Waqar Younis - the inimitable king of speed and swing

another excellent article about our Burewala Express. :slight_smile:


**Pakistan’s poster boy **

Osman Samiuddin in Islamabad (April 12, 2004)

Press conferences, especially pre or post-match, can be many things; routine, mundane, ritualistic. But almost without exception they lack in occasion, meaning and magnitude. All the better, then, when one comes along that evokes a rush of wistfulness and longing, such as that which marked the end of Waqar Younis’s illustrious career.

Looking comfortable and relaxed in a snug-fitting beige top with jeans, with family in tow, Waqar’s press conference marked the close of a period in which Pakistan’s fast bowling richness rivaled, in quality if not quantity, that of the Caribbean pace attacks in the 1970s and 80s. While Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammad Sami struggle to match up, it merely sharpens the nostalgic images of Waqar's contribution to Pakistan's success for much of the swinging 90s.

**He may not have been the granddaddy of reverse swing – Sarfraz Nawaz will undoubtedly put in his two cents here – but he became its most glamorous and potent poster boy. Nobody, not Imran, not Wasim and certainly no-one from the current crop of Pakistan pacers, exploited a battered old ball and 90mph pace, with the “threading a needle” accuracy, as devastatingly as Waqar did. He may not have had the variety of a Wasim (very few do) but if he was a one-trick pony, then what a trick it was. And like his partner in swing, Wasim, his retirement will also evoke a curious and unsettling blend of sadness and relief.

Sadness, definitely, for at his peak, the Burewala Express was a magnificent sight and a destructive force. Sadness, because we will most likely never see another spell like the one Waqar bowled at Durban in 1992-93 against South Africa – a spell which, incidentally, he recalled as one of his most memorable. Coasting along at 159 for 1, chasing a seemingly inadequate 209, Waqar scythed through a batting line-up including Andrew Hudson, Hansie Cronje and Daryl Cullinan, picking up five wickets for 25 runs. **

**Sadness, because if bowlers in the `90s, as Gideon Haigh has argued, are becoming less ambitious and have been “taut, trained, restrictive and repetitive,” then Waqar’s attacking raison d’etre was a glorious rejoinder to that notion. Sadness because of the bombast he brought to the game - while his economy rate in Test cricket was 3.25 and in ODIs, almost 5, his strike rates were among the best of all time (43 in Tests and 30 in ODIs) – if he wasn’t giving away runs, he was taking wickets. **

But there is also relief; because like other Pakistani cricketers, he too stayed on considerably past his peak. Although he developed into a bowler of some nous and skill in his latter years, his effectiveness was never the same. Relief because, as he said himself, he left the game with regrets – some, like the '92 World Cup were unavoidable and thus more painful, but some, like his ongoing rivalry with Wasim, were avoidable and thus annoying.

Relief also because his involvement in player politics brought an era of rampant factionalism and controversy within the Pakistan team. And relief because, during his captaincy, Pakistan lurched from disaster against Australia in Sharjah, to shame in South Africa in the World Cup.

What lies ahead for Waqar? At the press conference, he revealed that an autobiography, predictably and depressingly tell-all in nature, was in the works. Then the media or maybe even, as is strongly rumoured, a stint as bowling coach for the national side. Probably, as is increasingly popular, it will be a combination of both. His success in what PCB Chairman Shahrayar Khan calls his “second innings” will depend heavily, however, on the who’s and how’s of the PCB power paradigm.

His retirement undoubtedly book-ends an era in which, along with Wasim, he was more often than not the difference between a mediocre Pakistan and an extremely dangerous, if inconsistent, version. He began by stating that, for once, at a press conference, he wasn’t under any pressure. Thankfully, for once, we too were present at a press conference with some meaning.

tribute to waqar’s bowling by rediff

http://specials.rediff.com/cricket/2004/apr/12cric1.htm

a wonderful article about Waqar, the champion. enjoy. :slight_smile:


Final Stop For Burewala Express

In his pomp, stumps and batsmen all over the world feared him. A bowler who bamboozled players by sheer speed and swing through the air, Waqar Younis was a treat for any fast bowling fan to watch. C365 looks back on the career of one of Pakistan’s most famous Ws.

Arguably one of the most endearing images of Waqar Younis is the paceman coming in from that long smooth run-up, getting in close to the stumps and letting down a thunderbolt that, more often than not, would swing in late and collect the batsmen’s leg stump with it.

After an innocuous performance in that debut against India at home in 1989, Waqar stormed onto the international scene in 1990, with his amazing feats at the dull Sharjah wicket. Waqar, in tandem with the legendary Wasim Akram, obliterated other international outfits sides with his toe-crushing yorkers delivered at extreme speed. Waqar and Wasim were, at this point, the most feared pair of fast bowlers in history, having learnt from one of the other masters, Imraan Khan.

It was here where the pace bowler started the trend that would later personify his type of fast bowling. He is one of the few players in world cricket who has got more than half of his wickets by either bowled or trapping the batsmen lbw.

**The fastest player to reach 50 Test wickets (he needed just 10 Tests), his first 33 Tests saw him garner nearly 200 wickets at a strike rate of under 30. He would go on to become one of the most successful fast bowlers in the world. In 87 Tests, he took 373 wickets at 23.50 and at the lowest strike rate of all time. In 262 one-day internationals he claimed 416 wickets, making him just the second player to go past 300 ODI wickets.

At the tender age of just 21, he became the youngest player to reach 100 wickets in Test cricket. In ODIs, he was just as devastating, becoming the fastest player to reach the 200 mark. Incredibly, it was on the dusty, batsmen-friendly pitches of the sub-continent where he proved most effective.** It is in Faisalabad and Karachi, with 35 and 38 wickets respectively, that he has tasted the most success while Lord’s has proven a happy hunting ground, with 17 scalps in the three matches he has played there.

The year 1992 was perhaps one of Waqar’s finest, but it was also one of the most disappointing. With the World Cup looming, a recurring back problem robbed him of the chance to play in the game’s most prestigious tournament, leaving many fans to dream of what might have been.

Nevertheless, Waqar shrugged off the injury and headed with the Pakistan to England where he demolished the English batting that summer. The home side had no answer to his skill, speed, swing and ferocity and he returned home with 22 wickets.

From there, things got far less rosy for Waqar mainly due to a torturous action that ultimately forced him to drop his pace in return for line and length. Nevertheless, there were many more memorable moments for Waqar and Pakistan.

Younis’s sagging career was resurrected on the England tour when he took seven wickets in two Tests, including five in Pakistan’s win at Old Trafford. The best ODI matches for Waqar as captain could easily be during the NatWest Series when he took 7 wickets for just 36 runs against England and when he claimed 6 wickets for 59 runs against Australia.

In between, there were the infamous match-fixing allegations, but few could match the pacer for self-belief and sheer hard work. Pakistan’s poor performance at the 2003 World Cup was the final straw as Waqar held onto that optimism that characterized his career.

The skipper of a notoriously unpredictable side in 17 Tests he grabbed 67 wickets, leading his team to 10 wins and seven losses. A first-class career that stretched over 17 years, Waqar finished with 956 victims at the amazing strike-rate of 40.9.

Without injuries and Pakistan’s slide in the international ranks during the late 90’s, it is plausible to argue that Waqar’s career could have been a lot more successful. However, he will always be remembered and revered for being synonymous with quick bowling and a fierce competitor who wore his heart on his sleeve… one of Pakistan’s greats indeed.

By John van Straaten

We will Miss Him!..Great Faster Blower! but a sad ending