An Indo-Pak crunch encounter provides the International Hockey Federation (FIH) its biggest audience by a huge margin, which in turn fetches millions of dollars in television rights.
Hosts at international tournament await an India-Pakistan match to boost their ticket sales.
The history of India-Pakistan hockey encounters goes back to their first clash in the Olympic Games final in 1956 at Melbourne.
But the FIH has decided that a majority of this hockey history should be erased.
The 'TMS Data' that the FIH has compiled and circulated around the world only list 46 India-Pakistan matches before yesterday's match in the fourth Asian Champions Trophy here.
The organisers at the ongoing Asian Champions Trophy are circulating statistics based on the FIH data, which seems to be a massive disservice to players who have toiled for decades to score goals and win medals on the pitch.
By the logic, Indian players who celebrated when they scored the remaining 223 goals seemed to have wasted their effort and time on the pitch.
Similarly, only 110 goals by Pakistani players against India were worth the effort and skills exhibited on the pitch, as per the FIH yardstick. The remaining 276 goals may perhaps best be listed in computer games, if the FIH master list - called the TMS Data - is to remain the yardstick of hockey's glorious history.
Decades after their skills dazzled the world and earned plaudits from fans, the players or their friends may now have to write to the FIH to check if any of their goals scored in India-Pakistan encounters were worth the effort.
Incidentally, if the FIH is to be believed, India and Pakistan have met in only 47 head-to-head internationals, including yesterday's action-packed encounter.
In the governing body's book, India are supposed to have won 19 matches and Pakistan 25, with just three drawn encounters in six decades.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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