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"I wasn’t forced to convert to Islam as some have alleged" : Mohammad Yousuf

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Speaking to Saj for Wisden in a recent interview, former Pakistan batting great Mohammad Yousuf spoke about his humble beginnings, converting to Islam, his impressions of the Late Bob Woolmer, his career highs and lows, toughest opponents and his desire to share his experience with the younger generation as a coach.

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Humble Beginnings

I came from a very humble background and certainly was not one of those cricketers who was born with a silver spoon in their mouth. Life was difficult, every day was tough and my family had to work really hard to make ends meet and to put food on the table. I worked in a tailor’s shop before I started to play cricket at the club level. But when I look back at those days, I realise they toughened me up, they prepared me to compete at the highest level of cricket and they made me realise not to take anything in life for granted. Those difficult days as a youngster made me appreciate every opportunity and grab every chance with both hands in later life.


The Road to Success

My earliest memory of playing cricket is using planks of wood as a bat and out of shape taped-up tennis balls. Those tennis balls would behave unpredictably, and they probably helped me face the challenges of spin and seam movement when I started playing cricket at a higher level. I would play cricket on the roads for hours, alongside my brothers and other boys from the local neighbourhood. It was like an escape for me from the challenges and difficulties of daily life. We would be dodging traffic as we imitated our cricketing heroes and at the same time receiving some very strange looks from road users.


Talent Spotted

One day I was playing cricket on the road, batting as usual with my full repertoire of strokes and as luck would have it, a man came up to me and said, son, you should come to the local cricket club and play there instead of just playing cricket on the local roads every day. I thought he was joking, but after getting encouragement from my brothers and friends I went to the Golden Gymkhana club in Lahore, where I started my cricket journey. From then on, I was extremely fortunate that I was given ample chances and opportunities were made available as I progressed through the ranks in cricket in Lahore. But quite often I wonder how my life would have turned out if that stranger hadn’t come up to me, encouraged me and said get yourself to your local cricket club instead of just messing about on the streets.


A Fresh Start

In 1994 at the age of 20, I was feeling rather disillusioned with life and felt that I needed a fresh start and at that moment I was of the opinion that cricket wasn’t for me. I planned to give up on my dream of playing cricket professionally and continue to work in the tailor’s shop, whilst playing the occasional game of club cricket. But as fate would have it, a local club was struggling for players and asked me at the last minute to make up the numbers for them. I turned up and scored a century which was exactly what I needed and which rekindled my passion for cricket.


The Bradford Experience

After impressing in club cricket, I eventually made my way to First-class cricket in 1996 and after a couple of first-class matches for Bahawalpur, that summer was spent in Bradford, playing for Bowling Old Lane Cricket Club. It was an interesting experience as I was only 22 years old and away from home in what felt like a strange land. The club and the locals really made me feel welcome and I still have many friends in that area of Yorkshire. The cricket was competitive and it was difficult batting on those wickets, but the challenge of playing on such surfaces really helped my confidence and self-belief as a cricketer. I scored nearly 900 runs at an average of just under 40, but unfortunately, we were relegated. However, after that summer in England, I went back to Pakistan with a real focus about my cricket, plenty of ambition and duly established myself as a regular selection in First-class cricket. Only two years after my time in the Bradford League, I made my international debut.


First-Class Education

I have always believed that the standard of First-class cricket is the key to how strong your national team is. I played First-class cricket for nearly 15 years and throughout that period it was competitive, no-holds-barred cricket which was a breeding ground for good international players. The bowlers I came up against never gave you an inch and that to me was the key to my relatively smooth transition from domestic cricket to Test cricket. You had the best players from departments and also from regional teams and it was very tough cricket. Every time you faced a bowling attack, it was full of current or former international bowlers and there were rarely easy runs available. The fact is that if you overlook your standard of domestic cricket, it will inevitably come back to haunt you.


Converting to Islam

I wasn’t forced to convert to Islam as some have alleged and tried to suggest. The reality is that I was very close to Saeed Anwar. We were great friends on and off the field and had played a lot of cricket together in our teenage years. I spent so much time with Saeed that his parents regarded me as their own son. When I was at their house, I could see the sort of peaceful and disciplined life his parents led and that really intrigued me. I had observed Saeed Anwar’s life before he became religious and how that changed when Saeed had the personal tragedy of the death of his daughter. Saeed turning to religion was an inspiration and the turning point for me that lead to my conversion to Islam.


Toughest Opponents

It’s an honour to look back at some of the bowlers I faced and the fact that they were at the peak of their careers. Courtney Walsh and Curtly Ambrose were always difficult opponents, Glenn McGrath, Shane Warne, Brett Lee, Jason Gillespie, Damien Fleming and Michael Kasprowicz were always in your face and hunted batsmen in packs. South African bowlers, especially at home, were a handful, Allan Donald, Shaun Pollock, Jacques Kallis, Lance Klusener and Fanie de Villiers were top-class bowlers. I also always had the utmost respect for Darren Gough, James Anderson, Andrew Flintoff and Steve Harmison. For Sri Lanka, there was Chaminda Vaas and Muttiah Muralitharan. India’s spin duo of Anil Kumble and Harbhajan Singh always tested you. Looking back at my career, I played at a time when there was a golden generation of bowlers that will be tough to match in the future.


Divine Intervention

I did nothing different when it came to training or practice in 2006. Towards the end of 2005, I had converted to Islam and had read Islamic prayers for the first time. I then grew a beard and I felt at peace with myself, very calm and mentally ready for any challenge that came my way. I have always felt that my brilliant performance in 2006 was a reward from The Almighty after my conversion to Islam. I had never even dreamt that I would break Sir Vivian Richards’ record that year, but because I was at peace with myself and my surroundings, mentally I was at the top of my game and I felt that nothing could stop me or come in my way.


Peak Yousaf

When I look back at some of my best innings, I don’t always look at the number of runs that I scored. Sometimes the venue played a part, sometimes it was the result or at times it was the opposition that I faced. One of my favourite innings is the 83 I scored out of a total of 157 on a very difficult track at Cape Town in 2007. There was a double-hundred in Christchurch in 2001 which remains a special innings for me, as were a couple of centuries in the Caribbean in 2000 against the might of Courtney Walsh and Curtly Ambrose that meant a lot to me also.


