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"Hasan Ali is everything that a perfect fast-bowler should be" : Mohammad Zahid

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Writing in his exclusive blog for PakPassion.net, Mohammad Zahid airs his concerns at the spate of injuries to Pakistan fast-bowlers as headlined by Usman Khan Shinwari, discusses the phenomenal improvement in Pakistan's limited-overs fortunes, Hasan Ali as an example for other fast-bowlers, and expresses his surprise at Mohammad Hafeez's suspension from international cricket whilst being allowed to bowl in domestic tournaments.


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Usman Khan Shinwari’s injury is a symptom of a bigger issue

I, like many others, was really impressed by the manner in which Usman Shinwari stepped up and took Mohammad Amir’s place during the ODI and T20I series against Sri Lanka recently. Obviously, the news of his injury has come as a shock, but then it should really not be that surprising to anyone who has been observing Pakistan cricket for a good few years.

Whilst it is true that injuries are not specific to Pakistan fast-bowlers as the art of fast-bowling does put pressure on the human body, I would say that our bowlers seem more susceptible to breaking down than bowlers from other nations. Now that is very surprising to me especially given the amount of expert help and gym facilities available to our bowlers today. Of course, it depends on a player's body type as well as some are more prone to injuries than others, but still that does not explain why our bowlers are getting injured so often with potentially career threatening injuries. In my playing days too, bowlers did get injured but then that was understandable as there was a definite lack of technical help in terms of fitness training which caused problems in our careers. But today, this is not the case.

There are all sorts of cricket academies and gyms as well as coaches so it's rather puzzling to see the spate of injuries to our bowlers. But what is clear to me is that that not enough is being done at the domestic level to look after our young fast-bowlers. Whether it’s incorrect advice or bowlers not paying attention to what they are being told, the fact is that when our young and inexperienced fast-bowlers are brought into the national side, their bodies are unable to adjust to the stresses of training and playing at the international level, resulting in injuries.

It’s easy to blame the PCB for most problems in Pakistan cricket and possibly they can do more to ensure that trainers and fitness staff associated with domestic teams have the right qualifications and the local academies are equipped with good training equipment. But in this case, I feel that our youngsters are not looking after their bodies as they should, as it is also their responsibility to train in the right way to avoid injuries later.


The improvement in Pakistan’s limited-overs fortunes has been nothing short of phenomenal

The graph of Pakistan's limited-overs side’s progress has been showing a steep incline which is nothing short of phenomenal. Whilst in the past, we have come down hard on our sides for below par performances, it is time for us to come together and give credit for this improvement to the team.

The ODI and T20I sides have good individual players but the most important improvement is that they are pulling together and playing like a team. It is commonly believed that the Pakistan Super League has played a big role in improvement of our limited-overs fortunes and that is true to an extent as the financial rewards have been great, but the real difference has been made by the attitudes of the players and the hard-work of the team management.

Anyone who has worked with Pakistan teams of the past will know that managing and coaching our teams is not easy and to guide them to such a position in international cricket deserves a lot of praise. Our coaches have done a great job as they have managed to unite a team which in the past has always had groupings. To gel a team into a unit is a big achievement and the coach, captain as well as the whole team must take credit for that.


Pakistan’s bowling attack continues to impress

Anyone who follows cricket will have taken notice of the fantastic variety that the Pakistan bowling attack in all formats possesses today. Amongst all our bowlers, Hasan Ali’s progress has been excellent. To me, he is everything that a perfect fast-bowler should be. Not only is he bowling well which is obvious by his bowling figures, but he is also looking after himself really well and training hard. He is an example for other bowlers as well. I can only hope and pray that he continues to remain fit and put in the kind of superlative performances which have become normal for him.

Yes, we have bowlers like Rumman Raees who are able to perform above their usual standard in one game or two, but Hasan Ali’s consistency is something else. While we are on the subject of our bowling attack, let me say that there seems to be a common misconception that our bowlers exist to simply act as support bowlers for Mohammad Amir. There is no doubt that Amir is a brilliant talent but in my view, it’s the presence in the team of a bowler like Hasan Ali which will keep Amir on his toes and drive him to perform better for Pakistan in the future.


Mixed signals from the ICC regarding Mohammad Hafeez’s situation

With the third suspension due to an illegal action, we can safely assume that there is a definite problem with Mohammad Hafeez’s action. Hafeez has been playing for Pakistan for a good many years where his bowling has played an important part in his success. How effective will he be without this important part of his cricket? The balance of the side will be affected by his absence and the team management will need to decide whether Hafeez is crucial for the success of the team going forward with just his batting as his selling point.

As regards to the nature of the ban itself, what is most strange is that whilst Mohammad Hafeez is suspended from bowling in international games by the ICC, they have left the door open for the PCB to allow him to bowl in domestic competitions such as the PSL. In my view, if a player’s action is suspect and subject to suspension at the international level, the same rule must apply to him at the domestic level too. You cannot have two ways of looking at this. I do wonder if the ICC will change their minds and tell PCB to not allow Hafeez to bowl in the PSL which will be played in UAE, not too far away from the ICC headquarters in Dubai.

