“After university, Baghbanpura, my old college, offered me the position of sports teacher, a great honour. But this was before my results were announced. Later, I noticed an advertisement for the post of director sports at Garrison College, which is Lahore Garrison University now. I applied and got the job,” she says. She has been there for 28 years now and is also doing her PhD in Sports Sciences from there.
Meanwhile, she attended all coaching courses that she could lay her hands on. “Badminton, athletics, volleyball, hockey, table tennis, basketball … you name it and I would attend it. However, since women’s cricket was not that developed around the time, there was no cricket course to take,” she says.
So how did she end up with the PCB? “Well, when the PCB set up its women’s wing in 2005, Shamsa Hashmi was heading it. Shamsa was someone who used to play hockey with me in the Pakistan Railways team and she had also done her Master’s in Sports Sciences, although she was my senior at university. But she was my friend, too. And she asked me one day to bring my students for the women’s team trials at the Gaddafi Stadium where she had also invited the then PCB chairman Shahryar Khan.
“When I went there I was also briefed about the work of the Women’s Wing and asked to work for their talent hunt programme. That was in February or March of 2005. By October or November of the same year, Shamsa informed me about their coaching and umpiring courses. I was interested in cricket and had played inter-collegiate and inter-university tournaments along with a few club matches too. I decided to go for it,” she says.
Umpire Khizar Hayat was then manager of the PCB Women’s Wing Umpires’ Department. Around seven female and 30 to 35 male umpires attended the five-day course before appearing for the exam. “Only four females — Nabila, a girl from Karachi, Mehwish, a girl from Lahore, Shamsa and myself — were among the females who passed. But only one among them, having passed both her PCB Panel-1 and 2 umpiring courses, entered the field of umpiring,” Humaira beams referring of course to herself.
“Standing on the ground all day and taking decisions on every ball isn’t as easy as it seems to be. There is pressure from players, from the team officials such as coaches, the manager and also the match referee. You need to focus on the ball, whether in play or not,” she says.
Now having umpired more than 150 matches, Umpire Humaira Farah has her sights set on going international. “None of PCB’s female umpires have done any international umpiring. I have worked very hard to reach where I am today and I dream of being on the Panel of ICC Umpires. I want to be able to do that too very soon,” she says.
The writer tweets @HasanShazia
Originally published in Dawn, EOS, September 29th, 2019