Key Influences

I owe a lot to Saeed Anwar and Inzamam-ul-Haq for my success. They were match-winners, they were classy on and off the field and I learnt a lot from them, not only technically, but also about the mental side of the game which many players struggle with. They taught me how to build an innings, how to bat in various conditions and how to stay calm even when the bowlers were on top. I was so fortunate that these two greats were in the team when I started playing for Pakistan. They were big characters and fantastic role-models for me and I will always be grateful for their help, advice and guidance.

Bob Woolmer was a great coach and someone who I really enjoyed working with. He knew how to get the best out of players; his man-management was fantastic and he had that rare skill of being able to communicate as a friend, a mentor or as a colleague for all the players. He also was tough with the players when it was needed and was always there when a player needed an arm around the shoulder. He was a wonderful human being, a brilliant coach and I will always appreciate the work he did with me, cherish the time that I spent with him and remember the great memories he left.


Memorable Moments

One of my most memorable matches is the 2004 Champions Trophy clash against India where I was the Man of the Match. The conditions for batting were really difficult that day in Birmingham. We needed 201 to win and were struggling at 27 for 3, but I took the team home with 81 not out as we beat our arch-rivals by 3 wickets. Another memorable match is the 2009 Champions Trophy encounter against India at Centurion. We were 65 for 3 before I scored a run-a-ball 87 and shared an important partnership with Shoaib Malik as we managed a total of 302/9 and went on to win by 54 runs. Those matches against India were high-pressure occasions and it was always enjoyable to perform and help my country to victory against India. The 1999 World Cup apart from the final was a very enjoyable tournament as we played some fantastic cricket leading up to the final.


Moments to Forget

The career low-points were the 2003 and 2007 World Cups. We just did not perform and it was hugely disappointing as we were back home before we knew it after being knocked out in the first round, without any sort of performances to be proud of. Pakistan has been a nation that generally does well in World Cup tournaments but those two tournaments were horrendous and very forgettable. The 1999 World Cup final was also a low point from a personal point of view and for the team. I wasn’t picked for the final and the match turned into a disaster which was a huge anti-climax, as we had played some good cricket before the final at Lord’s.


Grace and Steel

I’d like to think that people will remember me as a batsman who was tough to dismiss, was stylish with the bat and was entertaining. I have always been a firm believer that the best batsmen are capable of performing well in all formats and you don’t have to be someone who only knows one way to bat. You can be orthodox, correct and still be effective in limited-overs formats and I believe I managed that, when others have failed in this regard.


The Next Generation

Looking ahead, I want to still be involved in cricket and believe that I have the experience and knowledge to work with and get the best out of batsmen. Whenever the Pakistan Cricket Board or any other Board around the world gives me the opportunity to coach players at any level, I would jump at the chance. I always believe that cricket is all about passing on your experience and what you have learnt to young cricketers, just like players such as Inzamam-ul-Haq and Saeed Anwar passed their knowledge to me.
 
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He was a brilliant batsmen. Loved watching him bat. One of my favourite Pakistan players, I think he can do a really good job as the batting coach at NCA.
 
Discarded way to early if he played another 5 yrs after 2010 in uae he would have been near 10000 test runs.

Unlike yk and misbah he was also top class in odi cricket.
 
Probably the most aesthetic Pakistani batsman I have seen. Babar is more textbook but Yousuf innings were pleasure on a different level for me
 
Along with Inzi our most talented batsman of the last 40 years. He achieved alot but it feels that he underachieved
 
One of our best bats who could have achieved so much more had he been more professional and committed to his job. As a fan, my biggest disappointments with him were oat-gate and the whole ICL fiasco where he tried to blackmail the selectors in order to get into the T20 squad.

But, what a talent. Could watch him bat all day!
 
he was an excellent batsmen to watch once in full flow, but his tendancy to camp on the front foot made him an lbw candidate early on and slightly suspect against the short stuff, also he wasnt particularly mentally strong.

yousuf is a level below javid, inzi, yk and saeed in pak batsmen imo, his test stats are massively padded by performances against bang, zim and wi.
 
Classic player, a match winner on any day and undoubtedly a world class talent. One of Pakistan’s ATG batsmen and arguably a sub continent ATG. He was on another planet in 2006-2007, unconscious at the crease with runs flowing like a water fall. Yousuf was artist at the crease and a joy to watch. Low point was his captaincy which was painful to watch.
 
Remember him making a come back in that 2010 England series. Almost all batsmen were struggling and yet he was able to help his team win with a 50 and 30 odd despite batting after a long gap.

Many here didn't want him back at that time. :moyo
 
A very enjoyable read, great work PakPassion, not heard from Moyo before on this level, bought back some memories; those were the days, what a fine middle order Pakistan had
 
Up until 2006 I felt Yousuf was in Inzamam's shadow, going missing too often at crunch moments.

In 2006 however I don't think there were many better batsmen to watch in world cricket. The backlift, the precision, placement and sheer elegance of his strokeplay was breathtaking, especially on that tour of England.

One vivid memory I have is of the 2010 Oval Test. Pakistan took a second string batting lineup on that tour with no Younis or Yousuf, who were banned after the 2009/10 Australia tour debacle by Ijaz Butt. Our batsmen were sitting ducks against swing in the first two Tests, bundled out for scores of 80 and 72.

In comes Yousuf in the 3rd Test, and just gives a masterclass on facing swing bowling, playing the ball late under his eyes with soft hands prompting Simon Hughes on Channel 5 to do a whole segment on Yousuf's technique.

After two Tests of total rubbish, it felt like HERE is a proper batsman.
 
Miss the dude. Was a great pakistani batsman and I just felt his career deserved a proper end , not the one he got. He would have scored tons more runs in the UAE and against some of the modern day attacks. Probably our best ever ODI bat.
 
He is highly underrated on PP because a lot of people never watched him play while others have forgotten how good he was.

A much better batsman than Younis Khan. The fact that he missed out on a few years of the UAE is quite a tragedy.

All the major Pakistani batting records - most Test runs, most ODI runs, most Test and ODI hundreds etc. were his for the taking.

The fallout with PCB after he was wrongly ignored for the inaugural WT20 in 2007 ended his career because he never really patched up with PCB and was always on borrowed time.

He should have played in all formats until 2012-2013. I bet he can still bat better than most of these young talents.
 
he was an excellent batsmen to watch once in full flow, but his tendancy to camp on the front foot made him an lbw candidate early on and slightly suspect against the short stuff, also he wasnt particularly mentally strong.

yousuf is a level below javid, inzi, yk and saeed in pak batsmen imo, his test stats are massively padded by performances against bang, zim and wi.

