Makeshift gear and nowhere to play? No problem for Cape Breton's cricket diehards - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Makeshift gear and nowhere to play? No problem for Cape Breton's cricket diehards

The growth in cricket on the island is being fuelled by international students. It's estimated there are hundreds of people playing the sport in Cape Breton, despite the fact there are no proper facilities.

'We don't got any place to play around here, so we make our own place to play'

Athul Panicker is an avid cricket player in Sydney. Here he holds up the makeshift cricket bat his neighbour made for him and his friends. (David Burke/CBC)

A stick, a sponge ball and a patch of grass that's all some cricket players on Cape Breton Island need to get a game off the ground.

They scrounge up whatever makeshift gear they can and play in parking lots, baseball fields,even on walking trails.

There's a huge passion for the bat and ballgameon an island where the big sports are softball, hockey and basketball. For many, cricket is more than a game; it's a little piece of home.

"I miss my home all the time. [Cricket]reminds me of my friends actually because we used to play there and we used to have fun. That comes to mind," said Magnus Philip, a Cape Breton University student from India.

And he's not alone in his love for the game.Philip believes there are hundreds of people on the island that want to play,mostly international students from 50 different countries who've come to Sydney in droves to study in recent years.

Magnus Philip gets ready to send a pitch to Panicker. The pair, along with dozens of their friends, have been playing cricket anywhere they can find space. Here they're playing on a patch of grass at an intersection in the Ashby neighbourhood of Sydney. (David Burke/CBC)

"Even I got random calls on my phone asking, 'Buddy, I hear you guys are playing. Can I join? Can I play?'" he said.

"They all want to play, but we don't have the facilities."

Most players didn't bringtheir cricket gear to Cape Breton simply because there were no cricket grounds to play on.But as time dragged on, they missed the game so much they started to make their own gear.

Locals have even stepped up to help.

When a neighbour saw Philip and his friends playing cricket with a stick, he made them a cricket bat. It's flat, wooden, and after a few rough gamesnow wrapped in duct tape.

"The neighbourwhen he saw us, he was so nice and graceful," said Athul Panicker, 27, who is also a CBU student.

"It does the job because we play with the sponge ball, so it doesn't really matter because we don't hit it really hard.If it's a real cricket ball, it's going to be broken in two pieces."

Panicker takes a swing with a homemade cricket bat. He's been playing cricket in one form or another since he was 4 years old. (David Burke/CBC)

Panickerwas four years old when he got his first cricket batfrom his father. Growing up,Panickerplayed cricket any chance he had.

If he had any breaks during the school day, he would squeeze in a game. Hisweekends were all cricket, all the time.

"Cricket is like a native game over there in India. Everybody plays cricket. It was brought by the British people, so all of the Indian people are supposed to play cricket, that's a rule over there," Panicker said with a laugh.

"So all of the schools are playing cricket, everybody is behind cricket. Not much of soccer or basketball is famous in India, everybody is behind cricket."

Cricket used to be popular in Cape Breton too but it was a long time ago.

The first written references to cricket on the island date back to 1863, according to John Reid, a retired history professorat Saint Mary's University in Halifax.

For the last few years, Reid has been researching sports history.

Cricket was a popular sport around Cape Breton, hitting the height of its popularity before WWI, according to history professor John Reid. This image shows the Sydney Cricket team from the 1912-13 season. (Beaton Institute/Cape Breton University)

There used to be cricket teams all over Cape Breton, making it one of the most popular team sports in Nova Scotia.

Reid said cricket is often considered asnobby sport played by the rich, but that's not entirely accurate. It was historically popular among coal miners and steelworkers, as well.

"People from totally different social backgrounds would share the playing surface together ...in some cases they played on the same team. The Sydney cricket club is interesting because it co-opted working-class players even though it began as an elite club. Sometimes uneasily there was a real degree of social diversity," said Reid.

Cricket's popularity in Cape Breton peaked just before the First World War and began to fade after the war ended, partly because the men who used to play were injured or killed. The sport was also overshadowed by the growing popularity of baseball, said Reid.

Reid is a retired history professor who worked at Saint Mary's University. He's researched sports history in Nova Scotia. (Submitted by John Reid)

Still, he said cricket continued to be played on playgrounds into the 1960sby kids who adjusted the rules to their own liking.

That kind of cricket is exactly what's being played around the island todayas Panicker and his friends adapt the game to their new home.

"We don't got any place to play around here, so we make our own place to play," he said. "We kept the wicket as a waste bag, and if you hit the car or something that's going to be out.

"We make our own rules."