Hats off to PCB/ Goodbye Inzi

For doing the right thing for once.

The send off of Inzi was great. At last we have started to recgonise people who have given so much for their nation.

I have watched Inzi all through his career and I would put him right up there with Miandad and Zaheer Abbas.

From the moment when he walked out to bat during that 1992 semi final against NZ to today he has brought immense pleasure to Pakistani fans with his brilliant batting.

Off his 25 centuries 17 resulted in Paksitan winning the match.

Thank you Inzi you will be sadly missed.

Good luck. :wave: :cheer: :cheer:

Re: Hats off to PCB

good buy inzi…we’ll miss u…:teary2: :salute:

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koi pata nahi inzi ko india series mai wapis ghusaiR laiN

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Goodbye Inzi ... We wil miss you so much ...he was a world class player and definately will be remembered!

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A great cricketer Inzy. Many were great but few had the courage to take a stance of what they truly believed, ala Ranatunga
Kudos to Inzy :k:

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The moment when Shoaib Malik started crying while hugging Inzi, it broke my heart. :(

Hats off to PCB though. Great send off!

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Yes Inzi was a class act and it would be difficult to replace him.

Ehsan Bhai Eid Mubarak - lagta hai aap nay Eid kee khushi mein Inzi ko 10 centuries gift kar dee hain. He has 25 not 35 test hundreds

And kudos to PCB for recognising the services of a true legend atlast - dere aayad durast aayad

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INZAMAM THE LEGEND. It was Extremely sad, when he was leaving the field a great batsman. He will surely be missed; he was an absolute gentleman and achieved many successes in his great career.

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and he tried to be bradmanesque by failing to score the "required" runs in his final innings....
that really takes a lot of courage.... :p

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Goodbye Inzi :(
her kamaal raa zawaal !

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Thankyou Inzi for what you have done over the years to bring us the pleasure. It was a treat to watch your LAZY ELEGANCE (as per Ramiz Raja). You will always be remembered as one of the finest batsman !

:cheer:

Re: Hats off to PCB/ Goodbye Inzi

From cricinfo:

Inzamam enclosure: PCB have named one stand at the Lahore stadium, the venue where he made his debut, in Inzamam's name.

Inzamam speaks in his native tongue: "I am going today but I would like to thank you for all the support that you all have given me for the last 17 years. I would also like to thank the members of the board for giving me this opportunity. I would like to thank you the selectors also for selecting me for these 17 years. I thank my seniors and colleagues for supporting me. Special mention to the boys, in this team, who played under my captaincy and for extending support.

I thank my family, my brother and sisters. Especially, my father, who would be really sad that I am quitting the game. Also, my wife for supporting me thick and thin through everything.

"Unfortunately I couldn't finish this game on a high. But that's the way it goes sometimes." Inzamam picked the 1992 World Cup as the highlight of his career.

Inzy walks towards his team-mates. Younis Khan gives him a big hug and one by one each and everyone of his team-mates do the same. Shoaib Malik can't hold back his tears.

Re: Hats off to PCB/ Goodbye Inzi

Dazzling, delicate; a reassuring presence](http://content-www.cricinfo.com/pakistan/content/current/story/315147.html)

This is my Inzamam moment. At Mohali in 2005, Pakistan’s top order had imploded tragic-comically against an imposing deficit. 10 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.
Laxmipathy 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. His 86 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 he 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.

Aamir 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 chiseled from ice.
This is all to nitpick, of course, especially as Pakistan has less 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 teammates, 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.

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 and 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 matchfixing 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.

Re: Hats off to PCB/ Goodbye Inzi

Still remember my uncle told me back in late 80’s or early 90’s about this young giant who scored a double century in Pakistan domestic season playing for UBL and that he is going to be a big sensation in international arena. I said nah. There are so many so called shinning stars in our domestic circuit who fade away playing their whole life for their domestic teams and never make the cut just because they are not good enough. How wrong I was.

I saw Inzi for the first time playing against Windies at home soil. It was a Friday and I came home after Namaz-e- Jumah and sat infront of my TV looking at Pakistan’s response to Windies total. Inzi came and drove Marshall for 2 boundaries, scored 20+ runs and then got dismissed on Marshall attempting a similar drive. However the manner he dealt with Marshall definitely left an impression. Then came the World Cup and there was no looking back.

Thank you Inzi for all your services, Pakistan will miss you :salute:

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The thing that I will remember of Inzamam and may be emulate (if I could) is the immense calm he always portrayed. Anil Kumble says on Cricinfo that Inzamam was so "self-contained" all the time, that it was difficult to play mind games with him. Alan Donald writes that it was impossible to perturb him by saying anything to him. The Toronto incident was obviously an aberrattion to his "gentle-giant" personality.

He holds out a lesson in spiritual living for all of us.

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What a wonderful batsman who saved the game so many times, perhaps the most reliable one who can play with the tailenders and continue to play for long time, saved Pakistan from a very possible humiliation against BD. I remember his innings in WC'92, brilliant timing and brute power. As long as he was on crease in any match we had hopes of winning.

He will surely be missed, what a legend!

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inzi :(

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I felt really emotional after reading comments from all of you guys and specially looking at the video of presentation. Thanks a lot Inzi Bhai for giving us the pleasure of your beautiful batting.

He was definately a legend, I believe our next legend will be Mohammad Yousuf, if given fair chances, he will break all the records God willing.

Inzi the great and I hope PCB does good things like this in the future. Salute to PCB chairman for doing all this (even though I am not big fan of PCB), but we should give credit where its due. Whether it was PCB who made Inzi to retire, we may never know the truth, only if Inzi writes his biography and tell us all about his decision of retiring all of sudden.

I remember while I was working for GHQ Rawalpindi RA Bazar (those days). I used to go and watch matches in Rawalpindi Stadium in either my break time or after work and when I saw Inzi first time playing a domestic match, I did not see him batting but in dressing room I saw him so young and looked giant, I had no idea who he was at that time, only until I saw him later in worldcup to know that he is the same guy who was playing for some domestic team. What a guy he is...............\I never knew he will become one of the greats one day.

Man time passes quick. God bless Inzi and his family I hope he have a brilliant future and all the respect he deserves.

Eid Mubbarak to everyone as well whereever you guys are.

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He will surly be missed a lot by the fans all over the world. I will always remember him as a man with nerves of steel. Good bye, Inzi.
:jhanda:

Re: Hats off to PCB/ Goodbye Inzi

What a great cricketer and servent of Pakistan!!!!
Congrats for such wonderful career. Best of luck.
Please make a career in TV commentry.It will be fun.