Younis is the odd one out in that list because he did not have the versatility and talent to be successful in both Tests and ODIs. The other batsman were versatile and scored in both formats.

Younis was a grinder who carved out a great Test career because of his unflappable temperament.

Purely against spin, Younis was better but Yousuf was superior against other types of bowling. That is why when they played together during the 2000-2006 period, Yousuf overshadowed Younis more often than not.

As far as aesthetics are concerned, people who think Babar is stylish never watched Yousuf in flow. His drives were great but he was the best exponent of the late cut I have ever seen.

Certainly the most stylish Pakistani batsman after Saeed Anwar.
 
Younis is the odd one out in that list because he did not have the versatility and talent to be successful in both Tests and ODIs. The other batsman were versatile and scored in both formats.

Younis was a grinder who carved out a great Test career because of his unflappable temperament.

Purely against spin, Younis was better but Yousuf was superior against other types of bowling. That is why when they played together during the 2000-2006 period, Yousuf overshadowed Younis more often than not.

As far as aesthetics are concerned, people who think Babar is stylish never watched Yousuf in flow. His drives were great but he was the best exponent of the late cut I have ever seen.

Certainly the most stylish Pakistani batsman after Saeed Anwar.

not often i say this when quoting your post lol, but i agree with pretty much all of that, however with respect to yk vs moyo, yk matured a lot later as a batsmen, whereas yousufs ability fell away alarmingly in his last 2 years, i dont think there peaks overlapped. peak yk imo was a slightly better batsmen (because of mentality and judgement) against all bowling types.
 
If ever a Pakistani batsman could be called Rolls Royce it was him

Simply, what a player.

This ‘lazy elegance’ tag he got I found insulting, nothing lazy about how all components of batting - head, feet, bat swing, follow through, were all in motion.
 
not often i say this when quoting your post lol, but i agree with pretty much all of that, however with respect to yk vs moyo, yk matured a lot later as a batsmen, whereas yousufs ability fell away alarmingly in his last 2 years, i dont think there peaks overlapped. peak yk imo was a slightly better batsmen (because of mentality and judgement) against all bowling types.

I still think it was down to these haphazard gripes with management - even arriving late to tour of England in 2010 he got a 50 in first innings - started motoring before Swann got him.

He had another 20-30, tests in him, and say with half in UAE, another 7-10 hundreds respectively.
 
One of my all time favorites, absolutely loved watching his effortless strokes.
 
He was a very ‘ziddi’ player who held grudges and that really wasted a lot of his career.

He didn’t get picked for T20 2007 WC and took it personally and then quit and signed up for ICL. So a good 1.5-2 years of his cricket were wasted. Those were prime years. But then his dropping post 2010 SA series was unjust.
 
Massively underrated over here, and a severe underachiever as many have pointed out above.

He is also a genuinely great guy and many over here have a false perception because of his blunt comments as an analyst.

While Younis was a tactical master in neutralising a bowling attack, Yousuf was a superb technician and hence evaluates batsmen on that basis.

This augers very well for their respective coaching assignments as both of them are given the correct job roles that are in sync with their aptitudes.
 
Massively underrated over here, and a severe underachiever as many have pointed out above.

He is also a genuinely great guy and many over here have a false perception because of his blunt comments as an analyst.

While Younis was a tactical master in neutralising a bowling attack, Yousuf was a superb technician and hence evaluates batsmen on that basis.

This augers very well for their respective coaching assignments as both of them are given the correct job roles that are in sync with their aptitudes.

I think it’s great both are part of the setup, even just to see their physical conditioning still, shows to a degree what they’re about.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Azhar Ali "We are benefitting from the coaching of both Younis Khan and Mohammad Yousuf. This is a good opportunity to learn from them, as we have seen with Faheem Ashraf’s batting improving after working with Mohammad Yousuf at the High Performance Center" <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Cricket?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Cricket</a> <a href="https://t.co/gPObhYtbDn">pic.twitter.com/gPObhYtbDn</a></p>— Saj Sadiq (@Saj_PakPassion) <a href="https://twitter.com/Saj_PakPassion/status/1367855382543167500?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 5, 2021</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
A pleasure speaking to the legend that is Mohammad Yousuf.

One of my all-time favourite batsmen. The way he caressed the ball to the boundary was just fantastic to see. That cover drive was just awesome, the lofted cover drive off the spinners was a thing of beauty, the straight drive was just irresistible.

What a batsman.
 
One of the best bats produced by Pakistan imo.. thoroughly enjoyed watching him playing those drives! He along with Saeed Anwar, Inzi, Sohail formed one of the most formidable batting lineups of all time. Enjoyed reading this, well done!
 
A legend, Mohammed Yousuf. What a player he was, I remember in 2006 he was just undismissable. Very elegant and so easy on the eye. Absolutely love MoYo.
 
Yousuf was one of the all time greats ot the game , massively underrated and i still think had he not went on to play icl he would have easily scored 10k odi runs and 8000+ test runs
Deserved to play 2011 wc ahead of yk and misbah
 
Wow... so even him ending up playing cricket was just a stroke of luck, he wouldn’t have even given it a shot if that man hadn’t come up and asked him to play for the club... that’s the feeling I’m getting from what he’s saying.

Wonder how many talented kids there are like that out there. Those that may never attempt the sport seriously or just get lost in the system.
 
Younis is the odd one out in that list because he did not have the versatility and talent to be successful in both Tests and ODIs. The other batsman were versatile and scored in both formats.

Younis was a grinder who carved out a great Test career because of his unflappable temperament.

Purely against spin, Younis was better but Yousuf was superior against other types of bowling. That is why when they played together during the 2000-2006 period, Yousuf overshadowed Younis more often than not.

As far as aesthetics are concerned, people who think Babar is stylish never watched Yousuf in flow. His drives were great but he was the best exponent of the late cut I have ever seen.

Certainly the most stylish Pakistani batsman after Saeed Anwar.

Oh man!! I miss those late cuts!!! Have not seen anyone in recent times to come close to that. Feels like a forgotten art now.

People have short memories but yousuf was way superior to younis. Growing up in 90s and 2000s I knew no kid on street who rated anyone over saeed and yousuf. Inzi was there but with nostalgia that if he reduces his weight to 1992 levels then he won’t be walking across for a single instead of running!!
 
One of my memories of yousuf is Inzi and Woolmer amazed at the finesse of a yousuf cover drive and trying to replicate it with hands in the dressing room.

And during one Australia tour in early 2000s, Australian commentators were absolutely enthralled by him.
 
