“We are baseball players, but we are proud to represent our country. Our aim in Malaysia is to do our best in every match. We want to connect with the international community through this sport,” says Dang.

That’s when construction of a new ground was completed, and the country’s first representative team really came to life.

The old Phu Tho race track, now home to the Ho Chi Minh City Sports Center oval, has also become Vietnam’s new home of cricket since June last year.

“This is a strange game,” says Dang through a translator, sweating after another session in Saigon’s sweltering heat. On the evidence to hand, he’s right.

Fast forward to today, and they are amongst a squad of 20 young men who have been training five days a week on an old horse racing track in District 11 in the hope of being selected to travel to a different foreign country to play a sport they’d barely heard of a year ago, cricket.

In 2011, Dang, a personal trainer from Tra Vinh, and Ngo Duc Thuy, a 25-year-old PE teacher from Binh Thuan, were teammates on Vietnam’s first ever baseball team. Thuy was captain, and they traveled to Indonesia for the biennial SEA Games where they finished fourth out of five.

All things going to plan, he’ll join names like Steve Smith, Eoin Morgan and Virat Kohli as the captain of his country’s cricket team. It’s lofty company, but he’ll have one over these famous names in sport, and he won't be alone.

To make this unlikely story a possibility though, a few things have had to happen.

Once foreigners started landing here again, clubs in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City formed and a league eventually sprung up in Saigon, but the game remained the almost exclusive domain of the country’s growing band of expats.

Never able to get a foothold here, despite an avid following around the world, the earliest evidence of cricket in this country are photographs of Australian troops playing on a cement wicket built by local women in Vung Tau in 1969.

However, when Malaysia confirmed two years ago that cricket would be contested at the regions biggest sporting event in 2017 - the SEA Games - and the Vietnam Cricket Association’s (VCA) major sponsor, Suntory Pepsi, said it would no longer support a wholly-expat league here unless a commitment was made to develop the sport locally, the VCA leapt into action. It created its "Road Map for Cricket in Vietnam," which it presented to the Department of Sports and Culture at the end of 2015.

It all meant that cricket got a permanent base, Suntory stayed on board as a sponsor, and a commitment was made to form a side with the aim of representing Vietnam at the next two SEA Games and next year’s Asian Games in Indonesia.

To attract players a call went out to several of the city’s local baseball clubs. These included the Ho Chi Minh City University of Sport team, where Dang, vice captain Pham Huy Phong and Thuy were all players.

“They said stop with baseball,” said Thuy, referring to the order given by the secretary of his club. “Now you will learn cricket.”

And train they do. Since January the squad has moved from training once a week to a five-day schedule, and are paid a wage of VND5 million for their efforts. It’s probably less than what Thuy’s favorite player West Indian master blaster Chris Gayle makes per run, but it’s a start.

A leap of faith

Prior to their elevation as national representatives, the player’s exposure to cricket had been limited to curious glances beyond the baseball diamond at RMIT University. It’s from there that they witnessed this ‘strange game’ being played by Saigon’s multicultural expats, who form the Vietnam Cricket Association’s T20 league.

The league, and the VCA, led by President Angelo Pillay, has been around in Ho Chi Minh City for 12 years, providing an opportunity for cricket-starved foreigners to fulfill their Sunday league dreams.

Unfortunately, during this time it’d be generous to suggest that inroads had been made into getting local Vietnamese involved. So far none have been formally registered with any of the league's teams.

With the decision to go forward with a local team however, and the above milestones achieved, it meant that on the sidelines of this year’s VCA season, news got around of a team comprised entirely of locals, and several players offered their services to help out.

Stepping up

Australian expat Michael ‘Mick’ Blinkhoff was one of them. He’d played cricket at home for 15 years, most of it at Valley Districts just outside of Brisbane, before arriving in Vietnam in early 2016.

Spurred on by the death of his mother in Australia, he quit his financially secure job as a sales representative on the Sunshine Coast in Queensland, and decided that the life he was leading; comfortable, and centered around pushing himself to complete triathlons and other physical feats, wasn’t enough. He’d also traveled here previously and fallen in love with Thao, his now girlfriend with whom he lives.

Born in Melbourne, raised in New Guinea and educated in Brisbane, Mick’s story is worthy of its own piece. He’s a prolific author, currently finishing off a book about destiny, a teacher, and like many who arrive here, never saw this part of his life happening.

“I turned up to have a look at them in February and ended up knee-deep in teaching twenty guys how to play cricket,” he says.

Giving up five mornings a week including Saturday’s ever since and taking charge of an entire squad is no small feat, especially when there’s a language barrier and it’s done entirely voluntarily. In his own words, “somebody had to step up if cricket is going to have a future here.”

More than just their coach, Mick’s role has grown over the last four months to include English teacher, and three mornings of the week he conducts lessons in the offices to the side of the ground. "In case they are asked about Vietnam by media or other players," he says.

It’s a remarkable commitment, which along with passing on the technical skills of the game; converting pitchers into bowlers and sluggers into batters has been an intensive experience, but one that he’s enjoying.

“It’s something that I love doing,” he says. "I get a lot of value out of it, and that’s my reward.”

On his team’s prospects at the SEA Games - they are yet to play a competitive game, Mick remains realistic, but is hopeful that cricket can prosper here in the future. In any case he’d like to be part of it.