Sunday, January 29, 2012

Pakistan - The Best in 2011-12 and the Best of all Time at Home!

Remember what I posted just before the test series between Pakistan and England got underway?

This article was all about what the test series meant for Pakistan cricket, and how it was all about showing the doubters that we are not only good at beating lesser sides, but are one of the best test teams around.

It still hasn't sunk in that Pakistan have not only won the 2nd test, but also won the series; if that is how I am feeling then I can't even begin to imagine what all those critics and doubters would be going through right now.

It is time to wake up and realize what Pakistan have just done.

Believe it or not, they are up 2-0 and the prospects of a whitewash are truer than ever.

Pakistani Magic against low Totals
This was only the second time that Pakistan had defended a total below 150 successfully in a test match. The last time was against New Zealand in 1993 when Wasim and Waqar took 5 wickets apiece and Wasim bowled unchanged for 22 overs to ensure Pakistan defended a score of only 127.

That's funny because right after Pakistan's innings ended yesterday, my facebook status was "is anyone else dreaming of Ajmal & Co. doing what Wasim and Waqar used to do in the 90s or am I the only ultra optimistic fool?"

Guess at times it pays off to be an eternal optimist.

The night before the 4th day I was involved in a debate on what kind of target would be a winning one for Pakistan. The general consensus was that a target of 200 was the minimum that was required. Some said, 180 would be a fighting total also.

Little did we know that even a lead of 75 would have been enough! And to think that Pakistan managed the impossible and bowled out England for their lowest total ever against us.


Pakistan's Winning Streak
This was Pakistan's 4th consecutive test win, and it was also their 7th test win in their last 9 test matches. If you extend this run further back to the start of 2011, then Pakistan's record reads: Played 12, won 8, drawn 3, Lost 1.

Those numbers give Pakistan the best test record amongst all test playing nations for matches played since January 2011.

Since the beginning of 2011 till date, Pakistan have won the most number of test matches, have the best win:loss ratio, and have the highest win percentage and the lowest loss percentage, amongst all test playing nations.



Is there any doubt then that at present, Pakistan is the best test team out there?

Saeed Ajmal's Fastest 100
Going into this test, Ajmal required 7 wickets to get to a haul of 100 wickets in test matches. And he managed just that many - 7 wickets in Pakistan's epic victory over England. Not only did he pick up his 100th test wicket, Ajmal also became the fastest Pakistani player to get there in 19 test matches - 1 less than Waqar Younis and Mohammad Asif.

Ajmal's feat - 100 test wickets in 19 tests - puts him along side legends like Ian Botham and Andy Roberts. No one has got to 100 wickets as fast as Ajmal has since Botham did 35 years ago.


Abdur Rehman Not Far Behind
Traditionally, Ajmal has been Pakistan's match winner while Abdur Rehman's role has been to stop the runs. Rehman has bowled long spells in the past without getting many wickets; but he has bowled long economical spells and has troubled batsmen frequently. What he does at one end also plays a factor in the opposition losing wickets to Ajmal.

But yesterday was Rehman's day. He finally shone and exploited the rough created by England's and Pakistan's pacers to full advantage. It was only Rehman's first 5 wicket haul in test cricket and what a day to achieve that.

If you take a look at Rehman's test record, it doesn't look much different to Ajmal's. Both their averages, strike rates, and economy rates are very similar. They also have the same number of 4 wickets hauls.


It wouldn't surprise me if Rehman joins Ajmal as the fastest Pakistani to get to 100 test wickets.

Pakistan - Kings at Home
While the UAE might not be home to Pakistan, they have played most of their cricket here over the last 18 months and they remain unbeaten in a test match in both Abu Dhabi and Dubai.

Who says it isn't home here for them?

Pakistan have always favoured home conditions and have always done well at home. But its strange then that despite having the best win:loss ratio of all time amongst all test playing nations for test matches played at home, no one really thinks of Pakistan when you think of test teams that are significantly dominant at home.

I mean, beating India in India or Australia in Australia is considered the final frontier for many teams.

At one time beating West Indies in West Indies was also considered a huge feather in one's cap.

These are feats not many teams have achieved.

Yet, despite all this hype, it is Pakistan that turns out to be the strongest team at home!


Soon, beating Pakistan in the UAE will be one of those frontiers that teams would want to achieve.

For England, that challenge comes around next week.

Tell me whose not already thinking of a whitewash!

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Saturday, January 28, 2012

World Number What?


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Wednesday, January 25, 2012

How Good is Misbah Ul Haq Really?

Did you know that his full name is Misbah Ul Haq Khan Niazi?

Do you know who else shares the same last name?


