<p>After midnight during Ramadan, makeshift floodlights transform a central Karachi basketball court into an urban cricket arena, where dozens of young Pakistani men chase taped-up tennis balls zipping through the night air.</p>.<p>Donkeys watch on from the outfield and goats rummage through nearby piles of rubbish, breaking occasionally for a pitch invasion.</p>.<p>"After the 'Taraweeh' (special Ramadan prayers), people crave entertainment so that is why many play cricket," batsman Waqas Danish told <em>AFP</em>. "They play all night because some people can't wake up for breakfast if they sleep."</p>.<p>Tape-ball games are ubiquitous across Karachi's streets throughout the year, but Ramadan sees night tournaments pop up in most neighbourhoods.</p>.<p>The uninitiated may struggle to unravel the mayhem of multiple overlapping matches in a cramped space, but for Karachi's street cricketers, there is method in the madness.</p>.<p>The frenetic matches of between four and six overs per innings are concluded before 'sehri', the meal consumed ahead of daytime fasting.</p>.<p>They range from pick-up games on improvised concrete pitches to professional competitions on dusty ovals.</p>.<p>"The kids and youths can't afford kits and all the accessories for playing hard-ball cricket, but they can easily afford the tape ball," competition organiser Taqdeer Afridi told <em>AFP </em>in Karachi.</p>.<p>Money is often involved -- even though gambling is illegal in Pakistan -- and big-hitting mercenaries are occasionally lured from surrounding neighbourhoods to play under lights that craftily tap into overhead power lines.</p>.<p>A tennis ball is tightly bound with electrical tape, giving it extra weight so it swings much like a cricket ball, yet is less damaging if it hits a spectator, window -- or even a passing rickshaw.</p>.<p>Matches played in the poorest neighbourhoods can draw hundreds of spectators, with many onlookers admitting that watching cricket all night helps with the day's fast.</p>.<p>"All day they are sleeping. Maybe they go to their jobs for four or five hours," 19-year-old spectator Rahman Khan said.</p>.<p>After Partition in 1947, cricket was considered the domain of the upper class, played at Karachi's posh clubs and elite schools.</p>.<p>But as the population boomed through the 1960s, cricket adapted to the sprawling metropolis and tennis balls emerged as a substitute for the hard ball.</p>.<p>The cheaper alternative -- which also removes the need for costly equipment like batting pads -- took on several experimental forms in the following decades and is credited with bringing the sport to the everyday Pakistani.</p>.<p>There is no consensus on when the first tape ball delivery was bowled or by who, but legends abound -- and the one thing historians and fans agree on is that it originated in Karachi.</p>.<p>"The tennis ball without tape lacked speed," said veteran Nasir Ali, who recalls the 1980s as the formative years for the tape-ball game.</p>.<p>"On an experimental basis we wrapped the ball with red tape and when it was bowled the speed was amazing," said the 64-year-old, who hosts an annual competition in his apartment block's courtyard.</p>.<p>From legendary all-rounder Wasim Akram to modern-day pace star Shaheen Shah Afridi, many of Pakistan's top players credit street cricket as a positive influence on their techniques.</p>.<p>"In cricket, there is a saying: 'watch the ball' -- it doesn't matter if it is a tennis ball or a taped ball or a hard ball," Pakistan national youth coach Mohammad Masroor told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>"If a batsman can hit any ball, he can play cricket."</p>.<p>Watching young cricketers at a street pitch wedged between an elevated expressway and an apartment block in central Karachi, Masroor said rules adapted to the urban landscape hone a batsman's skills.</p>.<p>A hit back over the bowler's head and beyond the residential area on the full is six runs, but only one run if the ball rebounds off the apartment building.</p>.<p>Players must also beware of the "grumpy uncle or aunty" who is unwilling to return a ball hit into their home. A shot like that can cost a batsman more than just his wicket: they need to go buy a new ball, too.</p>.<p>"Nothing stops them," said Masroor, grinning.</p>
