Thursday 30 March 2017

Too good for Samuels

Why would he do that?

That was the primary reaction of a human mind relying on logic and common sense. For a moment, I wanted to believe it couldn’t be Samuels. No. He has rocked the day thus far. He can’t be short of perfection today. 

But for that ball.

As that last ball of Shadab’s quota kissed the outside edge of Samuels’ bat, it wasn’t his day anymore. Neither his side’s. 
The urge to dominate ended in despair for Samuels. And so for a side that couldn’t afford losing fifth in a row to Pakistan. 

                   ********

When Shadab bowled that short leg-break, Samuels kept his composure and slashed it into the square boundary. 

It was a gorgeous shot by a seasoned player of spin. There was an aura of command and authority in that shot. That was from those wrists that like to stand tall when it is really tough. It’s not a coincidence that Samuels has two world-cup winning performances to his name.

As the ball kissed the rope, Samuels came down the track. He looked Young Shadab in the eye. And then he pointed his bat towards cover region, “I’m gonna hit you there kid!”.
Samuels had to counter Shadab for WIndies couldn’t afford another young spinner inflicting their ego.

Shadab could’ve lost his nerve. Inexperience can cloud all the skills and wits. Being that threat from a guy like Samuels, there was merely an iota of hope that Shadab could save his skin. 

Imad bowls in. When the stroke off Samuels’ bat kissed umpire’s boots on its way down the ground, there was a scientific precision at work. Two balls later, Imad bowled with a mid-on well in place for a straight drive. Samuels didn’t even bother and went the aerial way. It landed around the sight screen. 
Next ball flew past cow corner.

Pakistan had lost their chance, if they had any.

                     **********

Next over started with Walton being undone by Shadab. 

When the umpire raised his finger, Shadab didn’t even look at Walton. He turned his face towards Samuels at the other end and looked him in the eye. It was the look of a bullfighter. 

After that Shadab bowled another 12 balls to Samuels. At his best, Samuels could score just 4 off them. 
Nine that he bowled to others yielded three wickets for five runs. 
           
                     ********

By the time Shadab came in to bowl out, Samuels was somehow convinced that he should respect Shadab. He was happy to see him off. It was just six balls. He didn’t want a drama there.

But it was just him.
Shadab wasn’t done yet.

Shadab never offers easy pickings. His unusual bowling action makes it hard to read out of the palm. He targets certain areas and tries testing variations. He uses his wrists subtly. It is his arm movement that helps him with minor speed variations.

Shadab pitched all six at a certain length on off. Some spun. Others didn’t. First five balls were played nicely but for 0 runs actually. Five dots in T20 are simply exasperating in any situation and here it was the man who had middled more balls than any other batsman from either side.

Samuels, somehow, kept his calm. He could’ve tried to swing it harder and higher. But he preferred to stay out of it.

Last ball of Shadab. Samuels knows it would be a wrong’ un. Shadab knew it too. He pitched it on off. Samuels got in the line. It spun and came back in. Samuels wanted to stop it with a dead willow. He knew it’d spin. But, he didn’t know how much would it.
It was a bit quicker for him. Off the Queen’s park turf, it didn’t turn as much as it should’ve. Samuels was stuck in. It turned a little and kissed the outside edge. Sarfraz completed the rest of formalities.
Shadab stretched his legs. He raised his arms. And then he shouted out like a champion.
A dejected Samuels looked down in despair as he walked off the Oval. 
He knew it was over. Not just him, also for WI.

Tuesday 28 March 2017

What WI must know

Shadab Khan poses yet another challenge for WIndies

How to play Shadab Khan?
That were WIndies asking themselves the other night. Only six months ago, there was a similar question. They failed to answer that.
And it cost them a clean sweep.
In their favourite format.

That was, “How to play Imad Wasim?”
It took them 9 wickets and three games to figure out. The last over Imad bowled in that series went for ten runs. Before that, he had bowled 11 overs for 43 runs and 9 wickets.

Samuels told Pakistan that they could play Imad Wasim.
Yet, by that the series was over.

This time, they were prepared for Imad.
But they didn’t know there would be a Shadab Khan.

                               *********

Shadab’s first ball in international cricket was a top-spin.
A young bloke who jogs in like an offie and folds his arm like a finger spinner is actually a leggie. Walton knows that. So when he slashes his bat on the next ball, there is a clear hint of premeditation.
But this one isn't a stock ball. It goes the wrong way and hits his pad.

Gone!

Simmons knew it for a fact that if he didn’t attack this cunning debutant, he’d eat them up. He wanted to hit him straight away. But Shadab got the better of him. And another one goes down attempting to up the ante.

Next in the line is Narine who does nothing different.

The bloke ends his quota with a dream analysis.
Four overs.
Seven runs.
Three wickets.

He could’ve had four though.

                          **********

Six months of wait, to avenge a whitewash, end up in Shadab Khan winning man of the match award.

That must be painful. Having licked the dust, losing to a similar question adds to it.
WI have three games left to settle the score.

Can they do it?

Shadab has to bowl another 12 overs in the series. And WIndies now must be yearning to face him again.

It is a make or break series for Shadab.
But more than him, it is for his opponents. They would like to dominate him and he might enjoy hurting them. Or they might plan to negotiate him and he ends up on the losing side.

Either way, it is going to be a chilling contest.
What WIndies must know, is that Shadab is better than Imad.

Sunday 19 March 2017

Would Sarfraz turn the tide?

Sarfraz has to prove that he is the revolution Pakistan needed

Ahead of a long tour spanning three Tests and five ODIs, Pakistan were in Australia. Misbah was in Pakistan. He was to join them later. Before his departure, in an interview with Umar Farooq from Cricinfo, Misbah was caught desperate and a little bit angry over the current series of events. It looked like he was done with the mindset PCB was toeing.

