Imran Khan - Pakistan's cornered tiger

Osman Samiuddin salutes Imran Khan
http://content-uk.cricinfo.com/allrounder/content/story/271585.html
To restrict Imran Khan to mere cricket is to heap an injustice upon him. Undoubtedly, he was a giant on the field. He lorded over the game in Pakistan; he chose when to play and when to lead, his teams were handpicked, under his tutelage gawky, precocious teenagers became legends. Under his leadership Pakistan not only won the World Cup, they learnt how to win, eventually challenging the West Indies consistently for top honours in Test cricket.
He was also, without exaggeration, among the finest all-rounders the game has ever seen; at his peak, a fast bowler as fierce as they came and a batsman attuned to most roles you can think of. But he was also, and remains, a giant personality off the field. Once, he was a man most men craved to be. Ruggedly yet aristocratically handsome, swanky London bachelor pad, beautiful, swooning ladies never far, Mick Jagger and Elton John for mates, equally at ease in the worlds of Royal Ascot and ‘Hello’ magazine, as in his Lahore home, hunting in the mountainous terrain in North-west Pakistan, on the cricket field and in cricket magazines. Larger than life than this, is difficult to imagine.
Achievements
What didn’t he achieve? As captain, he led Pakistan to first-ever overseas series wins in India and England. He also led them to a World Cup win and two semi-finals and never, under his captaincy, did Pakistan lose a series to the frighteningly dominant West Indians. He also took 362 Test wickets and scored nearly 4000 runs (average-wise, he tops the four great all-rounders of the 80s). He is one of only two players to take ten wickets in a Test and score a hundred, one of only a handful to take 40 wickets in a Test series (and that too on Pakistani pitches). The list could go on. And all this after he played two years literally as half a player, a serious shin injury preventing him from bowling.
What makes him special
Above all, he had tremendous presence on the field. Sheer will pushed him from being an inswinging medium-pacer to a fast bowler who, in his prime, touched West Indian pace, with an action so beautiful it deserved a catwalk. Arguably, he reverse swung it better than any, even his famed disciples. As a batsman, he improved with age; by the end of his career, an essentially sound technique meant he could do one-down stabilizer, lower-order bully or middle order chaser.
Finest hour
Potentially, it could be hours: his first series as captain in England, where he topped bowling and batting tables, the away series wins over India or England, or even the drawn series in the Caribbean in 1988. Probably edging them all is the World Cup triumph in 1992, his last act as captain and player. With the ball, the sting had gone, but as a batsman, the brain ticked over till the very end. Above all, as leader he was peerless, goading from a rabble, the performance of their lives; cornered tigers anyone?
Achilles’ Heel
He was widely perceived as being too arrogant and aloof, which didn’t endear him to many teammates. In his beliefs, he could be stubborn to the extent of being autocratic, a trait which made him as many friends as enemies. If he liked you though, you could do no wrong. Just ask Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis and Abdul Qadir. If he didn’t, then God help you (and that too after seeking permission from Imran). Just ask Qasim Omar, Younis Ahmed and Iqbal Qasim. To boot, he was never a great fielder.
How history views him
The greatest cricketer Pakistan ever produced and its’ most inspiring leader. Almost single-handedly, he created a legacy of fast bowling on which Pakistan thrives to this day. Without Imran, there would be no Wasim, Waqar, Shoaib, Asif or Gul. Along with Sarfraz Nawaz, he gave cricket reverse swing as well. As a personality, for much of the 80s, he was also one of Pakistan’s most useful PR tools.
Life after cricket
Where most cricketers slip smoothly behind the mic, Imran got busy helping his country. He first built a state-of-the-art hospital for cancer treatment - free for people who can’t afford to pay for treatment - after his mother passed away from cancer, for want of a decent hospital. He then became a politician, battling the many forces of injustice in this country. Cricket success hasn’t translated into political reward just yet, but from being a political joke, he has worked his way up gradually to becoming an opposition politician taken seriously enough to be once offered, he says, the premiership by President Musharraf. In the time he has left, he continues to raise funds for his hospital and dabble in occasional media work for cricket.
Osman Samiuddin is Pakistan editor of Cricinfo
http://content-uk.cricinfo.com/allrounder/content/player/40560.html

Imran Wallpaper
http://uk.cricinfo.com/greatestallrounder/wallpaper.html

Re: Imran Khan - Pakistan's cornered tiger

**^ imran khan is not a cricketr any more.

In his own words "i dont want to be one of those who once played criclet--and rest of there livies they only talk about it..."

so please regard his wishes---and avoid draging him into cricket forum**

Re: Imran Khan - Pakistan's cornered tiger

he does not play cricket anymore but he was once a cricketer and he is often seen commenting on the game on different channels. If he wants to distance himself from cricket, then he shouldn't even comment on the game.

