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"Let there arise out of you a band of people inviting to all that is good enjoining what is right and forbidding what is wrong; they are the ones to attain felicity".
(surah Al-Imran,ayat-104)
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User Name: Noman
Full Name: Noman Zafar
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Bowlers on Inzamam-ul-Haq

'Inzamam had all the time in the world'

Interviews by Nagraj Gollapudi

October 12, 2007

For the better part of two decades Inzamam-ul-Haq has earned the respect of bowlers the world over. Cricinfo asked five men who went head to head with the man for their impressions of him.



Kumble has been among the very few bowlers who has had consistent success against Inzamam © AFP

Anil Kumble
He was one of the top five batsmen I bowled to in international cricket and I was fortunate enough to get him on more than a few occasions. He always had a lot of time, knew when to take the risk and when just to push along. He was very good at planning an innings.

Inzy could hang in there and control the game and guide the Pakistan batting, but at the same time he could occasionally become impatient.

I always felt that he was more vulnerable if he first faced spin when he came in than the fast bowlers, because against fast bowlers he could move his feet easily. I trapped him quite a few times in front of the stumps - not just because of his late foot movement, but also because I tended to bowl quicker since he was a bit suspect in front of the wicket.

If you weren't successful, he could be a challenge. As he proved against India, in his second-last Test here, in Bangalore during the 2005 series, where he just went on and on to pile up 184. My other favourite Inzy innings was the one against Bangladesh at Multan in 2003.

He was not someone who was aggressive in his body language; he was always self-contained. I don't think one could play mental games with him.

Favorite Inzamam shot The back-foot punch.

Allan Donald
Bowling to Inzy was almost like bowling to a brick wall. Everything about him was unfazed, nothing could rattle him - he was so solid. He was very calm of nature, and even as captain you felt he never got angry. The only time I saw him angry was when Pakistan were called off the field at The Oval last year.

As a batsman he was a very, very difficult guy to bowl to. He was not the most elegant batsman ever seen, but he was very effective in his own way - a bit like Steve Waugh; and I'm not comparing him to Steve Waugh, just comparing their natures. Inzi was very resilient and put a very high price on his wicket.

When he was playing really well he had all the time in the world and all the shots to go with it. He played from quite deep in the crease and that gave him more time. The minute you started coming a bit fuller, thinking you might get him through the gate, the timing of his shots was incredible. He had such good balance for a big guy.

Our strategy was to bowl a little bit fuller and make sure that it was on the off stump, and not middle and off, because he was very good working the ball off the stumps. In the first 15-20 balls he didn't really look to get into the ball or at the ball on the front foot, so we concentrated on bowling fuller and finishing on the off stump. Then we would try peppering in the short one from time to time, because the bounce had been his undoing here in South Africa sometimes.

You can't compare Inzy to any of his team-mates, or even former Pakistan batsmen. This guy, to me, was the one batsman who showed a bit more real guts: to get out there, apply himself, get over the hot period and get himself in

Allan Donald

But over a period of time we realised we were wasting our time trying to bounce him early on because he almost wanted us to do that. What made our job difficult was he was very patient, and that was because he was very disciplined: He left a lot of balls and was a good judge of pitches and how to leave balls on the bounce or lack of bounce. He was good at wearing bowlers down. Sometimes it felt as though if anything was going to get him out it was him getting bored and playing a rash shot or running himself out. Mentally you couldn't upset him. It didn't matter what you said. In that respect he is like Jacques Kallis.

You can't compare Inzy to any of his team-mates, or even former Pakistan batsmen. This guy, to me, was the one batsman who showed a bit more real guts: to get out there, apply himself, get over the hot period and get himself in.

He was no doubt a great batsman and he would be in my top five: Sachin Tendulkar, Brian Lara, Steve Waugh, Inzamam-ul-Haq and Mike Atherton.

