
Misbah rues his luck as the Indians celebrate
Misbah rues his luck as the Indians celebrate
Bob and Inzi: one of the last moments together © AFP
Bob Woolmer was a man who lived and died for cricket. Such has been the case with Pakistan cricket that it consumed a strong man like Woolmer. I always feel that leading and coaching Pakistan is one of the worst jobs in the cricketing world. It can bring the best or worst out of you. Each time the team loses every one gets after them. Of course, sometimes the captain and the coach deserve to be blamed but not all the time. Woolmer was a man with a vision and passion to try new things in cricket. It was Bob who told the cricketing world how to make better use of technology to evaluate the opposition’s strong and weak points.
When he joined Pakistan in 2004, after turning down an offer to coach Sri Lanka the previous year, there was a question mark over whether Pakistan would allow him to succeed. As time told it was unfortunate for him to coach and work with a long list of idiots associated with Pakistan cricket and an inapt side for which he worked so hard to prosper. He brought some results but it is stupidity to judge him on the basis of the (statistical) performance of Pakistan team. Still during his stay as a coach, Pakistan won 37 out of 69 ODIs and ten of the 28 Tests.
Bob enjoying happy moments with Younis Khan © AFP
Those who understand cricket know that one can take the horse to a well but one cannot make him drink. The coach can only tell the player to do this and avoid this but if the player is not bothered then why one puts the coach at fault? One example, which I would like to quote, is our players’ running between the wickets. I never saw Younis Khan, running so straight on a cricket pitch as he is shown leaping in 90 degrees in the Pepsi add. When they are on the field they dance off the pitch and run in diagonally or in zigzag only to give the fielders a chance to shy at the stumps. The simple point is that Pakistani batsmen really don’t care.
They say, being a hero is the shortest lived profession in the world. When Bob was with South Africa he held that position for five years between 1994 and 1999. He coached South Africa to 21 victories out of 44 Tests, winning ten of the 15 series they played. During the same period, in one-day arena, South Africa won 83 of the 111 matches and emerged as one of the leading sides at the international front.
The price to be a Pakistani supporter, especially in recent times, has been very high. Whether or not one takes it to his heart or not, he would get through severe mental stress, embarrassment and disgrace mixed with brief (or sometimes long, but very rare) episodes of joy, triumph and euphoria. Even if one has a sound health there is no guarantee that he would not have a cardiac arrest or brain haemorrhage at any point in time.
Throughout the history, Pakistan team has been more or less the same. They are the greatest one day and can shrink from a team of your neighborhood the next. Their biggest consistency is their inconsistency. They give so much variety in pain and in joy that one always keeps them guessing. They can make a meal of the best of sides on their day and on their worst, can make Ireland look like World XI.
Defeats are nothing new to us and we are used to regular setbacks. We know victory and defeat are part and parcel of the game but why must we grab the larger share? But we are relieved when we try to live and believe in the adage that this Pakistan team is the most unpredictable side in the world so it would keep happening to us perpetually. This is only a game and blah blah blah! We enjoy saying the same and sometimes it gives us a soothing effect. So why worry? Pakistan has already won three World Cups in cricket; one under Imran Khan and two by our blind cricket team.
When we were thrashed out of the World Cup four years ago, people responded much like the same. All those concerned in the PCB claimed that they would make every effort in order to build a strong team under a new captain for the next World Cup in 2007. But what has happened? We produced good for nothing openers, no spinner and a world class bowler in Mohammad Asif only to find out that we forgot to educate him properly about drugs. The list of grouses is long, but I need to take a pause and stop here with a salute to a great humanist and professional: Bob Woolmer! May your soul rest in peace.
Cross posted on Cricket bloggers of Pakistan, Cricketviewer and published in daily The Nation on March 20, 2007.
A bigger shock was in store for England. One of their most talented cricketers, Chris Lewis - but one who rarely lived up to expectations - came to the crease. A natural stroke maker with the ability to play a long innings apart from hitting the ball with �lan, Lewis was expected to the man of the hour. But, the scene was similar. The method and the execution of his dismissal too were a repeat of Lamb's ouster. A huge dipping inswinger shot through Lewis' defence to rattle the furniture, resulting in a roar of appreciation from the huge Melbourne crowd. Akram had done the job assigned him. With a sensational burst of top class bowling, he sent shivers down the spine of England batsmen. Perhaps never in the history of World Cup did a two-wicket burst by any bowler prove as devastating as this one by Akram. Mind you, that was a World Cup in which only four bowlers got Man of the Match awards for their effort. The entire Melbourne crowd was on its feet applauding the great fast bowler for his exceptional combination of pace and swing which brooked no answer from the Englishmen.
Later, the tail threw the bat to no avail. With wickets falling at regular intervals it was only a formality and a matter of time before Imran Khan finally achieved all he had wanted to. The great captain enjoyed an all-round triumph himself with the match's highest score and the final wicket. He dedicated the victory to the cause of a cancer hospital in Lahore for which he was fund-raising in memory of his mother. In his 40th year and nursing a troublesome right shoulder, he declared this as his finest hour and the most fulfilling and satisfying cricket moment of his life, a claim clearly supported by the pictures of him holding the �7,500 Waterford crystal trophy, eyes wide with exhilaration, after the ICC chairman Sir Colin Cowdrey had presented it to him.
After that Imran called it a day but his inspirational role is still alive even today. Before the World Cup he had virtually hand-picked the team, and after the disappointment of losing a key player, pace bowler Waqar Younis, to a stress fracture before leaving Pakistan, and a disastrous start when they won only one in five matches (two of which he missed), he urged them to imitate a cornered tiger before they went on to make it happen - to five successive wins. The Pakistanis reached the giant stadium in peak form, while England looked exhausted. The players who had toured New Zealand unconquered had gradually weakened in the face of constant travel and frequent injury. As Pakistan had picked up, they had been losing, first to New Zealand and then, most embarrassingly, to Zimbabwe. "It's not the end of the world", said Gooch after the match. "We got beaten fair and square".
(The article was originally published at Cricinfo, on 10th anniversery of Pakistan's World Cup win, with my other writing byline i.e Ramis. Here is the link)
A photo-finish: Donald runs himself out and Aussies jubilant like never before
Both teams again met in the semifinal, which is believed to be the most stunning game ever played on the planet (until the epic encounter between both sides at Johannesburg last year). There can be hardly any cricket lover who was not watching that semifinal, except Ian Botham who was watching US Open golf. In scenes of complete cricketing madness, the game ended in World Cup’s first ever tie. As Australia had finished higher than South Africa in the Super Six table the result was as good as a win for Australia and a loss for South Africa. As such, one nation was joyous and the other heartbroken.
With just two more balls left Klusener made contact with Fleming’s fourth delivery, neither Shepherd nor, apparently, Donald heard the call as the striker ran. Mark Waugh, advancing from mid-off threw the ball towards the stumps and Fleming relayed it to Gilchrist. Donald had begun his run, his bat discarded, and he was barely halfway when the wicket was broken and the African hearts. Australians were toasting success. "Ridiculous running by South Africa," Bill Lawry boomed in the commentary box. Mike Procter hung up his headphones and went to the South African dressing room. "Shattered," he said. And that was just the commentators.
Mind Ur Cricket - Copyright © 2011 - Mind Ur Cricket