Shahid Afridi - The leggie trapped in a slogger's identity

Obviously written by an Afridi fan

Shahid Afridi is something of an enigma. Talented but at the same time a bit reckless and immature. An Afridi brain fade is always around the corner when he is batting. The query is: how far away is the said corner?

Had he taken his batting seriously and applied more professionalism, he could have been a great one-day all-rounder. His batting (serial slogger/ reckless batsman) hasn’t really matured with the passage of time.

Although techniquewise Afridi was never good enough to bat during crunch moments of the game and although he is a serial slogger, he is more than capable of a few semi-decent (destructive) knocks now and then! It has always been the application that is missing.


For most of his cricketing life, Shahid Afridi has had to contend with impossible expectations. After he smashed a new record for the fastest century in his very first outing at the crease, he was expected to do an encore each time he went out to bat. When he finally began concentrating on his legspinners and variations, he was expected to run through every batting line-up. After he took over the limited-overs captaincy, it was thought he would transform the team into a stick of dynamite. These are burdens that would have crushed any lesser mortal. Afridi has taken them in his stride.

Much of this has to do with his DNA. The Afridi tribe originated from brutal mountainous terrain overlapping Afghanistan and Pakistan. Even today, the name evokes ferocity, daring, and fearlessness. Shahid Afridi’s approach to cricket has been nothing short of tribal warfare. Background, context, and meaning are pushed to the periphery. It’s all about the immediacy of the challenge, the moment of conflict, the act of confrontation and battle.

It is an attitude that has carried him far. Afridi’s 36 international Man-of-the-Match awards place him tenth in the overall list, ahead of the likes of Adam Gilchrist, Chris Gayle, and Muttiah Muralitharan. In T20Is, he has collected more match awards (seven) than any other cricketer - proof of his match-winning abilities.

**He has hit more sixes in international cricket than anyone else, with no threat of being overtaken anytime soon, and has the the highest stike rate (by a distance) among players who have batted in at least 50 innings. In the list of fastest ODI hundreds, his name appears three times in the top seven; in the list of fastest ODI fifties, he appears five times in the top 12. He is eighth in the all-time list of most ODI wickets, ahead of Shane Warne and Saqlain Mushtaq, and behind only Akram and Waqar Younis from Pakistan.

He has a nose for the big moment. In 2009, Afridi lifted Pakistan to the World T20 title, with Man-of-the-Match performances in the semi-final and final. In 2011, he motivated a scandal-weary side to the semi-final of the World Cup, and could well have taken them beyond had his team-mates snapped up any one of Sachin Tendulkar’s four chances in Mohali.**

Yet for all his achievements, Afridi remains a terribly misunderstood and polarising figure. In the eyes of many Pakistan supporters, he is overrated, overhyped, and irresponsible, which is astonishing. Captains and coaches have invariably struggled with his stubbornness, and administrators have certainly never come to terms with his irrepressible independent streak. The previous PCB chief irked him so much that Afridi announced his retirement; the current one remains wary of him and has gagged him from talking to the media.

While there is also a large constituency united in blind adoration for Afridi, their intense devotion is inspired not so much by Afridi’s match-winning ability or all-round repertoire as by his propensity for batting pyrotechnics. For this segment of the fan base, if Afridi gets out early, the known universe might as well collapse. It is not uncommon in Pakistan to see entire stadiums emptying out after Afridi has gone cheaply.

The perpetual irony of Afridi’s career is that almost everything about him - explosive slogging from down the pitch, leonine prowling between cover and extra cover, moody portrayals in the media - has been a distraction from his authentic cricketing identity as a game-changing wristspinner.

He has a bag of tricks that would make Warne proud: a classic legbreak that heads towards first slip after pitching on middle or leg, a topspinner that jags up viciously from a length, a googly, a finger-spun offbreak that comes out of the blue, and a straight fast ball, hurled with the seam up. Wristspinners are supposed to be enigmatic and mysterious, but Afridi embellishes the art with threatening body language, combative appealing and hostile eye contact as only Afridi can.

It took a while for even Afridi to understand his true forte. Called up from the Pakistan Under-19s touring West Indies in late 1996, he earned national selection as a legspinning replacement for Mushtaq Ahmed, and in his first ODI innings he got to a hundred off 37 balls. This talent for clearing the sightscreen fetched him instant renown and made him a regular in the side; the legspinning identity was buried. Within two years, his bowling strike rate was hovering near 70, and his international bowling average had ballooned to over 54.

It’s taken repeated batting disappointments and visceral revulsion from the fans over the better part of a decade for Afridi to finally embrace the bowler inside him. His bowling strike rate is now in the low 40s, and his international bowling average has come down to under 32. With such visible success, the fan base has also adjusted. His detractors remain, but they are increasingly marginalised.

Officially 32 years old, Afridi has reached the period when a cricketer begins to edge past his biological prime. Perhaps not so much in his bowling but to some extent at the batting crease, and certainly out in the field, age is starting show. You can tell that retirement - this time for real - can’t be too far behind. Yet challenging opportunities are ahead for Afridi - the World Twenty20 in September, bilateral series with the likes of Australia and South Africa, and probably one other multi-nation tournament over the next couple of years.

In a recent media interview Afridi indicated that he has begun to reflect on his legacy. Revealing deep ambitions, he said he wants to be remembered with the kind of reverence that is accorded Imran Khan, Javed Miandad, and Wasim Akram. That may be too far into the stratosphere even for Afridi, but the perch he eventually comes to occupy will be lofty indeed. He has served Pakistan with enormous impact, ability and drive, and he definitely has the star wattage. He will go down as one of the great X-factor players for sure, a tremendously skilled limited-overs specialist - certainly one of the best.

