Waqar got injured due to overuse of him by his county side.He was phenomenal for Glamorgan.Used to take 80, 90 wickets per season.Pakistan didn't utilize him to his full capacity.
No, he didn't.
I am from Manchester - so a Lancashire fan - which is where Wasim Akram played.
But from 1987-1994 I was at university in London, and so I saw almost all of Waqar's Surrey career.
And I'm sure that [MENTION=7774]Robert[/MENTION] would agree with the following points......
1. It was county cricket which took in three rough diamonds in the form of Imran Khan, Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis and allowed them to hone their skills in good conditions against a range of batsmen on a range of wickets. They would have been Javagal Srinath without this.
2. Waqar's stress fractures to the back came about not after the English county season but after a series at home against Sri Lanka in 1991-92. He took 16 wickets at 17.43 in a 4 man pace attack with Wasim Akram, Aaqib Javed and Saleem Jaffer while the fifth quick - Imran Khan - didn't even bowl.
But Imran had been warning him for nearly two years that he was trying to bowl too fast and would get injured. And he did - straight before the World Cup (which Pakistan won anyway).
For the rest of Waqar's career he operated at lower pace - from 1992-1996 generally around 140K with occasional deliveries back over 150K to shock the batsman.
I had watched Waqar play against Aaqib's Hampshire the previous summer at The Oval. Waqar took 6-45 and 6-47, and bowled less than 20 overs in both innings. In spite of that, the skipper Ian Greig repeatedly told him to take it easy, because he was sprinting in from his long run.
This is why Waqar got so annoyed with Shoaib Akhtar when he famously told him to "shut up and bowl".
Waqar had ignored Imran Khan and Ian Greig and Wasim Akram's advice early in his career to bowl within himself, but he took it from 1993 onwards. But Shoaib thought he knew better.
Incidentally, Wasim Akram's long-term groin injury didn't come from Lancashire either. He got it late on the 1987 tour of England and was advised to have 6 months off.
But them Imran refused to play in the return series in Pakistan 3 months later, and Wasim was pressured to play because Pakistan was putting together a long unbeaten series sequence.
And then, six months later, he played with that injury in the World Championship series in the West Indies, often bowling off five paces with Saleem Yousaf standing up to the stumps, notably in the Port of Spain Test.
So neither player's long-term injury was Made in Manchester or Made in Surrey.
It's a myth. And I'd never heard it until today.