Oh man!! I miss those late cuts!!! Have not seen anyone in recent times to come close to that. Feels like a forgotten art now.

People have short memories but yousuf was way superior to younis. Growing up in 90s and 2000s I knew no kid on street who rated anyone over saeed and yousuf. Inzi was there but with nostalgia that if he reduces his weight to 1992 levels then he won’t be walking across for a single instead of running!!

Yousuf would often bisect the WK and first slip with his late cuts. Amazing skill. The level of assurance that he provided at number 3 in ODIs and the middle-order in Tests was unmatched by other Pakistani batsmen.

Going from Ijaz the axe man to Yousuf at 3 was a massive upgrade. I feel if Yousuf was born a generation earlier, Pakistan would have produced much better results in the 90’s. Ijaz played well on bouncy wickets but he was too inconsistent in home Tests. An average player of spin bowling.
 
<div style="width: 100%; height: 0px; position: relative; padding-bottom: 56.250%;"><iframe src="https://streamable.com/e/c0lxp1" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="100%" allowfullscreen style="width: 100%; height: 100%; position: absolute;"></iframe></div>

Watch and enjoy this master-class.
 
He is highly underrated on PP because a lot of people never watched him play while others have forgotten how good he was.

A much better batsman than Younis Khan. The fact that he missed out on a few years of the UAE is quite a tragedy.

All the major Pakistani batting records - most Test runs, most ODI runs, most Test and ODI hundreds etc. were his for the taking.

The fallout with PCB after he was wrongly ignored for the inaugural WT20 in 2007 ended his career because he never really patched up with PCB and was always on borrowed time.

He should have played in all formats until 2012-2013. I bet he can still bat better than most of these young talents.

Agree. Saw him play early in his career as 'Yousuf Yohana'.
What a talent. For me one of his most outstanding ODI innings was against India in the 2004 Champions Trophy match in Birmingham.
 
Wow... so even him ending up playing cricket was just a stroke of luck, he wouldn’t have even given it a shot if that man hadn’t come up and asked him to play for the club... that’s the feeling I’m getting from what he’s saying.

Wonder how many talented kids there are like that out there. Those that may never attempt the sport seriously or just get lost in the system.

A similar story of many Pakistani cricketers over the years.

Many were spotted by chance, rather than coming through PCB youth system or academies.
 
Agree. Saw him play early in his career as 'Yousuf Yohana'.
What a talent. For me one of his most outstanding ODI innings was against India in the 2004 Champions Trophy match in Birmingham.

A truly special innings on a seaming wicket. So much for being labeled a “choker”.

He played so many great innings across both formats. He would have done really well as an opener in T20s but Pakistan was too scared to be adventurous and took vastly inferior players like Butt and Hafeez to the WT20 in 2007.
 
Yes...used to love watching him bat.

But, I always thought he wasnt as mentally tough as Inzi or YK.

I would say, Asad Shafiq is a poor man's M Yousuf.
 
Yes...used to love watching him bat.

But, I always thought he wasnt as mentally tough as Inzi or YK.

I would say, Asad Shafiq is a poor man's M Yousuf.

Asad Shafiq wasn't fit to tie Mohammad Yousuf's shoelaces.

Yousuf was on a different level to the mediocre Shafiq.
 
Yes...used to love watching him bat.

But, I always thought he wasnt as mentally tough as Inzi or YK.

I would say, Asad Shafiq is a poor man's M Yousuf.

Yousuf had ATG potential had he not had a truncated career. He is still one of the best batsmen of the last 2 decades.
Shafiq on the other hand is your run of the mill average test batsman who has played far too many tests than he deserved.
That is as absurd a comparison as I have ever heard.
 
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Him along with Inzi couldn't perform at the world cup when it really mattered. Inzi had that 1992 semi final performance.

These guys could make as amny runs they wanted in series, but in world cup they sucked.
 
A similar story of many Pakistani cricketers over the years.

Many were spotted by chance, rather than coming through PCB youth system or academies.

I’m sure. This is why I don’t buy the story that there’s no talent in Pakistan. I’m sure there is, this is the only sport the entire country knows at their heart even if they don’t watch it much anymore. I’m supposed to believe a place like NZ or Australia where cricket is not even the main sport has more talent? That’s insane.

There’s just zero systems of processes to nurture the talent. Must be so many kids out there who may have the gift with bat ball and/or gloves but they won’t go through with it because their mind is on putting food on the table and other adversities on their mind as a modern day Pakistani. They may not even know where the opportunities lie for them to make a living out of it.
 
Him along with Inzi couldn't perform at the world cup when it really mattered. Inzi had that 1992 semi final performance.

These guys could make as amny runs they wanted in series, but in world cup they sucked.

That surely is not the yardstick of success?
 
That surely is not the yardstick of success?

it might not be, and i might be abit biased here. But than again, for me the world cup was always the benchmark for how good a player was.

Performing when it really really really mattered. Yousuf did nothing against Ireland, and even sucked against Zimbabwe aswell.

Great players perform when it really matters.

ANotehr problem with Yousuf was his ego. He never believed in self improvement or growth. Once he became international, he barely came back for domestic cricket.

People here say Yousuf is underrated, but i believe he over-achieved. With the kind of work ethic this guy had and the way he did not bother about first class cricket, he is lucky he got those runs. IN todays cricket, i doubt he would even get that.

By the end of his career, Yousuf had found another excuse that he didn't want to play domestic cricket for Banks as it was religiously wrong. To me, those were just excuses, he didnt want to play domestic circket and was hoping he would play Pakistan just on his international recognition
 
Him along with Inzi couldn't perform at the world cup when it really mattered. Inzi had that 1992 semi final performance.

These guys could make as amny runs they wanted in series, but in world cup they sucked.

He only really played one WC.

1999 got injured early on.

2007 got derailed pretty quickly
 
Yes...used to love watching him bat.

But, I always thought he wasnt as mentally tough as Inzi or YK.

I would say, Asad Shafiq is a poor man's M Yousuf.

M Yousuf was better than Inzi and YK imo. He bailed Pakistan out in countless situations.
 
A fantastic batsman and one of the greats. Had the PCB been competent, Yousuf could have continued his career and like Younis, would have reached ATG status.

Imagine this batting lineup:

Hafeez
Taufeeq (lol, okay maybe ignore him)
Azhar
Yousuf
Younis
Misbah

However, there was too much bad blood between Yousuf and the duo of Younis and Misbah. I'm glad that the divisions and internal groupings in the Pakistan team were erased even if it did cost us several years of Mohammad Yousuf's career.

