Brothers, age 7 and 10, launch cricket league for migrant workers in Singapore

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SINGAPORE – Every Sunday morning, on their way to cricket practice, Neel Ramnarayan, 10, and his seven-year-old brother, Jay noticed groups of migrant workers playing cricket on a stretch of open grass outside the United World College (UWC) campus in Tampines.

Under the hot sun, these migrant workers would spend hours bowling and batting amid long blades of grass, and running between stumps kicked into the uneven ground.

“They would play on available open grass plains, but if you bowl on the grass, the ball would bounce very unevenly, or not bounce at all,” said Neel.

His brother Jay said: “They never get a chance to play the game properly... And we are able to do that every single day.”

When the brothers compared the pristine pitch they used for cricket training at the UWC campus with the bumpy grass areas the migrant workers played on, they felt a need to set things right.

Neel and Jay, who study at the Singapore American School, were introduced to cricket in 2020 by their father, Mr Rajiv Ramnarayan, 43, a business owner in Singapore. Both of their parents are permanent residents, who moved here from India in January 2016.

Business owner Rajiv Ramnarayan taught his sons, Jay (in blue) and Neel, how to play cricket in 2020. ST PHOTO: AZMI ATHNI

The Straits Times

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