Favourite Inzamam shot My favourite Inzy shot was the straight drive. He didn't really look to hit through the line to a ball that was full: he would always hit it down the ground past the bowler, the hallmark of a top-class player.

Damien Fleming
During the 1994 tour of Pakistan, in the game before my Test debut, at Karachi I was the twelfth man and I was asked to put the champagne on ice when the ninth wicket for Pakistan went down. But by the end of it Inzamam and Mushy [Mushtaq Ahmed] put on 60-odd to win the game. Inzamam showed a lot of maturity, a lot of class, putting faith in his partner not to panic even if he was a No. 11. He was an intelligent cricketer.

I did get Inzamam a few times early in his innings. Being a swing bowler I backed myself to get a nick or to trap him lbw early, as he was never a great starter, but once he got going he covered all types of bowling, playing with no obvious weakness. Like all great batsmen, once he got in the zone he didn't throw his wicket away - he went on to get big scores.

For a big man he didn't try and over-hit the ball. And he didn't need to, because he had wonderful timing and immense power.



Hoggard thinks he has his man, at Multan in 2005 © AFP

Yes, he could be quite slow on his bat swing and on getting his front foot down at times, and so a couple of times I hit his pad before the bat came down. But over the years his defences couldn't be breached and the only way out then was to build the pressure and make him run hard between the wickets without giving him any cheap singles or doubles.

I still remember his great hundred against us in Hobart in 1999-00. At one point I was pretty flattened out and out of ideas. So I came round the wicket and bowled a couple of dot-balls and pushed him back. Then I thought I would bowl him the slower one, the offspinner, which used to get a lot of batsmen driving on the up. It came out perfectly but he picked it up, waited for it to land and just smashed it through the covers for four. Normally the weight of the batsman is on the back foot and the loopy one brings them forward, and if they are not to the pitch of the ball it goes in the air. But Inzy adjusted his shot and his timing - and this was during the second innings when it was real difficult. Only great players can do that.

One of my lasting memories of Inzy was during his last trip to Australia [2004-05]. The Australian press asked him what he felt about Glenn McGrath targetting him during the series. Inzy's response was, "Isn't that what bowlers do?" Always made his point in his own way without saying too much.

Favorite Inzamam shot I like batsmen who hook and pull and Inzi was always a good one to watch in that regard.

Chaminda Vaas
It was always a challenge to bowl to Inzamam, one of the greats of international cricket in both forms of the game. It was not difficult to bowl at him as such, but his was never a cheap wicket - he always was among runs. You had to bowl in good areas; the margin of error against him was very, very limited.

As a left-armer my natural delivery to him was the inswinger and that seemed to put him in trouble often, but if it was not pitched properly he would dominate soon. What I mean by good areas is: good line and length, around eight inches up always, and keep hitting particular spots the pitch which would get him.

For him it came naturally: he was very relaxed, just like Mark Waugh and Carl Hooper. Without a doubt he is among my top five batsmen

Chaminda Vaas

Inzamam was as strong in defence as he was in attack. He had good eyes and was a good timer of the ball. He always made many runs on subcontinental wickets against both pace and spin.

I have seen very few cricketers in international cricket who have so much time to play their shots. For him it came naturally: he was very relaxed, just like Mark Waugh and Carl Hooper. Without a doubt he is among my top five batsmen.

Matthew Hoggard
Inzamam is one of the greatest batsmen that has ever lived. And one of his greatest virtues was that he had so much time for his shots. That was because he always hung back; he didn't lunge at the ball and get forward mentally - like all great batsmen in history.

He was very much an accumulator of runs but, having said that, you didn't know what mode he would come out in to bat. He could switch from defence to attack without any trouble. And he always looked to bat for long time.

Part of his success was that he played himself in - just looked to stay in till he got the pace of the wicket and the bounce. He would try and make sure he was still there when the bowlers were in their third or fourth spells, because that's when he scored the majority of his runs.