As far as him reverting to Islam is concerned, I'm happy for him, MashAllah. I do remember laughing at one of the Indian news channels that were extremely upset at the news and were claiming that Danish Kaneria would be forced to convert next.
 
Performing when it really really really mattered. Yousuf did nothing against Ireland, and even sucked against Zimbabwe aswell.

Great players perform when it really matters.

ANotehr problem with Yousuf was his ego. He never believed in self improvement or growth. Once he became international, he barely came back for domestic cricket.

This has got to the funniest thing i've read today. Dude has knocked out a record for most runs in a Calender year that is STILL standing for more than 15 years.

He won countless games for Pakistan. Yet you're here talking about Zimbabwe and Ireland?

And so what if he didn't play Domestic Cricket? If anything, the big teams actually prohibit their players playing in domestic cricket to protect from overworking and injuries.
 
My grief will never end as Yousuf was denied of the most successful batsman in Pak cricket history. He was denied a long 7 years of cricket career for Pakistan when he was in prime. He would have scored 10000 plus runs in both tests and ODIs easily. The most elegant and effort less batsmen from Pakistan I have ever seen.
 
Former Pakistan batsman Mohammad Yousuf has credited his spectacular performance in 2006 to his conversion to Islam a year before. The 46-year old had an extraordinary run of success, which began with a 199-ball 173 against India at Lahore. Yousuf then had a memorable outing during Pakistan’s 2006 tour to England and even broke Sir Vivian Richards’ record –of most runs in a calendar year.

He finished with an aggregate of 1788, eclipsing Richards’s tally of 1710.

In a recent interview to wisden.com, Yousuf admitted that he was inspired by his ‘close’ friend Saeed Anwar who turned to religion after his daughter’s death.

Yousuf saw the changes it brought to Saeed’s life which became a turning point for him to convert to Islam.

“I wasn’t forced to convert to Islam as some have alleged and tried to suggest. The reality is that I was very close to Saeed Anwar. We were great friends on and off the field and had played a lot of cricket together in our teenage years. I spent so much time with Saeed that his parents regarded me as their own son. When I was at their house, I could see the sort of peaceful and disciplined life his parents led and that really intrigued me,” Yousuf was quoted as saying by PakPassion.net.

“I had observed Saeed Anwar’s life before he became religious and how that changed when Saeed had the personal tragedy of the death of his daughter. Saeed turning to religion was an inspiration and the turning point for me that lead to my conversion to Islam,” said Yousuf.

Recalling his spectacular performance in 2006 a reward from God after his conversion, Yousuf said, “I did nothing different when it came to training or practice in 2006. Towards the end of 2005, I had converted to Islam and had read Islamic prayers for the first time. I then grew a beard and I felt at peace with myself, very calm and mentally ready for any challenge that came my way.”

I have always felt that my brilliant performance in 2006 was a reward from The Almighty after my conversion to Islam. I had never even dreamt that I would break Sir Vivian Richards’ record that year, but because I was at peace with myself and my surroundings, mentally I was at the top of my game and I felt that nothing could stop me or come in my way,” he added.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Interviewed the great Mohammad Yousuf for Wisden. He said "Towards the end of 2005, I had converted to Islam & had read Islamic prayers for the first time. I've always felt that my brilliant performance in 2006 was a reward from The Almighty after my conversion to Islam" <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Cricket?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Cricket</a> <a href="https://t.co/ek8NNOreFb">pic.twitter.com/ek8NNOreFb</a></p>— Saj Sadiq (@Saj_PakPassion) <a href="https://twitter.com/Saj_PakPassion/status/1366443773903974410?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 1, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
The 45-year-old represented Pakistan in 90 Tests and scored 7,530 runs, which included 24 centuries and 33 fifties, at an average of 52.29. He also featured in 288 ODIs and accumulated 9,720 runs, which included 15 hundreds and 64 half-centuries, at an average of 41.71. Yousuf also played three Twenty20 Internationals and made 50 runs at an average of 16.66.

Deeming the peak of his career a golden time for bowlers, Yousuf said, “It’s an honour to look back at some of the bowlers I faced and the fact that they were at the peak of their careers. Courtney Walsh and Curtly Ambrose were always difficult opponents, Glenn McGrath, Shane Warne, Brett Lee, Jason Gillespie, Damien Fleming and Michael Kasprowicz were always in your face and hunted batsmen in packs.

“South African bowlers, especially at home, were a handful, Allan Donald, Shaun Pollock, Jacques Kallis, Lance Klusener and Fanie de Villiers were top-class bowlers. I also always had the utmost respect for Darren Gough, James Anderson, Andrew Flintoff and Steve Harmison. For Sri Lanka, there was Chaminda Vaas and Muttiah Muralitharan. India’s spin duo of Anil Kumble and Harbhajan Singh always tested you. Looking back at my career, I played at a time when there was a golden generation of bowlers that will be tough to match in the future,” said Yousuf.

https://indianexpress.com/article/s...-conversion-to-islam-mohammad-yousuf-7220970/
 
When Mohammad Yousaf was once a pariah in the dressing room

https://magazine.outlookindia.com/story/carols-for-allah/228802

http://www.sikhtimes.com/news_100305a.html

Carols For Allah

By AGHA AKBAR

Outlook, Oct. 3, 2005

Why did the sole Christian in the Pakistan cricket team embrace Islam? Was it coercion or a career move?

Mohammad Ali Jinnah's dream of a secular Pakistan has taken yet another shattering blow in an unlikely arena: cricket. Yousuf Youhana - the only Christian in the current Pakistani cricket team, its mainstay of many years, its veritable Mr. Dependable who has attained fame for his batting prowess - declared last week that he and his wife Tania had embraced Islam and adopted the Muslim names of Muhammad Yousuf and Fatima. For long a symbol for those who claimed Pakistan wasn't biased against non-Muslims - that at least on the cricket field, performance mattered more than the player's faith - Youhana's conversion to Islam leaves behind Hindu leggie Danish Kaneria as the only non-Muslim in a team which increasingly has members who wear their religion on their sleeves, or more visibly, on their faces.

Ordinarily, a person's change of faith ought not to be subjected to public scrutiny. But many here wonder whether Youhana's leap of faith was indeed prompted by a genuine change of heart. There's enough evidence to suggest that Youhana was more or less a pariah in the dressing room who would eat and drink separately; his views were rarely sought on issues of import to the team. And Tania, too, experienced the pangs of isolation: wives of other cricketers hung out together on tours, leaving her solitary.

