Friday, March 27, 2026
ADVT 
International

Can't Control What People Say: Sarfaraz Ahmed On Being Called ‘Pig'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 26 Jun, 2019 08:04 PM

    Pakistan skipper Sarfaraz Ahmed has urged his fans to refrain from abuse while criticising his team's performance in what is being seen as his first reaction to the abusive jokes that were hurled at him after his team's crushing defeat against arch-rivals India in the ongoing World Cup.


    While teammates Shoaib Malik and Mohammed Amir had requested the fans not to get personal while criticising the team, Ahmed had so far resisted a comment.


    However, defeating South Africa in their next game to keep alive their chances of making it to the semifinals of the ongoing tournament, Ahmed reacted to the nasty remarks that were hurled at him.


    "I can't say anything on this. It's not in our hands to control what people say about us. Winning and losing is part of the game and it's not that we are the first team to have lost a match; previous teams also have faced defeats," said the Pakistani skipper.


    "Had earlier teams faced the kind of criticism that we are facing, they would have realised how much these things hurt us. Now, there is social media. People write, comment and say whatever they like. These incidents affect the psychology of the players," he added.


    The wicket-keeper batsman urged the fans to refrain from abuse while criticising. "While criticising, one most not abuse. Criticise us on our cricket but don't get abusive with us," he said.


    Pakistan suffered an embarrassing 89-run loss (D/L method) against India at the Old Trafford in Manchester on June 16. This was their seventh loss against the Men in Blue in all the editions of the World Cups.


    After the defeat, the team went on to become the butt of all jokes with fans criticising the players' fitness and their training regime.


    And in a video that went viral, a Pakistani fan was even seen body-shaming Ahmed. The fan—who met Sarfaraz at a mall in London after the India match while the latter was carrying his son—called out to the skipper and asked him why he was "fat as a pig."


    While the cricketer chose to walk away, the man followed him and continued, saying: "You've become very fat, like a pig. You should diet less." Later following a backlash, the Pakistani fan issued an apology and deleted the video.


    "I don't know how that video got uploaded. I am very, very sorry. I myself am a Pakistani and I didn't realise this video would have such consequences. I know you all are very angry at me. I genuinely didn't think this issue would become so big. I had deleted the video. I didn't know he was with his son. I also didn't know he is Hafiz e Quran. Please forgive me if possible," the man said in another video posted by a Pakistani journalist.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Parents Stranded In Japan Granted Canadian Visas For Adopted Children

    Parents Stranded In Japan Granted Canadian Visas For Adopted Children
    Five Canadian families have been granted visas to return home with their newly adopted babies, after being stuck in Japan for weeks due to a bureaucratic impasse.

    Parents Stranded In Japan Granted Canadian Visas For Adopted Children

    21-Year-Old Woman Abducted, Gangraped In Pakistan's Karachi

    21-Year-Old Woman Abducted, Gangraped In Pakistan's Karachi
    Police said they have launched a probe into the case and two of the suspects have been arrested, while the search was on for the third.

    21-Year-Old Woman Abducted, Gangraped In Pakistan's Karachi

    Baba Ramdev To Get Wax Statue At London's Madame Tussauds

    Baba Ramdev will soon have a wax replica at the Madame Tussauds museum of London.

    Baba Ramdev To Get Wax Statue At London's Madame Tussauds

    Women All Set To Get Behind The Wheels In Saudi Arabia

    Women All Set To Get Behind The Wheels In Saudi Arabia
    Women in Saudi Arabia are gearing up to legally drive for the first time starting Sunday.

    Women All Set To Get Behind The Wheels In Saudi Arabia

    Melania Trump Wears 'I Really Don't Care' Jacket Before Visiting Migrant Kids

    Melania Trump Wears 'I Really Don't Care' Jacket Before Visiting Migrant Kids
    Melania Trump has surprised the world by visiting child migrants on the US-Mexico border -- but it was her choice of clothing for the trip that stunned the internet: a jacket emblazoned with the words "I really don't care, do you?"  

    Melania Trump Wears 'I Really Don't Care' Jacket Before Visiting Migrant Kids

    Indian-American Surgeon Appointed CEO Of Amazon-JP Morgan Venture

    Indian-American Surgeon Appointed CEO Of Amazon-JP Morgan Venture
    Atul Gawande practices general and endocrine surgery at Brigham and Women's Hospital and is Professor at the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health and Harvard Medical School.

    Indian-American Surgeon Appointed CEO Of Amazon-JP Morgan Venture