Twenty years ago, Pakistan had made it to the World Cup final. It was meant to be “Skipper” Tariq Zaman’s last great match, a glorious end to a remarkable innings. After that he would focus on the hospital he was building for the poor and on his political career. But Pakistan lost. Nobody could believe it. Not the fans, not the media, not Skipper. The players were accused of throwing the match, of selling their country and their honour for a few thousand dollars. Skipper retired a bitter, disillusioned man and when his erstwhile vice-captain Faisal Qureshi, aka FQ, took charge of the team, matters went from bad to worse.
The other players of that ill-fated team spent years denying their involvement in fixing, grew older, retired and went their different ways. One became secretary of the sports board and a mentor to the women’s team. Another became a maulvi. Yet another became an alcoholic working in a tobacco shop in London.
It was never proven that these men fixed the match, but the scandal had tainted them for life and they still suffered the consequences. Here, it is interesting to see how a situation appears from two different perspectives. On the one side is the exhaustive media and public analyses and the players’ own explanations for a job done badly: unfamiliar pitch, rain, injury, whatever. Such debates are familiar to anyone living in a cricket-mad country. People have built entire careers out of simply talking about a dropped catch. But the more one learns about how a match can be fixed — even in the tiniest, seemingly most insignificant way — the harder it becomes to not accept that the real reason could well have been the bag full of cold, hard cash delivered to a hotel room in the dead of the night.
But although we may be outraged to see how easy it is to sell one’s national pride, the players’ backstories humanise the novel’s (probable) bad guys. Often suffocated by poverty, many of these wide-eyed kids are barely out of their teens when they fall under the influence of teammates just a hair worldlier. Having given in to temptation, with time they find themselves trapped in a dangerous world from which escaping alive and intact is pretty much impossible.
Hamid details the incidents where each player sold himself and it is tempting to draw parallels between fictional and real matches, but one must resist doing so, especially if one is not hugely knowledgeable about cricket and just wants to enjoy a well-written thriller. However, we can safely draw parallels from what happens within the narrative itself.
Skipper and Sanam, for example, are exactly how we expect a person leading a national sports team to be. It is repeatedly pointed out that the bookies never dared approach Skipper and they’re finding it hard to entice Sanam as well. But Sanam and Skipper’s moral fortitude is easier to uphold; both come from affluent families where money is never an issue. Fatima — and to a lesser extent, FQ — grew up impoverished. The allure of deliberately fudging just one run for enough money to buy the family a decent house is understandable.
Thus, poverty is the rationale used by the players who succumb to the fixers, and it is an uncomfortable implication that money trumps loyalty. But isn’t that how the real world works? Do we have a right to judge when, for the majority, survival is possible only by bending the rules? So when Ethics says, ‘Do the job you’re paid to do with honesty and integrity’, it’s hardly surprising that Reality replies, ‘Bite me’.
From 20 years ago when the men’s team (allegedly) succumbed — first to need, then to greed — to the present when the women are experiencing the same, it seems the cycle will just never end. Plus, it’s hard to fight the crowd. Sanam and Fatima are holding tight to their integrity, but are the others? To the morally upright warrior, a victory counts only if it’s a fair battle, so imagine the two women’s state of mind when they see Saleem Euro chumming it up with the captains of the Indian and English teams.
Which brings us full circle, too. As soon as I finished reading The Fix, I flipped back to re-read the opening pages where the Pakistani women won big. It was such an uplifting chapter and I needed my spirits boosted after the nerve-wracking ride I’d just been on with the novel. But ignorance really is bliss, because now — having learned all that I had learned — I could see how the match had truly played out. I could see the exact moments where the meaning of everything changed, and no cricket-commentating pundit would ever be able to convince me otherwise.
The reviewer is a member of staff
The Fix
By Omar Shahid Hamid
PanMacmillan, India
ISBN: 978-9389109016
252pp.
Published in Dawn, Books & Authors, July 14th, 2019