Rana
Hall of Famer
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2006
- Runs
- 88,548
I think the guy is very talented but his biggest Issue is that he gets easily bogged down at the crease. He has all the shots and can accelerate at a very decent pace once he gets himself in. The curent issue we are witnessing is that he takes far too long to get himself going, is clearly struggling to take singles and rotate the strike, thus inviting pressure on himself and the team. I simply think the issue is the fact that hardly any quick singles are on offer for him in the first powerplay. Therefore, most of his shots are hitting the fielders and he continues to accumulate dot balls. The two new ball rule isnt helping him either.
You must look for a solution to this, and the solution isnt to drop one of your finest batting prospects. 10 international hundreds at the age of 23 is remarkable and we must back this fella to thrive. Therefore I believe coming a little bit late down the order might do him a world of good. The field is naturally spread out 85% of the time, therefore a lot more singles are on offer. It is much easier to play yourself in as a middle order batsman as compared to a modern opener, who practically should have got himself in from the 2nd over of the match. You must think of it this way; A player like Ahmad Shahzad would not have been criticized for his batting approach in one day cricket 20 years ago . The fact is, to compete with teams who now set 350 as the par total you must have players batting at strike rates above 100.
I dont want to see Shahzad being wasted the way players like Butt, Farhat, Kamran, Hameed and Hafeez (in the early part of his career) wasted themselves.
You must look for a solution to this, and the solution isnt to drop one of your finest batting prospects. 10 international hundreds at the age of 23 is remarkable and we must back this fella to thrive. Therefore I believe coming a little bit late down the order might do him a world of good. The field is naturally spread out 85% of the time, therefore a lot more singles are on offer. It is much easier to play yourself in as a middle order batsman as compared to a modern opener, who practically should have got himself in from the 2nd over of the match. You must think of it this way; A player like Ahmad Shahzad would not have been criticized for his batting approach in one day cricket 20 years ago . The fact is, to compete with teams who now set 350 as the par total you must have players batting at strike rates above 100.
I dont want to see Shahzad being wasted the way players like Butt, Farhat, Kamran, Hameed and Hafeez (in the early part of his career) wasted themselves.


) Then I'd say that Tamim Iqbal is a poor mans Sehwag. Only made this comparison due to his obsession with hitting boundaries but his inability to do so.