If being an "Ul-Haq" wasn't enough, he is also a "Khan" and a "Niazi".

No wonder Misbah is well on his way to being the best Pakistan captain ever. Or the best captain ever.

His critics will always point to the World T20 final in 2007 and the ODI World Cup semi final in 2011. One game denied Pakistan a world cup victory, and another that denied Pakistan a place in the World Cup Final. To date, Misbah is blamed for the defeats, but the critics forget that if it weren't for Misbah, Pakistan would not have even got close to victory in those games.

Lets forget those blemishes for a bit and lets take a look at what Misbah has been able to achieve as captain of Pakistan.

He returned to the team as captain in 2010, right after the spot fixing scandal had hit the country like a storm. The team was down and out and there seemed to be no coming back from the dark depths that Pakistan cricket had drowned itself into.

18 months since and it has been one hell of a turnaround.

Sure Misbah is not solely responsible for that turnaround but he has been at the helm and he has played a big part in it.

The performances speak for themselves, but even more than that Misbah has been able to lift a team whose spirits had been crippled, whose confidence had nose dived, and whose unity and discipline was being questioned by everyone concerned.

A glance at Misbah's performance as a captain shows unbelievable results. He has captained Pakistan in 14 test matches, 14 ODIs, and 5 T20Is, a total of 33 international matches, out of which Pakistan have lost only 2!

Yes. Only 2. Pakistan have lost only 1 test and 1 ODI under Misbah.

That is it!

It can't only be luck for this long.

This gives Misbah the best record as captain ever. Sure he hasn't captained for as long as other players have captained their countries, but even then, this record is phenomenal!


Not only has Misbah succeeded as a captain during this time, but he has also succeeded as a batsman.

He has led from the front on all occasions. He has relished the captaincy and has become the backbone of Pakistan's batting line up. His overall record is very good anyway, but as captain that same record becomes a great record.


With the way Misbah batted today against England and took Pakistan out of a precarious position, I believe that all these records will only improve for as long as he captains Pakistan.

Misbah has been a knight in shining armour, if there ever was one, for Pakistan cricket. If it weren't for him, who knows where we might have been today.

Statistics never paint the complete story, but they do provide a glimpse of how good or bad someone has been.

And all this just tells me that Misbah has been really very very good, if not great.

(Credit to Analyst Maaz for the captaincy record table)

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Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Psyched Out by the Teesra


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Monday, January 16, 2012

Pakistan's Test Team to Come Full Circle

The Pakistan vs England test series starts tomorrow at the Dubai International Cricket Stadium, and its not just any series for Pakistan. Its a test series with a lot of significance. Its about coming full circle from what started in 2010. Its about playing the number 1 test side in the world. Its about proving to the doubters that the last year was not about beating lesser sides, but about a resurgent team that has been playing the best test cricket it has played in a long long time.

It all started with Shahid Afridi being appointed as test captain in mid 2010 just before the series against Australia, which was played in England.

Afridi retired after being in charge for just the 1st test against Australia before Salman Butt took over for the 2nd and final test of the series. In Salman's first test as captain, Pakistan beat Australia in a test after over a decade and they ended up drawing the test series against the former number 1 test team.

What followed was disaster.

A 3-1 drubbing at the hands of England and the spot fixing scandal, which we all are trying to forget. Things seemed extremely bleak for Pakistan after that series. There was a man that had retired after being in charge for just 1 test match. There was another who was thought to lead Pakistan for a long time into the future, but faced a ban from cricket due to his involvement in spot fixing. Pakistan had lost its pace spearheads to the cricket underworld.

The team and the country were in shambles. There seemed to be no coming back from what had had happened.

However, what followed was a turnaround that no one would have expected.

Misbah Ul Haq returned to the team and this time as test captain. There were doubters all over the place. A man whose career seemed over was not only back in the team but also leading it.

Misbah's first test in charge, and Pakistan's first test since the spot fixing scandal, was against South Africa in a two test series in Abu Dhabi.

Pakistan drew 0-0.

Since then, Pakistan has beaten New Zealand, Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe, and Bangladesh in test series, and drawn against the West Indies.

Pakistan have not lost a test series under Misbah and they have lost only 1 test match since Misbah has taken over.

Since that Australia series, Pakistan have only lost to England, having drawn with or beaten all other opposition.

They have played against all test nations except for India, and they have proven that they are at par with all of them, if not better.

So this series against England is all about redemption for what happened during the summer of 2010, its all about showing those doubters that Pakistan can do just as well against the top test teams.

England might be number 1 in the test rankings, but Pakistan has one of the best test records amongst all teams over the last 18 months.