Earlier this year, Youhana was replaced by Younis Khan as vice-captain for the tour of India. The Pakistan Cricket Board (P.C.B.) justified the decision claiming it wanted to tackle the malaise of complacency supposedly afflicting the team. Ironically, Youhana was made a scapegoat for the team's poor performance against the mighty Australians playing on its own turf; Inzamam-ul Haq retained the captaincy even though Imran Khan thought the Pakistan skipper had taken the ruse of a bad back to duck the Australian fast bowlers.

Youhana's tale of woes did not end with that unkind cut. He was sent back from the West Indies in May this year, apparently after an ugly altercation with some senior players. Publicly, though, it was claimed Youhana had returned to Pakistan to tend to his ailing father. It was another matter that Papa Youhana wasn't sick enough to be admitted to hospital. Then one fine morning, after his return, Youhana's Mercedes was pelted with stones, at his home in a posh Lahore locality.

Coincidence or coercion? Well.

Each of Youhana's mates has warmly welcomed his conversion to Islam. And why not, most of them are born-again Muslims. This process of rediscovering Islam started when Saeed Anwar in 2002, then emotionally vulnerable owing to his toddler daughter's death, came under the influence of the Tablighi Jamaat, a conservative Islamic missionary group. He started sporting a beard and found solace in spreading the Word. What better place to start than the Pakistan dressing room.

Almost the entire Pakistan team was then recovering from match-fixing allegations. Call it pangs of guilt or a desire to reform, Anwar found a receptive audience in Waqar Younis, Inzamam, Shahid Afridi, Saqlain Mushtaq and Mushtaq Ahmed. The entire milieu around the national team witnessed a dramatic change. From indulging in carnal pleasures, they began to spread the mat in the dressing room for prayers. Interestingly, none of these born-again Muslims, some of whom had a dishonourable mention in Justice Qayyum's Judicial Report on match-fixing, publicly confessed to their dalliance with the bookies.

Younhana's conversion has shocked the Christian community already reeling under jehadi bomb attacks. 'After all, he was a role model for the entire community, perhaps the best known Christian here. He was an inspiration to those who wanted to strike it big,' said a Christian journalist. An official of Pakistan's National Council of Churches (P.N.C.C.) thought it was abominable if Youhana converted under peer pressure or to save his career. Dismissing Youhana's claims that he had converted three years ago and was only making it public now, the official asked, 'If he had done it three years ago, why was he making the sign of cross whenever he reached a fifty or a hundred as recently as the West Indies tour?'

I.A. Rehman, director of the Pakistan Human Rights Commission [P.H.R.C.], is concerned about the star batsman's conversion. 'It seems to me that Youhana was finding it difficult to keep his place in the side. Everyone is free to change one's religion but to my mind, there is apparently an element of coercion here,' Rehman told Outlook.

For Pakistan cricket officials, Youhana's conversion could turn into a P.R. disaster. A top P.C.B. official feels the British media which will accompany the English team's tour of Pakistan next month could turn the spotlight on the Youhana affair - and consequently on the status of the Christian community in Pakistan. 'It could become Pakistan cricket's Mukhtara Mai,' he said.

Youhana himself, though, is demonstrating the zeal so typical of new converts. Not only has he been pictured praying with team members, he has shifted his children to a school supposedly better suited for Islamic education.

But his parents are aghast at the proselytisation. His mother has been cursing Saeed Anwar and his brother, the two who had been preaching to Youhana, and had even threatened to disown her son. She has since relented and is back to talking to her son. Youhana's father is livid, more so because his other son, Tariq Youhana, too might follow in his elder brother's footsteps. 'Yousuf has been a good son; he has been kind to his family all along. We have lived on one floor in his house and he has bought houses for his brothers,' said Youhana's father Masih, who insisted he wouldn't convert even if each of his sons did. He added, 'But Yousuf has sinned by converting. God will punish him for that.' For the Pakistani team, you hope it isn't on the cricket field.
 
I am not here speculating about Yousaf's conversion because that is his personal choice, and it happened more than 15 years ago.

But i found this sad and interesting.

Ordinarily, a person's change of faith ought not to be subjected to public scrutiny. But many here wonder whether Youhana's leap of faith was indeed prompted by a genuine change of heart. There's enough evidence to suggest that Youhana was more or less a pariah in the dressing room who would eat and drink separately; his views were rarely sought on issues of import to the team. And Tania, too, experienced the pangs of isolation: wives of other cricketers hung out together on tours, leaving her solitary.

Danish Kaneria had also mentioned before that some team members were not willing to eat and drink next to him because he is hindu
 
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I am not here speculating about Yousaf's conversion because that is his personal choice, and it happened more than 15 years ago.

But i found this sad and interesting.



Danish Kaneria had also mentioned before that some team members were not willing to eat and drink next to him because he is hindu

Inzamam introduced tableegh to the dressing room during his captaincy and our players started to interact with the tableegh-i-jamaat regularly.

It is not surprising that both Yousuf and Kaneria felt isolated.
 
Inzamam introduced tableegh to the dressing room during his captaincy and our players started to interact with the tableegh-i-jamaat regularly.

It is not surprising that both Yousuf and Kaneria felt isolated.

According to the article it was Saeed Anwar. But anyways the change was drastic.
all it pangs of guilt or a desire to reform, Anwar found a receptive audience in Waqar Younis, Inzamam, Shahid Afridi, Saqlain Mushtaq and Mushtaq Ahmed.
They all started sporting beards. The 'mandatory' post century sajda started. Oaths on the Quran for miniscule issues like to rid someone as captain.
It was only becoming that the nonmuslims would be social pariahs in the team when all the major team players including the captain were on this 'born again' path. This obviously blended in with the politics that was always rife in the Pakistan dressing room.
 
https://magazine.outlookindia.com/story/carols-for-allah/228802

http://www.sikhtimes.com/news_100305a.html

Carols For Allah

By AGHA AKBAR

Outlook, Oct. 3, 2005

Why did the sole Christian in the Pakistan cricket team embrace Islam? Was it coercion or a career move?

Mohammad Ali Jinnah's dream of a secular Pakistan has taken yet another shattering blow in an unlikely arena: cricket. Yousuf Youhana - the only Christian in the current Pakistani cricket team, its mainstay of many years, its veritable Mr. Dependable who has attained fame for his batting prowess - declared last week that he and his wife Tania had embraced Islam and adopted the Muslim names of Muhammad Yousuf and Fatima. For long a symbol for those who claimed Pakistan wasn't biased against non-Muslims - that at least on the cricket field, performance mattered more than the player's faith - Youhana's conversion to Islam leaves behind Hindu leggie Danish Kaneria as the only non-Muslim in a team which increasingly has members who wear their religion on their sleeves, or more visibly, on their faces.

