Cricket at Mission Road was dramatic, but not due to the prowess on the field. The ground was right beneath the flight path to Kai Tak airport, only about two nautical miles away. Kai Tak was one of the busiest airports in the world, and jets landed every five minutes or so. And some of them flew over Mission Road.
A thundering noise of a low flying aircraft would signal another approaching flight, and a great shadow would glide across the field as a giant 747 flew past. The noise drowned everything, and perhaps only the batsmen, the bowler, and the wicketkeeper (not even the umpires) kept their eyes on the ball. I, for one, in the outfields, couldn’t help but gaze upward, trying to identify the airline: Cathay Pacific, United, Northwest, JAL, ANA, Korean, Malaysian, Thai, Singapore, Qantas, British Airways, Air France, KLM, Lufthansa, Air Lanka - all flew past. This process - the ear-splitting roar, the massive, gliding shadow – was repeated over and over again during a game.
Even
more dramatically, as I watched, the aircraft would bank sharply to the right
just as it passed the grounds, and disappear from sight. I read that a
checkerboard painted on a hill just past the grounds was the sign for a plane
to make that sharp, 47 degrees right turn, while descending from 600 to 150
feet, so that it could line-up and level off for landing at Kai Tak’s only
runway. All this had to be done within a few seconds, manually, because the
maneuver wasn’t possible on auto-pilot. If you turned too late, the aircraft
would plough into a hill. They said the ride would “give a Valkyrie the
heebie-jeebies”. No wonder pilots nicknamed the descent “Kai Tak Heart attack”!
As I began to travel in and out of Kai Tak, I learned a little secret: the most dramatic views of the landing were from the economy class, in a seat above the right wing. When I did manage to get the right seat, the experience was beyond belief.
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