Eidgah ground In 2014, the then chief minister of India-held Kashmir, Omar Abdullah, inaugurated the first ever synthetic turf at the TRC Polo Ground, a football stadium with a capacity of 16,000 spectators. The project cost over Rs45 million. Masoodi hopes for something similar for Eidgah ground as well. “The stadium should be renovated so that there would be possibility of organising international events here, too. It will go a long way in boosting morale of local players, who can then exhibit their talent on the premier platform,” opines Masoodi.
The Kashmir willow bat has made a name in cricket. It reached the international market decades ago. There are some 16,000 people involved in its trade, contributing to an average output of two hundred thousand bats annually.
India-held Kashmir has over 250 bat-manufacturing units and the steps involved in making a single bat takes nine to 10 months. There are some seven known places for producing bats here like Sangam, Bijbehara, Sethar, Pujteng, Charsoo, Mirzapour and Hallmullaha where after the floods, workers are putting up an effort to start work again. The planks are hewn, whittled, sawn, sanded and threaded until they reach the right shape. Handles and stickers for the bats are imported from Kolkata and Meerut, and even Singapore.
The bats are finished, packed and transported to national and international markets then. “In a wholesale market, the cost of tennis racket is around Rs250 to Rs400, whereas the seasonal bats cost Rs450 to Rs1,000,” says Masoodi.
The bat industry in India-held Kashmir adds over seven to 10 per cent to the India’s Gross Domestic Product. The Kashmir willow is termed as the second finest after the British willow. Processing and utilising bat-manufacturing units could help the country increase its productivity and bring respite to many producers directly and indirectly associated with the sports industry.
Traditionally known as ‘pod shaving’, the bat-manufacturing process was introduced in Kashmir by the British in 1900. The visitors found the Kashmir willow light and flexible for making durable clefts. The bat-making process takes off when the willows are felled, cut and split after being sliced into two-and-a-half feet long logs. These are then left out to dry for at least six months before being transported to bat-making units. Once dried, the logs are peeled by machine and turned into planks and later into 30-inch bat-sized pieces called ‘clefts’.
The finest of India-held Kashmir willow bats are sold at Rs7,000 to Rs8,000 in different parts of India, including Mumbai, Kerala, Chennai and Gujarat. But the workers in bat-manufacturing units here are paid Rs30 to Rs60 for shaping the blade of a bat. MAS, currently, the busiest bat-manufacturing unit has wood shaving all over the place. “We love the smell of wood shavings. It reminds us that we are a successful unit. And by the end of the day we can gather it to take home to burn for preparing and cooking food,” says one worker at the unit.
The writer is a freelance journalist and cricket blogger from India-held Kashmir.
Twitter: @TahirIbnManzoor
Published in Dawn, Sunday Magazine, December 20th, 2015