England might have a very strong top 6, but Pakistan also has a stable batting line up that has consistently performed over the last 18 months.

England might have a strong bowling line up, but Pakistan has the best test spinner in the world and a pace attack that can use conditions in Dubai and Abu Dhabi to their full advantage.

England will not be taking Pakistan lightly, and I suggest that all the doubters don't either. This test series is going to be one of the biggest ones for Pakistan and it will show everyone just how good a test team we really are.

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Thursday, January 5, 2012

My Love-Hate Relationship with Lala Pakistani

Contributed By Azfar Adil (guest blogger)

I am not a Shahid Afridi fan. Quite the opposite. He is everything that I believe is wrong in Pakistani cricket and, by extension, Pakistan at large. He is the personification of our modern style-over-substance culture: a culture that values a 10 ball 24 over a well constructed 100, Afridi over Misbah. Hum ghaas khayein ge magar bum banayein ge.

What's particularly galling is the undeniable talent on display every time he laces up a pair of cricket boots. He tantalizes us with sparse occurrences of sanity in his batting. Even his detractors had to marvel at the way he shepherded a hounded Pakistani team through the T-20 and ODI World Cups. He has developed into Pakistan's best and most consistent ODI bowler (only made better with the addition of Saeed Ajmal).

With all this however, there are the regular brain farts: godawful swings across the line, lame charges down the pitch, on pitch sambas, cricket ball samosas and various repeated retirements. I have often wondered what Afridi's talent would produce if coupled with even half of Miandad's brain. I wonder this still.

I am a child of the eighties, spoiled by Pakistani cricket. This team has given me many gifts; a six in Sharjah, the twilight of a Lion's career, the left arm of God, banana inswinging yorkers, the straightest of straight bats from the roundest of round sportsmen, two converted mullahs each with a cover drive they could only have attained through a life of prayer and piety, a doosra a teesra and maybe even a chautha. It is through this legacy of champions that I evaluate Shahid Afridi and all objective evaluation finds him lacking.

So why bother? I don't know. Or at least I didn't know why I bothered until very recently. I was following the ODI series against Sri Lanka online, splitting my concentration between risking a derivative, following the score and receiving SMS from my father. Somewhere between Lala making 75 out of a Pakistani score of 200 and throwing out the Starman on his way to a 5 wicket haul (basically single handedly winning the third ODI), I realized the power of the man and his method. Shahid Afridi makes me feel like I belong, like I felt when I was a child, like a Pakistani.

I am that most confused of individuals, the Pakistani transplant. Na idhar ka na udhar ka. I left the land of the pure at what I thought was the ripe old age of 18, ready to conquer the world, a giant in my own mind. I landed in the US and promptly had to grow up to the immensity of the world and my small place within it. While I was absorbing the world around me and changing, my homeland was changing as well. Nawaz gave way to Musharraf gave way to Zardari, all the while accompanied by a liberalizing media and a de-liberalizing populace. I now go home to a shade of the place I knew, wondering whether my Pakistan ever really existed or whether I was just too young to understand what my country was when I lived within its borders. There seems to be nowhere to go and nothing to believe in except Allah, ghairat and of course Imran Khan.

I don't mean that last part flippantly at all. Imran Khan has many exceptional achievements, on and off the cricket field. But the only reason he is a credible politician is because Wasim Akram had the game of a lifetime in the World Cup final. I don't know my country anymore, but I do know that I can stop anyone on the streets of Karachi and have a long passionate argument about the relative merits of Taufeeq Umar and Imran Nazir, gesticulating wildly and then going our separate ways without rancor or hurt feelings. We are bonded with each other through cricket and little else. The only time we consider ourselves Pakistani as opposed to Sunni, Shia, Sindhi, Punjabi or Mohajir is when Shahid Afridi bats for all of us.What Lala gives me is more subtle than anything that can be objectively evaluated. Continued mismanagement and corruption in the institutions of power in Pakistan have left the country bankrupt; financially, culturally, intellectually and morally. If only while he bats, Afridi convinces me that he can succeed despite his obvious shortcomings. That his resilience is born of our resilience as a nation. That while he bats for us, all Pakistanis can succeed despite our obvious shortcomings. That we can be the best in the world, known as champions and not terrorrists and malcontents. Lala gives me hope; and isn't that what being Pakistani is all about?

About the author: Azfar's relationship with Pakistan cricket is similar to the relationship a meth head has with his crystal; he can't stand what it does to him and his family/friends, but can't tear himself away from its unique high. He lives in New York with his beautiful wife Marium, her beautiful cat Munni and his beautiful PS3.

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