Ordinarily, a person's change of faith ought not to be subjected to public scrutiny. But many here wonder whether Youhana's leap of faith was indeed prompted by a genuine change of heart. There's enough evidence to suggest that Youhana was more or less a pariah in the dressing room who would eat and drink separately; his views were rarely sought on issues of import to the team. And Tania, too, experienced the pangs of isolation: wives of other cricketers hung out together on tours, leaving her solitary.

Earlier this year, Youhana was replaced by Younis Khan as vice-captain for the tour of India. The Pakistan Cricket Board (P.C.B.) justified the decision claiming it wanted to tackle the malaise of complacency supposedly afflicting the team. Ironically, Youhana was made a scapegoat for the team's poor performance against the mighty Australians playing on its own turf; Inzamam-ul Haq retained the captaincy even though Imran Khan thought the Pakistan skipper had taken the ruse of a bad back to duck the Australian fast bowlers.

Youhana's tale of woes did not end with that unkind cut. He was sent back from the West Indies in May this year, apparently after an ugly altercation with some senior players. Publicly, though, it was claimed Youhana had returned to Pakistan to tend to his ailing father. It was another matter that Papa Youhana wasn't sick enough to be admitted to hospital. Then one fine morning, after his return, Youhana's Mercedes was pelted with stones, at his home in a posh Lahore locality.

Coincidence or coercion? Well.

Each of Youhana's mates has warmly welcomed his conversion to Islam. And why not, most of them are born-again Muslims. This process of rediscovering Islam started when Saeed Anwar in 2002, then emotionally vulnerable owing to his toddler daughter's death, came under the influence of the Tablighi Jamaat, a conservative Islamic missionary group. He started sporting a beard and found solace in spreading the Word. What better place to start than the Pakistan dressing room.

Almost the entire Pakistan team was then recovering from match-fixing allegations. Call it pangs of guilt or a desire to reform, Anwar found a receptive audience in Waqar Younis, Inzamam, Shahid Afridi, Saqlain Mushtaq and Mushtaq Ahmed. The entire milieu around the national team witnessed a dramatic change. From indulging in carnal pleasures, they began to spread the mat in the dressing room for prayers. Interestingly, none of these born-again Muslims, some of whom had a dishonourable mention in Justice Qayyum's Judicial Report on match-fixing, publicly confessed to their dalliance with the bookies.

Younhana's conversion has shocked the Christian community already reeling under jehadi bomb attacks. 'After all, he was a role model for the entire community, perhaps the best known Christian here. He was an inspiration to those who wanted to strike it big,' said a Christian journalist. An official of Pakistan's National Council of Churches (P.N.C.C.) thought it was abominable if Youhana converted under peer pressure or to save his career. Dismissing Youhana's claims that he had converted three years ago and was only making it public now, the official asked, 'If he had done it three years ago, why was he making the sign of cross whenever he reached a fifty or a hundred as recently as the West Indies tour?'

I.A. Rehman, director of the Pakistan Human Rights Commission [P.H.R.C.], is concerned about the star batsman's conversion. 'It seems to me that Youhana was finding it difficult to keep his place in the side. Everyone is free to change one's religion but to my mind, there is apparently an element of coercion here,' Rehman told Outlook.

For Pakistan cricket officials, Youhana's conversion could turn into a P.R. disaster. A top P.C.B. official feels the British media which will accompany the English team's tour of Pakistan next month could turn the spotlight on the Youhana affair - and consequently on the status of the Christian community in Pakistan. 'It could become Pakistan cricket's Mukhtara Mai,' he said.

Youhana himself, though, is demonstrating the zeal so typical of new converts. Not only has he been pictured praying with team members, he has shifted his children to a school supposedly better suited for Islamic education.

But his parents are aghast at the proselytisation. His mother has been cursing Saeed Anwar and his brother, the two who had been preaching to Youhana, and had even threatened to disown her son. She has since relented and is back to talking to her son. Youhana's father is livid, more so because his other son, Tariq Youhana, too might follow in his elder brother's footsteps. 'Yousuf has been a good son; he has been kind to his family all along. We have lived on one floor in his house and he has bought houses for his brothers,' said Youhana's father Masih, who insisted he wouldn't convert even if each of his sons did. He added, 'But Yousuf has sinned by converting. God will punish him for that.' For the Pakistani team, you hope it isn't on the cricket field.

What's the source of this article? It's from the Sikh times and none of the statements are from Yousof or anyone close to him, this was conviently posted after he converted and all the author does is theorize is why he may have converted yet Yousuf states his reasons publically moreover he was super close to Saeed Anwar and other members of the team, if I'm not wrong he was even the vice captain of the national team while he was still a Christian.
 
Younhana's conversion has shocked the Christian community already reeling under jehadi bomb attacks.

The author tried their hardest but couldn't entirely conceal their true intentions behind writing this article. Decent effort though.
 
https://magazine.outlookindia.com/story/carols-for-allah/228802

http://www.sikhtimes.com/news_100305a.html

Carols For Allah

By AGHA AKBAR

Outlook, Oct. 3, 2005

Why did the sole Christian in the Pakistan cricket team embrace Islam? Was it coercion or a career move?

Mohammad Ali Jinnah's dream of a secular Pakistan has taken yet another shattering blow in an unlikely arena: cricket. Yousuf Youhana - the only Christian in the current Pakistani cricket team, its mainstay of many years, its veritable Mr. Dependable who has attained fame for his batting prowess - declared last week that he and his wife Tania had embraced Islam and adopted the Muslim names of Muhammad Yousuf and Fatima. For long a symbol for those who claimed Pakistan wasn't biased against non-Muslims - that at least on the cricket field, performance mattered more than the player's faith - Youhana's conversion to Islam leaves behind Hindu leggie Danish Kaneria as the only non-Muslim in a team which increasingly has members who wear their religion on their sleeves, or more visibly, on their faces.

Ordinarily, a person's change of faith ought not to be subjected to public scrutiny. But many here wonder whether Youhana's leap of faith was indeed prompted by a genuine change of heart. There's enough evidence to suggest that Youhana was more or less a pariah in the dressing room who would eat and drink separately; his views were rarely sought on issues of import to the team. And Tania, too, experienced the pangs of isolation: wives of other cricketers hung out together on tours, leaving her solitary.