Re: Imran Khan - Pakistan’s cornered tiger

^ Regardless of what he may think now and regardless of what he may still achieve in life, Imran Khan will be remembered first and foremost for his cricketing achievements. Cricket will always remain his first identity. Besides I am not dragging him into anything. Cricinfo is debating the greatest all-rounders and this week they are discussing Imran Khan
http://www.cricinfo.com/greatestallrounder/

My reply is to knockout artist

Re: Imran Khan - Pakistan's cornered tiger

he is also a playboy turned mullah.He probably had more girl friends than Elvis and did'nt mind drinking and womanizing.He had girl friend of every nationality except Pakistani.Some of his ex-gril friends include:Zeenat Aman,Emma Seargent,Sita White etc.

Re: Imran Khan - Pakistan's cornered tiger

There might be people like you, who may not take it easy if someone tell the truth so clearly about such a great son of the land, but it is truth and no one can deny it.

Every Pakistani and every cricket fan on the face of earth came to know him as a great cricketer, and no matter what way of life he may pick, he will always be known as a great cricketer, a legend and true leader on the cricketing field.

What he said mean way more than what you think. He means he was a legend as a cricketer, but we can't limit him to that he want to be more than that, and he did this by starting a cancer hospital, and leading a political party. Which mean he is more than just a legendary cricketer, rather he is leader both on and off the cricket field.

Re: Imran Khan - Pakistan's cornered tiger

I figure, even if he were hypoethetically to become the prime Minister of Pakistan he;d still be called World Cup hero and Prime Minister :D

Re: Imran Khan - Pakistan's cornered tiger

Womanizing yes but I am not too sure about alcohol. Sarfraz Nawaz (not a great friend of Imran's) once said that although Imran frequented pubs and clubs in his heyday he never drank alcohol, he would usu. have a glass of milk!

Imran comes from a very traditional and conservative family. Did you not see his sisters at his wedding reception in London in 1995? They all wear Hijab and everything. so while they are all educated they are n't westernised at all.

Re: Imran Khan - Pakistan's cornered tiger


I don't think he is 'mulla', I remember some of "Islamic" article supposedly written by him before his first attempt at elections but he didn't turn into a 'mulla'.

Re: Imran Khan - Pakistan's cornered tiger

Good article

Re: Imran Khan - Pakistan's cornered tiger

why can't we as a nation discuss someone's achievements and leave his or her character and past aside. for once, just once...tsk.

Re: Imran Khan - Pakistan's cornered tiger

^He is quite a mullah now...thats why he sympathizes with talibans and other terrorists in Pakistan.I remember listening to him in a gathering in Karachi once,he said he used to be atheist,but turned towards Islam after his mother died of cancer.As for Alcohol I am not saying that he was an Alcoholic like Shoaib Akhtar, but he did drink on occasions.He did all those thing without being indisciplined about it,he was very dicsiplined perhaps the most disciplined Pakistani cricketer ever.

Re: Imran Khan - Pakistan's cornered tiger

Just because he sympathizes with talibans and 'terrorists' that doesn't mean he's a Mullah right?

Re: Imran Khan - Pakistan's cornered tiger

egjactly....................Imran Khan glamorised cricket not just in the subcontinent but the world over and his many outstanding achievements speak volumes for him as a cricketer.

Re: Imran Khan - Pakistan's cornered tiger

^lol it does.he has become close friends with Kazi Hussain Ahmad and Maulana fazullul rahman and is often seen making speeches with them against musharraf and America

Re: Imran Khan - Pakistan's cornered tiger

I know Imran Khan quite well actually through one of my relatives...he has been to my house. I know a lot of stories about him

Re: Imran Khan - Pakistan’s cornered tiger

abey tu kyoon jealous ho raha hai. The article is about cricket and Imran not how many girls he had and if he drink alcohol or not. You can’t resist to drag his personal life just to show he is not a good person or maybe to satsify yourself.

Re: Imran Khan - Pakistan’s cornered tiger

he never had a drink in his life…

                                    **i really wish u had read some of his articles.**
**1- liver diseases in Pakistan ----social reasons--physical  effects**
**2-racism in west ------Islamic ideology --**
**3-education system in Pakistan----current  situation--solution for future.**
**4-justice system in Pakistan-----**
**5-**
**in case you have forgotten CANCER HOSPITAL..**
        **

**
that guy is a visionary for haven sakes.

Re: Imran Khan - Pakistan’s cornered tiger

and asked for expert comments on a series or a PAK win or loss in a Match…
lolz…
:clown:

Re: Imran Khan - Pakistan’s cornered tiger

I know we should only be discussing Imran’s cricketing achievements here but this is what Imran Khan told ‘The Guardian’ recently

‘The thing was, I hated pubs,’ he says. ‘I could not tell you how much I detested them. I had been playing cricket for six hours body and soul and the last thing I wanted to do was stand in an English pub and talk about it. I hated the smell of a pub. I hated the look of it. And of course I never drank alcohol. So maybe that was part of it.’

The path of Khan