.
 
Brilliant video of football craze in Lyari

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KARACHI: Save for a rectangular glow coming from its far end, the Imam Bux Memorial Football Ground in Malir’s Siddiq Village was completely dark. As you entered from one of its gates something hit your shin.

It was a bouncy green volleyball being used for playing football by little children, one of whom, a little girl, came chasing after it before kicking it back to her team-mates. They were killing time before the final of the FIFA World Cup between Argentina and France on Sunday.

The match was being screened live here from Lusail Stadium in Doha, just like all the other World Cup matches though the ground management was expecting more people here today than the regular crowd.

Kamran Abdullah Murad, chairman of the Shaheed Master Abdullah Murad Foundation who is also associated with the popular Gul Baloch Football Club here was expecting more than a thousand people to watch the match on the 12ft by 20ft big screen put up there which is spreading the glow.

The authorities didn’t turn on the ground lights as they said that their area wiring couldn’t take the load but no one cared. Everyone was fixated on the screen counting the minutes to kickoff.

Everyone there was either coming with an Argentina flag or is donning an Argentina jersey. Not all the people with the blue and white flags and jerseys are Argentina fans though.

Shah Jahan there said he was a Brazil fan. “Since Brazil is out and Argentina is in the final, I’m all for my other favourite player than Neymar, Lionel Messi, and his team,” Shah Jahan told Dawn.

It’s 36 years since Argentina is back in a World Cup final. Big Argentina flags mostly bought from the Lighthouse Lunda Bazaar are swaying in the evening breeze in Malir just like they are in Lusail.

“You also won’t see many France fans here, only three or four. And their number will not exceed four, I guarantee it,” says Zaheer, who is sporting an Argentina jersey also bought from the flea market.

One of those poor outnumbered four had also managed to bring with him a France flag. There were times when looking at him sticking out like a sore thumb you could read his mind. He was most probably thinking of stealing someone’s Argentina flag.

Thanks to the chill in the breeze, there were no mosquitoes in Malir. And even if there were, they were dismissed by the waving and swaying of the blue and white flags.

As the national anthem of Argentina was played on screen there were the fans here cheering too and humming along.

The whistle goes off. The match begins and the Argentina fans don’t have to wait too long as Messi scores in the 23rd minute. Everyone goes absolutely wild. It happens again in the 36th minute when Angel Di Maria brings up Argentina’s second goal. There were more oohs and aahs and whistling, hooting and clapping than even at Lusail.

An occasional cracker would also go off from one or the other houses lining the ground.

Those who stood up to cheer wouldn’t sit back down again prompting several requests from the ground management to sit down kindly, all falling on deaf ears. And then when France came back into the game, there was pin drop silence as everyone felt the need to sit down again. Of course, it wasn’t for long as they finally got their wish.

Published in Dawn, December 19th, 2022
 
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