My strategy to get him was simple. He was susceptible to the lbw early on, with the ball nipping backwards, as he didn't move his feet that much. And he was too good to get easily riled mentally. Having said that, he could surprise you with his aggression on occasions. I remember in my second Test, at Old Trafford, I hit him on the head and the next ball he tried to hit me out of the ground. Thankfully he didn't connect properly.

Favorite Inzamam shot The hook and pull were his best shots - he just had so much time to play them.

Nagraj Gollapudi is assistant editor of Cricinfo Magazine

 Reply:   A genuine matchwinnerscript s
Replied by(Noman) Replied on (13/Oct/2007)
Fifteen years after his Test debut, Inzamam-ul-Haq signed off a glittering career on the final day of the second Test against South Africa in Lahore

Inzamam-ul-Haq's Test career

A genuine matchwinner

Mathew Varghese

October 12, 2007



Inzamam-ul-Haq: a batting giant for Pakistan © Getty Images

Fifteen years after his Test debut, Inzamam-ul-Haq signed off a glittering career on the final day of the second Test against South Africa in Lahore. His performance in the sign-off Test wasn't what he would have wanted it to be, and while that hardly diminishes from an exceptional career, it did mean he missed out on a couple of important landmarks.

The 17 runs in his 120th and final Test not only left Inzamam - who finished with a Test aggregate of 8830 - two runs short of equalling Javed Miandad as Pakistan's leading run-getter in Tests, but also brought his career batting average down to 49.60, marginally below the 50-mark, which is considered by many as a benchmark to distinguish between a good and a great batsman. In Inzamam's case, however, that definition clearly doesn't hold.

Inzamam's best year in Tests was 2005, where he scored 1000 runs at 83.33 in eight matches. He was particularly impressive between 2000 and 2003, when he amassed 2963 runs, including 10 hundreds, at an average of 61.73.The last couple of years clearly weren't great ones for him, though: he averaged 35.36 in 15 Tests since the start of 2006.

Inzamam's overall average slipped below 50, but he still finished with an average of 50.16 for Pakistan, as he played the Super Test for the World XI against Australia, where he made one run in two innings. (For Inzamam's career summary, click here.)

Inzamam's career batting record
Team Matches Runs Average 100s 50s
Pakistan 119 8829 50.16 25 46
World XI 1 1 0.50 - -

The aspect of Inzamam's career that stands out is his ability to be a matchwinner. When he scored runs, Pakistan usually won. Pakistan's reliance on him is also reflected in the fact that his average plummets to 28.36 in the 39 Tests Pakistan have lost while he's played.

Inzamam 's record by result
Result Matches Runs Average 100s 50s
Won 49 4690 78.16 17 20
Lost 39 2156 28.36 2 13
Drawn 32 1984 47.23 6 13

He averages a phenomenal 78.16 in matches won by his team, putting him in elite company -among batsmen with at least 3000 runs, only two batsmen average more.

Highest averages in matches won (Minimum 3000 runs)
Player Matches Runs Average 100s 50s
Don Bradman 30 4813 130.08 23 4
Kumar Sangakkara 31 3166 87.94 11 9
Inzamam-ul-Haq 49 4690 78.16 17 20
Garry Sobers 31 3097 77.42 12 11
Rahul Dravid 36 3674 76.54 10 18

Another current player who's done exceptionally well in matches won is Michael Hussey. Though he hasn't scored 3000 runs in wins yet, he averages 84.22 for his 1516 runs in the 15 matches won by Australia.

Inzamam's averages soars to a Bradmanesque 94.42 in matches won at home, while Bradman himself hovers above the 150-mark.

Highest averages in home Tests won (Minimum 1000 runs)
Player Matches Runs Average 100s 50s
Don Bradman 21 3361 152.77 17 2
Inzamam-ul-Haq 20 1983 94.42 7 9
Garry Sobers 11 1322 94.42 5 3

With 17 of his 25 hundreds coming in wins, Inzamam squeezes himself right in the middle of eight Australians in the list of batsmen with most hundreds in winning causes. Ricky Ponting tops the list with 26, and barring Don Bradman and Greg Chappell, he's played alongside the rest - brothers Steve and Mark Waugh, Matthew Hayden, Justin Langer and Adam Gilchrist.