Saad Shafqat on how Afridi’s legspin has been overshadowed by his batting | Opinion | Cricinfo Magazine | ESPN Cricinfo

Re: Shahid Afridi - The leggie trapped in a slogger's identity

Afridi wants to be accorded the same reverence as Imran, Miandad and wasim. He is not even quarter of those guys. Please dont insult those legends.

Re: Shahid Afridi - The leggie trapped in a slogger's identity

while we are on his topic do you think waqar belongs to this revered list or not?

Re: Shahid Afridi - The leggie trapped in a slogger's identity

I think he does.

Re: Shahid Afridi - The leggie trapped in a slogger’s identity

Haters Gona Hate \o/

:jhanda:

Re: Shahid Afridi - The leggie trapped in a slogger’s identity

ppl used to make fun of imran khan, waseem akram, inzimam n may more, they all r legends, ppl r criticizing u , means u r doing good :k:

Re: Shahid Afridi - The leggie trapped in a slogger’s identity

Whne did people make fun of Imran and Wasim? Compairing Imran, Wasim and Miandad with Afridi is like compairing Jinnah with Zardari.

Re: Shahid Afridi - The leggie trapped in a slogger's identity

oh plz ehsan uncle politics mat lia bech mei, everyone is entitled to their own opinions, i respect ur opinions but.....

Re: Shahid Afridi - The leggie trapped in a slogger's identity

I have said time and time again

Afridi is a great entertainer there is no question about it.
Will I have him in ODI team? YES
Will I have him in T20 team? YES
Great player? NAY

Its so common to use the term "great" these days that it has lost its charm. Great is the word that you want to associate with Bradman, Gavaskar, Imran, Miandad, Ponting, Lara, McGrath, Holding and VIV and not with Sehwag, Dilshan, Afridi, Collingwood etc etc

Re: Shahid Afridi - The leggie trapped in a slogger's identity

Waqar most certainly belongs in the same class

Wasim had more variety but at the peak of their powers (when I think back to the test series in England in 1992 and 1996), Waqar was the more destructive partner IMO ... the one who triggered English batting collapses with his deadly inswinging yorkers

Re: Shahid Afridi - The leggie trapped in a slogger's identity

I think he does. btw, he could have done a lot more had it not for the politics b/w him and akram.

Re: Shahid Afridi - The leggie trapped in a slogger’s identity

As good a writer as Saad is, I think he sometimes gets carried away by his emotions.

In an article he wrote on cricinfo after Pakistan’s impressive 3-0 whitewash of England in the UAE, Saad claimed that this was our finest test performance ever!

It (however praise-worthy) wasn’t even statistically our best performance as Pakistan had whitewashed (3-0) both Australia (1982) and NZ (1990) before in a test series at home

No knowledgeable cricketer or fan would buy Saad’s assertion!!!

Our greatest test series performances have all been under Imran’s captaincy

  • Beating India 1-0 for the first time in India in 1987 (current chief selector Iqbal Qasim and Tauseef Ahmed were the architects of the win sharing all ten second innings wickets)
  • Beating England 1-0 for the first time in England in 1987

Don’t go by the narrow margin of victory over 5 tests. This was the age of hostile partisan crowds, dull test draws (no mandatory 90-overs per day rule), biased home umpires and ofcourse no DRS

But **our finest test series performance IMO has got to be the 1-1 drawn (three test) series in the Caribbean in 1988 **(certainly no mean feat).

**Pak v WI - 1988
**Test Series - Matches & Results

What If Imran’s Pakistan had toured the Caribbean in 1983?
Cricket Web - Features: What If Imran’s Pakistan had toured the Caribbean in 1983?

Would have won it 2-0 but for Viv being reprieved by the West Indian umpire off Imran’s bowling in the third test. The umpiring in general was biased and poor

What’s more the two great veterans led the way - Imran with the ball (23 wickets) and Miandad with the bat (2 hundreds)

Re: Shahid Afridi - The leggie trapped in a slogger's identity

As for Afridi he is an inconsistently brilliant ODI bowler (his bowling record against the major teams is not great) and average batsman capable of slogging some quick runs (but rarely under pressure)

good but not great in my book

Re: Shahid Afridi - The leggie trapped in a slogger’s identity

I thought that list was of ‘all-rounders’.

Really? What “people” used to make fun of IK, WA, Inzi? I believe even the opponent players were never able to make fun of these legends on ground.

Re: Shahid Afridi - The leggie trapped in a slogger’s identity

oh yes really, if ppl r criticizing you, guess what they r not able to digest good things about you :k:

Re: Shahid Afridi - The leggie trapped in a slogger's identity

^ if you didn't notice until now, Afridi has been criticized for the 'bad things' like impatience, his good things were appreciated but criticism has always been for the bad ones.

Re: Shahid Afridi - The leggie trapped in a slogger’s identity

:yawn:

Re: Shahid Afridi - The leggie trapped in a slogger's identity

^ thats reflection of Afridi's mind :D

Re: Shahid Afridi - The leggie trapped in a slogger’s identity

So Inzi was never good against Aussies and Africa means he was not a great batsman :help:

Re: Shahid Afridi - The leggie trapped in a slogger’s identity

inzi and afridi being compared :eek: