The result was keep. KTC ( talk) 20:37, 22 November 2013 (UTC)
Contested PROD. Article was originally prodded with the reason, "The lasting significance of this match has not been proven. Coverage at the time of the game was nothing more than routine, and there is nothing here to suggest that the match has transcended into cricket lore." PROD was removed with the reason, "Notable match among arch-rivals in the world cup, had significant coverage, attended by premiers of the nations." As I have noted above, the match did receive coverage, but that coverage was nothing more than routine for a match between India and Pakistan, of which there have been hundreds. This match has not had any lasting consequences, and in the two years since it happened, there has been no indication that it will be looked back on as a cricketing classic. – Pee Jay 01:13, 14 November 2013 (UTC)
India-Pakistan World Cup semifinals match goes way beyond cricket Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and his Pakistani counterpart Yusuf Raza Gilani are watching the match together in what is being referred to as an example of 'cricket diplomacy.' As Pakistan takes on neighboring India in the semi-finals of cricket’s World Cup today, much more is at stake than just bragging rights for the billion fans expected to tune in. Pakistan’s cricketers have not played a match in India since the Mumbai attacks in 2008, which Pakistani officials have admitted were partly planned on their soil. Dialogue between the two nations resumed only last month, and the countries remain locked in a bitter dispute over the Himalayan territory of Kashmir, over which they have fought three wars. For something approaching a comparison, think: the United States vs. the Soviet Union in the 1980 Winter Olympics ice hockey match dubbed “ Miracle on Ice.”
An encounter to stop a subcontinent Interest is at fever pitch across the region. India's parliament is shutting up shop at 2.30 pm. A large screen has been erected in the halls of debate. Mumbai's taxi drivers are taking the day off. Companies are asking their employers to arrive at 7am, promising to stop work in time for the first ball. They, too, have put up screens in offices and on factory floors. Otherwise no one would turn up for work. The Melbourne Cup might stop a nation. India versus Pakistan in the World Cup stops a subcontinent.
The result was keep. KTC ( talk) 20:37, 22 November 2013 (UTC)
Contested PROD. Article was originally prodded with the reason, "The lasting significance of this match has not been proven. Coverage at the time of the game was nothing more than routine, and there is nothing here to suggest that the match has transcended into cricket lore." PROD was removed with the reason, "Notable match among arch-rivals in the world cup, had significant coverage, attended by premiers of the nations." As I have noted above, the match did receive coverage, but that coverage was nothing more than routine for a match between India and Pakistan, of which there have been hundreds. This match has not had any lasting consequences, and in the two years since it happened, there has been no indication that it will be looked back on as a cricketing classic. – Pee Jay 01:13, 14 November 2013 (UTC)
India-Pakistan World Cup semifinals match goes way beyond cricket Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and his Pakistani counterpart Yusuf Raza Gilani are watching the match together in what is being referred to as an example of 'cricket diplomacy.' As Pakistan takes on neighboring India in the semi-finals of cricket’s World Cup today, much more is at stake than just bragging rights for the billion fans expected to tune in. Pakistan’s cricketers have not played a match in India since the Mumbai attacks in 2008, which Pakistani officials have admitted were partly planned on their soil. Dialogue between the two nations resumed only last month, and the countries remain locked in a bitter dispute over the Himalayan territory of Kashmir, over which they have fought three wars. For something approaching a comparison, think: the United States vs. the Soviet Union in the 1980 Winter Olympics ice hockey match dubbed “ Miracle on Ice.”
An encounter to stop a subcontinent Interest is at fever pitch across the region. India's parliament is shutting up shop at 2.30 pm. A large screen has been erected in the halls of debate. Mumbai's taxi drivers are taking the day off. Companies are asking their employers to arrive at 7am, promising to stop work in time for the first ball. They, too, have put up screens in offices and on factory floors. Otherwise no one would turn up for work. The Melbourne Cup might stop a nation. India versus Pakistan in the World Cup stops a subcontinent.