Most hundreds in matches won
Player Matches 100s 50s
Ricky Ponting 78 26 25
Steve Waugh 86 25 25
Don Bradman 30 23 4
Matthew Hayden 64 21 19
Inzamam-ul-Haq 49 17 20

Inzamam also captained Pakistan in 31 Tests from 2001 till earlier this year, winning and losing 11 of the 31 matches in which he led the team, including the controversial forfeiture against England last year. However, captaincy didn't affect Inzamam the batsman: his average as leader stayed over 50.

Inzamam as captain
Matches Runs Average 100s 50s
31 2397 52.10 7 14

It's inevitable that Inzamam will always be compared to Miandad, and rightly so, as it was Inzamam who took over the mantle of being Pakistan's mainstay from Miandad. Both Inzamam and Miandad have similar away records, while Miandad averages significantly higher at home.

Inzamam home and away
Venue Matches Runs Average 100s 50s
Overall 120 8830 49.60 25 46
Home 49 3709 53.75 11 20
Away 68 4821 45.91 13 26
Neutral 3 300 75.00 1 -

Javed Miandad home and away
Record Matches Runs Average 100s 50s
Overall 124 8832 52.57 23 43
Home 60 4481 61.38 14 17
Away 64 4351 45.80 9 26

Inzamam averages over 50 against most teams, but the one blotch on his stats are his numbers against the best teams during his playing days: against both Australia and South Africa, his average dips into the 30s. Even here, the numbers are similar for Miandad. Against West Indies, the best team during his time, Miandad averaged marginally below 30.

Inzamam and Miandad against the best teams
Player Opponent Runs Average
Inzamam-ul-Haq Australia 785 31.40
Javed Miandad West Indies 834 29.78

Though Inzamam is widely known for his poor running-between-the-wickets, Miandad is the one who has a higher percentage of run-out dismissals. Inzamam's run-out woes are largely in ODIs, having being dismissed 40 times in that manner. Inzamam and Miandad have similar dismissal percentages, the only difference being while Miandad has been caught behind far more often.

Dismissal summary (figures in percentage)
Mode of dismissal Inzamam Miandad
Bowled 12.9 12.5
Caught by fielder 46.6 38.1
Caught by wicketkeeper 14.6 22.6
Stumped 3.4 2.4
Leg-before 18.5 19.6
Run-out 3.4 4.8
Hit-wicket 0.6 0.0

In their 189 and 200 innings, Miandad and Inzamam have remained unbeaten 21 and 22 times during their career.

Inzamam, however, has the highest number of centuries for a Pakistan batsman, and he has also scored a triple-hundred, something that Miandad failed to achieve despite being able to convert the hundreds into big ones.

Break-up of scores (figures in percentage)
Runs scored Inzamam Miandad
0-19 39.5 35.9
20-49 25.0 29.1
50-89 19.0 20.6
90-99 4.0 2.1
100-149 10.5 6.9
150-199 1.0 2.1
200 and above 1.0 3.2


 
 Reply:   Exit Inzamam, the modest legen
Replied by(Noman) Replied on (13/Oct/2007)
The end was not what had been anticipated, especially the hasty manner in which it arrived. Ultimately, it did not matter as Pakistan cricket bade a teary, emotional farewell to Inzamam-ul-H

Pakistan v South Africa, 2nd Test, Lahore, 5th day

Exit Inzamam, the modest legend

Osman Samiuddin in Lahore

October 12, 2007



A guard of honour as Inzamam departs for the final time© Getty Images
The end was not what had been anticipated, especially the hasty manner in which it arrived. Ultimately, it did not matter as Pakistan cricket bade a teary, emotional farewell to Inzamam-ul-Haq at Gaddafi Stadium in Lahore.