Coming back to my issue with the nature of the ban, if the ICC have banned him from bowling then they should also instruct the PCB to stop him from bowling too. If that doesn’t happen, as seems to be the case in their statement, then there is no shame or harm in Hafeez continuing to bowl in the PSL or any other local tournament. Given that he has played and served Pakistan cricket for more than 14 years, and if ICC have no objection to him bowling in domestic tournaments, Hafeez now has a chance to correct his action, once again. If the world’s cricket governing body is allowing it, then Hafeez should make use of this chance and fix his problems and no one should have any misgivings about this at all.
 
Hasan Ali is becoming such a legend in his own ways - almost feels too good to be true!

But as Zahid says, he is the role model for other bowlers at the moment, and something even Amir should keep an eye on
 
The legend of Hassan Ali grows!
Zahid is spot-on about Hassan's fitness. His fitness is almost non-Pakistani in so many ways. Our bowlers are usually bulky or wiry but looking at Hassan gives you the impression of so much hard work he puts behind the scenes. I hope that all other young bowlers follow his example including Amir.
 
Zahid is spot on about Hafeez. If he is banned from bowling for Pakistan he should not be bowling in PSL etc. Your action is either legal or not.
 
The Hafeez comments are also good.

Why allow him to play domestic but not international?
 
Interesting that Hafeez didn't bowl today at the National T20 Cup.

Seems that he's giving up on bowling until he's been re-tested.
 
And he is write about Hasan Ali!

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Hasan Ali's 5 wickets (all bowled) today in the Bangladesh Premier League for Comilla Victorians against Dhaka Dynamites <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Cricket?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Cricket</a> <a href="https://t.co/gMnZybKeFx">pic.twitter.com/gMnZybKeFx</a></p>— Saj Sadiq (@Saj_PakPassion) <a href="https://twitter.com/Saj_PakPassion/status/932567823615918080?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">November 20, 2017</a></blockquote>
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i have said on many a time Amir maybe an amazing talent, but Hasan is the Daddy
 
And he is write about Hasan Ali!

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Hasan Ali's 5 wickets (all bowled) today in the Bangladesh Premier League for Comilla Victorians against Dhaka Dynamites <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Cricket?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Cricket</a> <a href="https://t.co/gMnZybKeFx">pic.twitter.com/gMnZybKeFx</a></p>— Saj Sadiq (@Saj_PakPassion) <a href="https://twitter.com/Saj_PakPassion/status/932567823615918080?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">November 20, 2017</a></blockquote>
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MashaAllah, may long he continue like this for a very very long time. Ameen!

Some jealous folks (across) might be getting sleepless nights...Just seems to be getting better and better :-)
 
His development has been rapid.

Each time he bowls, you can tell Hasan has learned something new or added to his game. What an elite talent!
 
He's not perfect. But his hard-work is. And he is expected to stay at top as long as he carries that on.
 
He seems to have more wicket-taking deliveries than the other Pakistani pace bowlers at the moment.
 
His workload will have to be monitored, he can't play each and every game out there.
 
Only missing piece is height, otherwise indeed complete package. If only had he been 3/4 inch taller!!!

I think, key here is the age he was drafted more than any thing else. If Sameen & SS Afridi is brought under Mahmood/Arthur, chances are high that they’ll go to Hasan way rather than Sohail way.
 
Only missing piece is height, otherwise indeed complete package. If only had he been 3/4 inch taller!!!

I think, key here is the age he was drafted more than any thing else. If Sameen & SS Afridi is brought under Mahmood/Arthur, chances are high that they’ll go to Hasan way rather than Sohail way.

sameen was poor today,but i see a good loi bowler in him.
 
I just hope complacency doesn't kick-in with Hasan.

So far, so good though.
 
Think Pakistan have a good 5th bowler in Tests!
 
Looked 50% more dangerous than the other bowlers from the first over he bowled. He hits the wicket hard and gets bounce and movement. Pakistan's reputation for producing fast bowlers lives on.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Hasan Ali - another of the new breed of young, confident, skillful and fearless Pakistani cricketers <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/ENGvPAK?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#ENGvPAK</a></p>— Saj Sadiq (@Saj_PakPassion) <a href="https://twitter.com/Saj_PakPassion/status/999613227628720128?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 24, 2018</a></blockquote>
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So is Hasan Ali clawing his way back slowly to be what he used to be?
 
Hasan Ali is a decent to good LOI bowler, especially in ODIs.

Will go out of form from time to time, also need good coaching. Azhar isn't helping much.
 
Hasan is at his best when he forgets about accuracy and just sprints in to attack the stumps. Sarfaraz needs to shut his trap and let him bowl fast even if he goes for a few.
 
Unreal Phainty being handed to him!

Terrible spell today. Didn’t seem right from the word go
 
Hasan Ali bowled like Dinda in Asia cup and since then he was not recovered. His pace seems to be down and bowls gentle pies. Either he is not fit or just overrated by all of us.
 