<p>After midnight during Ramadan, makeshift floodlights transform a central Karachi basketball court into an urban cricket arena, where dozens of young Pakistani men chase taped-up tennis balls zipping through the night air.</p>.<p>Donkeys watch on from the outfield and goats rummage through nearby piles of rubbish, breaking occasionally for a pitch invasion.</p>.<p>"After the 'Taraweeh' (special Ramadan prayers), people crave entertainment so that is why many play cricket," batsman Waqas Danish told <em>AFP</em>. "They play all night because some people can't wake up for breakfast if they sleep."</p>.<p>Tape-ball games are ubiquitous across Karachi's streets throughout the year, but Ramadan sees night tournaments pop up in most neighbourhoods.</p>.<p>The uninitiated may struggle to unravel the mayhem of multiple overlapping matches in a cramped space, but for Karachi's street cricketers, there is method in the madness.</p>.<p>The frenetic matches of between four and six overs per innings are concluded before 'sehri', the meal consumed ahead of daytime fasting.</p>.<p>They range from pick-up games on improvised concrete pitches to professional competitions on dusty ovals.</p>.<p>"The kids and youths can't afford kits and all the accessories for playing hard-ball cricket, but they can easily afford the tape ball," competition organiser Taqdeer Afridi told <em>AFP </em>in Karachi.</p>.<p>Money is often involved -- even though gambling is illegal in Pakistan -- and big-hitting mercenaries are occasionally lured from surrounding neighbourhoods to play under lights that craftily tap into overhead power lines.</p>.<p>A tennis ball is tightly bound with electrical tape, giving it extra weight so it swings much like a cricket ball, yet is less damaging if it hits a spectator, window -- or even a passing rickshaw.</p>.<p>Matches played in the poorest neighbourhoods can draw hundreds of spectators, with many onlookers admitting that watching cricket all night helps with the day's fast.</p>.<p>"All day they are sleeping. Maybe they go to their jobs for four or five hours," 19-year-old spectator Rahman Khan said.</p>.<p>After Partition in 1947, cricket was considered the domain of the upper class, played at Karachi's posh clubs and elite schools.</p>.<p>But as the population boomed through the 1960s, cricket adapted to the sprawling metropolis and tennis balls emerged as a substitute for the hard ball.</p>.<p>The cheaper alternative -- which also removes the need for costly equipment like batting pads -- took on several experimental forms in the following decades and is credited with bringing the sport to the everyday Pakistani.</p>.<p>There is no consensus on when the first tape ball delivery was bowled or by who, but legends abound -- and the one thing historians and fans agree on is that it originated in Karachi.</p>.<p>"The tennis ball without tape lacked speed," said veteran Nasir Ali, who recalls the 1980s as the formative years for the tape-ball game.</p>.<p>"On an experimental basis we wrapped the ball with red tape and when it was bowled the speed was amazing," said the 64-year-old, who hosts an annual competition in his apartment block's courtyard.</p>.<p>From legendary all-rounder Wasim Akram to modern-day pace star Shaheen Shah Afridi, many of Pakistan's top players credit street cricket as a positive influence on their techniques.</p>.<p>"In cricket, there is a saying: 'watch the ball' -- it doesn't matter if it is a tennis ball or a taped ball or a hard ball," Pakistan national youth coach Mohammad Masroor told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>"If a batsman can hit any ball, he can play cricket."</p>.<p>Watching young cricketers at a street pitch wedged between an elevated expressway and an apartment block in central Karachi, Masroor said rules adapted to the urban landscape hone a batsman's skills.</p>.<p>A hit back over the bowler's head and beyond the residential area on the full is six runs, but only one run if the ball rebounds off the apartment building.</p>.<p>Players must also beware of the "grumpy uncle or aunty" who is unwilling to return a ball hit into their home. A shot like that can cost a batsman more than just his wicket: they need to go buy a new ball, too.</p>.<p>"Nothing stops them," said Masroor, grinning.</p>