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Nepal fans enliven Hong Kong T20 games but can city draw cricket crowd regularly? Coach Simon Willis says results upturn is a start

  • Hong Kong thumped Nepal on Saturday with a destructive innings from Babar Hayat, before Sunday’s meeting falls victim to rain
  • Coach Simon Willis says he and players have responsibility to build a ‘winning team that hopefully the region is proud of, and people want to come to watch’

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Hong Kong’s Nizakat Khan plays a shot during Sunday’s T20 international with Nepal, which was halted by rain. Photo: May Tse

Head coach Simon Willis says Hong Kong’s cricketers are playing to “inspire the next generation”, after improving across the board in the first year of the Englishman’s reign.

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Hong Kong have won eight of their past nine completed T20 internationals, and on Saturday beat Nepal by 73 runs following some pyrotechnics from Babar Hayat, who bludgeoned 13 sixes in a 49-ball innings of 110.

Two October matches against Nepal, who will compete in this year’s T20 World Cup, ended in lopsided defeats. A meeting between the teams on Sunday, to begin a tri-series also featuring Papua New Guinea, fell victim to grotty weather after only eight overs.

The rain falling from a slate-grey sky did not dampen the enthusiasm of around 100 Nepal supporters, who made every ball feel like an event. Around 200 had attended Saturday’s match, but Hong Kong Cricket’s hopes for twice that figure through the gates at Tin Kwong Road Recreation Ground a day later were dashed by the cold and wet.

Ground staff pull on rain covers after rain stopped play at Tin Kwong Road Recreation Ground. Photo: May Tse
Ground staff pull on rain covers after rain stopped play at Tin Kwong Road Recreation Ground. Photo: May Tse

Willis said it was “great” to sample a boisterous cricket atmosphere in Hong Kong, but admitted trying to attract more local support was a difficult task.

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“Some of that is out of our control,” he said. “All we can control is what happens on the field, and trying to develop a winning team that hopefully the region is proud of, and people want to come to watch. I think the two are very much linked.”

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