Hasan Ali bowled like Dinda in Asia cup and since then he was not recovered. His pace seems to be down and bowls gentle pies. Either he is not fit or just overrated by all of us.

He was bowling at 140 what he usually does.

Corey was too good for him
 
Hasan Ali bowled like Dinda in Asia cup and since then he was not recovered. His pace seems to be down and bowls gentle pies. Either he is not fit or just overrated by all of us.

He bowled 148 kph delivery in the last match, its not his pace just the lack of hard work and consistency. Getting overconfident is pretty common phase among players especially when they are young. He just needs to get out of this zone quickly, putting his head down and start working hard again.
 
Hasan is at his best when he forgets about accuracy and just sprints in to attack the stumps. Sarfaraz needs to shut his trap and let him bowl fast even if he goes for a few.

Im not sure what you are trying to imply here . If you have to attack the stumps regularly, you've got be accurate with your line/length.
In fact I think it's his lack of accuracy that is affecting him. We saw that in the Asia cup atleast. The successful bowlers were all who consistently hit the short of good length area on these wickets and Hasan was consistently bowling too short or floating it up and was the least accurate from amongst even Pakistani bowlers. In fact , Junaid was the only one who was ridiculous accurate. Also hasan's speeds have been very consistent in his career more so than someone like Aamir so im not sure how you're implying that he's holding back.
 
Hasan Ali bowled like Dinda in Asia cup and since then he was not recovered. His pace seems to be down and bowls gentle pies. Either he is not fit or just overrated by all of us.

He bowled at 91mph this series and generally operates around 140 kph.

Pace is key in the UAE but you need to pull it back.
 
Im not sure what you are trying to imply here . If you have to attack the stumps regularly, you've got be accurate with your line/length.
In fact I think it's his lack of accuracy that is affecting him. We saw that in the Asia cup atleast. The successful bowlers were all who consistently hit the short of good length area on these wickets and Hasan was consistently bowling too short or floating it up and was the least accurate from amongst even Pakistani bowlers. In fact , Junaid was the only one who was ridiculous accurate. Also hasan's speeds have been very consistent in his career more so than someone like Aamir so im not sure how you're implying that he's holding back.

When he has free reign to attack the stumps is when he gets into a rhythm and his accuracy improves. But if Sarfaraz asks him to do this and that and bowl according to his plan, he's gonna have a hard time. You can do that with bowlers like Bumrah but not attacking bowlers like Hasan. You just have to back them, give them confidence and trust in their abilities.
 
When he has free reign to attack the stumps is when he gets into a rhythm and his accuracy improves. But if Sarfaraz asks him to do this and that and bowl according to his plan, he's gonna have a hard time. You can do that with bowlers like Bumrah but not attacking bowlers like Hasan. You just have to back them, give them confidence and trust in their abilities.

OK fair enough.
 
Hasan Ali is becoming such a legend in his own ways - almost feels too good to be true!

But as Zahid says, he is the role model for other bowlers at the moment, and something even Amir should keep an eye on

Lol look at this post. Why Pakistani have habit of making everyone legend so early. He is ruthlessly beaten in Asia cup and still didn't recover from it.
 
Seems too eager to take a wicket every ball which ends up going both ways. He either ends up picking wickets or getting smashed; no in between.

He needs to learn how to set-up a batsman and I believe a stint in FC (county or domestic) will do him plenty of good.

For our SA tour, I would give the new ball to Abbas and Shaheen and then hand it over to Hasan.

Playing these T20’s goes against his natural aggressive attitude as the batsmen can use the pace to score off him. In return, it makes him question his confidence and ability.
 
Lol look at this post. Why Pakistani have habit of making everyone legend so early. He is ruthlessly beaten in Asia cup and still didn't recover from it.

I think you are very new here.Last time he won us t20 so one bad performance does not make him bad.but i can understand people who come from a country which have never produced phast bolwer will say things like these,
 
A lot has been said that he hasn't been performing as he did in his freak 2017 year with not taking as many wickets however his stats have been pretty good.

For 2018 alone:
Tests: 9 innings and 19 wickets at an average of 24.47, 3rd for the most wickets in the squad.
ODIs: 14 innings and 19 wickets at an average of 34.00, 2nd for the most most wickets in the squad.
T20Is: 15 innings and 15 wickets at an average of 26.06, 3rd for the most wickets in the squad.

Not the best of figures but definitely not the worst as some posters were over exaggerating about. It's good to see alot of praise for him after how he bowled in the NZ tests. At only 24 years of age, onwards and upwards for the young man!
 
Looked a bit flat in this Test so far.

Some pretty average bowling from him, mixed with the occasional decent ball.
 
Looks to be bowling slower than usual, the ball should be zipping for him on this pitch...:abbas1

I am happy that he is taking wickets but yes, pace is low for someone who could bowl with some zip
 
I think his lack of height is magnified on more bouncy surfaces because the skiddy nature of his bowling is allow the balls to reach the batsmen at a more comfortable height.

He isn't just short but very short for a fast bowler remember, standing at 5"7. That is just one inch taller than Bilawal Bhatti.

I would swap him with Abbas for the next test.
 
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