The board renamed an enclosure in his honour and a brief visual presentation of his achievements was shown on the big screen. As he said goodbye to "my boys", his successor as captain, Shoaib Malik, broke down. He wasn't alone.

Javed Miandad's position as Pakistan's record Test run-scorer stays intact, just, and though Inzamam regretted not breaking it, he had 16 satisfied years to look back at.

"I wouldn't say my career was zabardast (extraordinary), but I am generally happy with it," said Inzamam with typical modesty. "I wanted to break the record but Javed bhai was a much better player than me. Even if I broke it, he has played a huge part in the runs I got."

His last innings lasted all of two balls; a first-ball clip to square leg suggested something special, a second-ball dance, swipe and walk back to the pavilion told another story entirely. He did it, he said, because he wanted to win a Test for Pakistan one last time.

"I wanted to play a memorable knock, I wanted to play aggressively because that could have won the match for Pakistan," he said. "It's difficult to describe my emotions when I walked in. There was a lot of pressure and though I've hit a number of deliveries like this for sixes, today in the battle of batsman and bowler, the bowler won.

Because he is now an ex-Pakistani cricketer and there is some previous, he was asked the question that is asked of all of them: Will you reconsider your decision to retire? "No chance. The youngsters are doing well, they did well at the Twenty20. It is the right time to go and I wanted to do it at home."

The youngsters are doing well, they did well at the Twenty20. It is the right time to go and I wanted to do it at home

His last press conference was also in keeping with most of his others, low-key with the standard wit. He was asked about the most difficult bowlers he faced: "Paul Harris was the most difficult...today." Will he play in the ICL or the IPL, asked another journalist. "I'll play for both, thanks." Who was his favourite captain? "If I say one the other will get angry."

With the humour, there was sadness, at the prospect of not doing what he has done for the last 16 years. "I am sad. I love this game and have been in it for so long. I've been thinking about my last five days, my last three days, my last hour so much. It's difficult to explain the emotions, but it's sad."

If the various leagues are out of the equation, there is no immediate cricket on the cards. He is not planning an academy just yet. Instead, he wants to go down the route his first captain Imran Khan did after he retired. Like Imran, Inzamam is building a hospital in Multan, his hometown, which is almost ready. "I have more time now, so I will concentrate on that."

And on that quiet note, he slipped away from Pakistan cricket.

Osman Samiuddin is the Pakistan editor of Cricinfo


 
 Reply:   Dazzling, delicate; a reassuri
Replied by(Noman) Replied on (13/Oct/2007)
This is my Inzamam moment. At Mohali in 2005, Pakistan's top order had imploded tragic-comically against an imposing deficit

Looking back at Inzamam-ul-Haq's career

Dazzling, delicate; a reassuring presence

Osman Samiuddin

October 12, 2007



'Against pace, on his day, he was the equal of any and the same reflexes made him probably the best slip Pakistan has had' © Getty Images

This is my Inzamam moment. At Mohali in 2005, Pakistan's top order had imploded tragic-comically against an imposing deficit. Ten for 3 in the fifth and heavy defeat read the scoreboard when Inzamam walked out. If his mood has ever been dark at the crease, it was here.

Lakshmipathy Balaji bowled the innings' sixth over; Inzamam struck three boundaries off the first three balls, none of them deserving their fate. The last I will remember till I remember nothing else: from the back, the contours of his love handles visible, he gently hunched forward. As the left heel landed, bat met ball, a forward push, no more, but mid-off never had a chance. Inzamam's 86 that day was unusually hurried, and though men below him saved the Test, without Inzamam they had nothing.

Others will remember other shots, other days: a World Cup semi-final six, the last-ball poke past point in Ahmedabad, the triple, a Karachi hundred against India, the Multan escape. But they all speak only one truth, that when Pakistan absolutely needed him, he pulled through. Not always, because he was needed most days and he wasn't one for the nine-to-five life. But much more often than not, he did, and that is precious.