Azhar Ali was appointed as a successor to Misbah in ODIs after World Cup 2015. He was purely a choice of Misbah. They say Misbah wanted Azhar be included in World Cup squad too but the selectors were not convinced enough. So when he was assigned the role on Misbah’s recommendation, he was doomed to receive what Misbah had been for five long years.

Cricket journalism in Pakistan is a weird phenomenon. It is quite human to have contrasting opinions. But in this part of the world, Cricket journalist find themselves in a self-assumed nobility. For instance, when Afridi played a brilliant knock in PSL and post-match he announced that he had retired from international Cricket, I exchanged it with a person next to me in Sharjah press box. His response was, “It all comes down to media. If media want him back in green, he’d be there in a blink.”
Not to mention that he himself was the “media” he referred to.

Misbah was the only Pakistan star to have survived a media trial that went on for almost a decade. Azhar, on the contrary, couldn’t resist that long.

When Pakistan lost four of their five ODIs against England, chairman PCB asked Azhar to resign. There was a guarantee too that he won’t be excluded from ODI squad if he tenders a resignation. Azhar, in response, stood firm and declined the offer. He knew he had a home series at hand against WIndies. And he whitewashed WI.

The debate should’ve been over.
But actually it strengthened.

A couple of days before Pakistan’s first game against Aussies, chairman PCB once again showed up and told us that Azhar wasn’t the captain Pakistan needed. In the background, there had been a continuous streaming of ruthless criticism over Azhar’s job ever since he took the charge. The plot thickened when Pakistan ended up on the losing side in Tests as well as ODIs.
We can ignore the fact that Sarfraz, the next boy prodigy of media, apparently had to skip the ODI series for his family business. We can also overlook the truth that he had a desperate run against Aussies in the Test fixtures. And we should not remember that he had been terrible there, with gloves too.

Azhar’s spot in the ODI side was so fragile that when he had to sit out of two ODIs following an injury, media started shouting out for Hafeez, the stand-in captain. We knew they wanted Sarfraz at the helm but more than that, they were desperate for Azhar’s exclusion. No matter how well he batted against all the odds, he shouldn’t lead Pakistan.

For he was Misbah’s choice.

At a dinner table in Lahore, I asked Misbah of his views on the hot topic. As plain and simple as himself, his reply was, “That’s not even a debate. Look at the upcoming World Cup and rethink your choices." What he conveyed between the lines should read, "For Pakistan, it's not just the captaincy. Real problems lie somewhere else."

A couple of weeks later, the most viewed news channel in Pakistan held a special transmission “Taakra”. With Wasim, Ramiz, Aqib and Akhtar on the panel, the debate concluded on replacing Azhar with Sarfraz. In their expert opinion, this change would start yielding goods for Pakistan.

It wasn’t about Azhar or Sarfraz.
It was all for the ideological identity Pakistan Cricket keeps searching for.

In less than a week, Azhar resigned. Sarfraz was appointed. Both were formal announcements for we knew eventually it had to happen.

Now that Pakistan are bound for the Caribbean’s, a lot more than Cricket is at stake. Seven off the ten games they play there are to be led by Sarfraz. Had Misbah not opted to go, it’d all be the lion’s share. For now, Sarfraz only has to prove his efficacy in shorter forms of the game.

Can he do it?

Visiting Caribbean’s has never been a picnic for Pakistan. Apart from Australia, this is the only place where they are are yet to win a Test series. Knowing what Pakistan under Misbah have pulled off, this should come as a surprise that even Misbah hasn’t succeeded in that.
But that’s not what Sarfraz has to deal with. His job is to validate all his supporters that have been campaigning for his captaincy over the last two years. He has to prove that he has got a good pick of a side. He has to ensure that Pakistan don’t slip in the rankings and keep their berth for World Cup 2019.

How practical is all that?

While Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Australia and WI have got some fruits courtesy young talent, Pakistan are also looking forward for the same. They got a good pool from PSL. They think they are good to go with it. They have compromised on Azhar too, their most reliable performer with bat in all conditions.

The onus is on Sarfraz now.

Bangladesh got their results for Mortaza led them. Same did Sri Lanka under Matthews. So for Smith’s Australia and Morgan’s England. But there is this thing that could trouble Sarfraz.
Sarfraz comes in here not just as a makeshift arrangement to reverse the odds. His arrival is more of an onset, a new ideology. From Misbah inspired and Azhar led conservatism to Sarfraz’s aggression, this has been a leap of faith for Pakistan. They believe they could’ve done better had they opted for aggression like Sarfraz’s rather than the calculated calmness of Misbah and Azhar. And their coach Mickey Arthur believes the same.

While we know that Sarfraz has a likeness for accelerating things with bat, we also must not forget that he has an overwhelming tendency of losing his nerves under pressure. Similarly, Arthur might have coached big teams like Australia and South Africa in the past but now that he is coaching a weak side, he often crumbles under pressure. We’ve seen both of them going crazy often when the shit hits the fan.
While this young Pakistan side could be more than capable with bat and ball but the international arena asks for more than just game skills.

With all the new talent in place, both Sarfraz and Arthur have to fill in for the mental strength required to behave like a team out there. Add to it the stakes such as direct spot for the World Cup, there would be a tremendous amount of pressure.

Can they stand it in unison?

We’d have to watch for it.
Because this new WI side is not like the one we met in UAE months ago. Nor is the new set-up at WICB anything like that post-Sammy and post-Simmons era.