The environment, the personality, didn't exist for him to become a glam lone ranger like Lara. Javed Miandad, Salim Malik, Mohammad Yousuf and Younis Khan all helped ease the burden, not always equally. Neither was Inzamam as driven, as ruthless as Tendulkar, Kallis or Ponting. A louder media might have helped, but that hunger would've done so more. Against pace, on his day, he was the equal of any, and the same reflexes made him probably the best slip Pakistan has had.

A touch distasteful, maybe, to recall what he wasn't - because what he was was special enough - but in a time of such batting excess, it is important to situate him. The first time his average reached 50 was in his 92nd Test. Only from his 100th, marked with a century and win, did he sustain it. Tragedy is, it fell below the milestone in his final Test.

Alongside Javed Miandad he is the greatest Pakistani batsman and undoubtedly one of the best, most compelling of modern batsmen

Aamer Sohail, never one to call a spade by any other name, got to the core of the batsman Inzamam: a great player, a rare blend of force and delicacy, yes, but could he have done even more? Ten hundreds in 378 ODIs says maybe, as do ordinary records against South Africa and Australia, the best bowling attacks of his time.

Two of his finest came against the best: an unbeaten fifty against Australia to chase Pakistan's highest Test target, and a 92 the equal of any century at Port Elizabeth. Seventeen match-winning hundreds out of 25, among the best rates ever, also settles many debates. Batting so far down the ODI order hurt his conversion-rate, but in a stiff chase, the heat on, Inzamam was the sharpest tack, capable of innings chiselled from ice.

This is all to nitpick, of course, especially as Pakistan has fewer batting heroes than it should. Much more convenient to say that, alongside Javed Miandad, he is the greatest Pakistani batsman and undoubtedly one of the best, most compelling of modern batsmen.

Captaincy brought out the human in Inzamam, despite his reluctance for the post. He was a caricature before: aloo, overweight, loves a nap, (and his food even more), comedy runner, loses runs when he loses pounds, hits fans. He probably didn't mind it, because nobody minds goodwill, sympathy and endearment the world over.

His dry, sharp wit, already known to team-mates, emerged when he had to address press conferences. He was also honest: asked to assess an under-utilised bowler's performance once, he replied, "If he had performed I could've told you."

The Bangalore win, on the last afternoon, to level the series, was the making of Inzamam as leader. The allsorts attack he used then would today be good, honest Twenty20 material. Yet somehow he tricked Mohammad Sami, Arshad Khan, Shahid Afridi and Danish Kaneria into believing they could dismiss the most frightening batsmen in the world. And they did. On the field Inzamam was never more alert, more harassed, more proactive and under greater strain.



A reassuring presence © Getty Images

That sparked a 15-month period in which Pakistan prospered under Inzamam and Bob Woolmer. Suddenly Pakistan calmed down, came together. With the bat Inzamam touched his peak; five hundreds in 11 Tests at over 80, as Pakistan beat England, India and Sri Lanka.

But subsequently decay set in. Inzamam's calm became inertia, he drifted from Woolmer; religion, glue one year, became distraction the next. That most human of all maxims, that power corrupts, afflicted him. As Pakistan stumbled out of the World Cup in an ugly daze, Inzamam was famously accused of being a dictator, haughty and a maulvi (preacher).

In truth, he did things this last year which he shouldn't be remembered by, notably a cranky, emotional, accusatory press conference. His last dismissal was strange, but in a career that long, a blemish or two (an uneasy, indirect entanglement in match-fixing was another) is human.

With Inzamam departs the last of 1992, when Pakistan cricket was a different world. Not that it was stable before, but that world has since come undone. Inzamam didn't keep it all together; he couldn't for no one person could, but he was there through all of it, the highs, the lows, the thick, the thin: a reassurance. In that alone, there is greatness.

Osman Samiuddin is the Pakistan editor of Cricinfo


 
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