Earlier this year, Youhana was replaced by Younis Khan as vice-captain for the tour of India. The Pakistan Cricket Board (P.C.B.) justified the decision claiming it wanted to tackle the malaise of complacency supposedly afflicting the team. Ironically, Youhana was made a scapegoat for the team's poor performance against the mighty Australians playing on its own turf; Inzamam-ul Haq retained the captaincy even though Imran Khan thought the Pakistan skipper had taken the ruse of a bad back to duck the Australian fast bowlers.

Youhana's tale of woes did not end with that unkind cut. He was sent back from the West Indies in May this year, apparently after an ugly altercation with some senior players. Publicly, though, it was claimed Youhana had returned to Pakistan to tend to his ailing father. It was another matter that Papa Youhana wasn't sick enough to be admitted to hospital. Then one fine morning, after his return, Youhana's Mercedes was pelted with stones, at his home in a posh Lahore locality.

Coincidence or coercion? Well.

Each of Youhana's mates has warmly welcomed his conversion to Islam. And why not, most of them are born-again Muslims. This process of rediscovering Islam started when Saeed Anwar in 2002, then emotionally vulnerable owing to his toddler daughter's death, came under the influence of the Tablighi Jamaat, a conservative Islamic missionary group. He started sporting a beard and found solace in spreading the Word. What better place to start than the Pakistan dressing room.

Almost the entire Pakistan team was then recovering from match-fixing allegations. Call it pangs of guilt or a desire to reform, Anwar found a receptive audience in Waqar Younis, Inzamam, Shahid Afridi, Saqlain Mushtaq and Mushtaq Ahmed. The entire milieu around the national team witnessed a dramatic change. From indulging in carnal pleasures, they began to spread the mat in the dressing room for prayers. Interestingly, none of these born-again Muslims, some of whom had a dishonourable mention in Justice Qayyum's Judicial Report on match-fixing, publicly confessed to their dalliance with the bookies.

Younhana's conversion has shocked the Christian community already reeling under jehadi bomb attacks. 'After all, he was a role model for the entire community, perhaps the best known Christian here. He was an inspiration to those who wanted to strike it big,' said a Christian journalist. An official of Pakistan's National Council of Churches (P.N.C.C.) thought it was abominable if Youhana converted under peer pressure or to save his career. Dismissing Youhana's claims that he had converted three years ago and was only making it public now, the official asked, 'If he had done it three years ago, why was he making the sign of cross whenever he reached a fifty or a hundred as recently as the West Indies tour?'

I.A. Rehman, director of the Pakistan Human Rights Commission [P.H.R.C.], is concerned about the star batsman's conversion. 'It seems to me that Youhana was finding it difficult to keep his place in the side. Everyone is free to change one's religion but to my mind, there is apparently an element of coercion here,' Rehman told Outlook.

For Pakistan cricket officials, Youhana's conversion could turn into a P.R. disaster. A top P.C.B. official feels the British media which will accompany the English team's tour of Pakistan next month could turn the spotlight on the Youhana affair - and consequently on the status of the Christian community in Pakistan. 'It could become Pakistan cricket's Mukhtara Mai,' he said.

Youhana himself, though, is demonstrating the zeal so typical of new converts. Not only has he been pictured praying with team members, he has shifted his children to a school supposedly better suited for Islamic education.

But his parents are aghast at the proselytisation. His mother has been cursing Saeed Anwar and his brother, the two who had been preaching to Youhana, and had even threatened to disown her son. She has since relented and is back to talking to her son. Youhana's father is livid, more so because his other son, Tariq Youhana, too might follow in his elder brother's footsteps. 'Yousuf has been a good son; he has been kind to his family all along. We have lived on one floor in his house and he has bought houses for his brothers,' said Youhana's father Masih, who insisted he wouldn't convert even if each of his sons did. He added, 'But Yousuf has sinned by converting. God will punish him for that.' For the Pakistani team, you hope it isn't on the cricket field.

A textbook example of shoddy journalism. To even label it as journalism is a stretch; it's a polemic in every sense. I've seen teabags with fewer holes.

Great article Saj Sahab - a riveting read. MoYo was one of my favourite cricketers from that era.
 
Great article Saj Sahab - a riveting read. MoYo was one of my favourite cricketers from that era.

Thanks guys.

By the way, Yousuf clearly states that he was very close to Saeed Anwar and his family long before he played for Pakistan and alongside the likes of Inzamam.

Therefore I don't buy the 'he was forced by Inzi and others' to convert to Islam.
 
Inzamam introduced tableegh to the dressing room during his captaincy and our players started to interact with the tableegh-i-jamaat regularly.

It is not surprising that both Yousuf and Kaneria felt isolated.

I wasn’t forced to convert to Islam as some have alleged and tried to suggest. The reality is that I was very close to Saeed Anwar. We were great friends on and off the field and had played a lot of cricket together in our teenage years. I spent so much time with Saeed that his parents regarded me as their own son. When I was at their house, I could see the sort of peaceful and disciplined life his parents led and that really intrigued me. I had observed Saeed Anwar’s life before he became religious and how that changed when Saeed had the personal tragedy of the death of his daughter. Saeed turning to religion was an inspiration and the turning point for me that lead to my conversion to Islam.
 
He would have long immigrated to some western country had he been forced. Allah showed him the light, alhumdolillah.
 
Danni seemed to be a cry baby always complaining about something. He was doing the same when banned by the ECB if memory serves me correctly. The late Bob Woolmer never complained of being bombarded in any way.
 
I wasn’t forced to convert to Islam as some have alleged and tried to suggest. The reality is that I was very close to Saeed Anwar. We were great friends on and off the field and had played a lot of cricket together in our teenage years. I spent so much time with Saeed that his parents regarded me as their own son. When I was at their house, I could see the sort of peaceful and disciplined life his parents led and that really intrigued me. I had observed Saeed Anwar’s life before he became religious and how that changed when Saeed had the personal tragedy of the death of his daughter. Saeed turning to religion was an inspiration and the turning point for me that lead to my conversion to Islam.

Sadly, for some who wish to see Pakistan and Islam in a bad light, this explanation will not meet the narrative they have been fed or wish to believe in.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/OnThisDay?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#OnThisDay</a> in 1974. The brilliant Mohammad Yousuf was born in Lahore.<br><br>17,300 international runs<br>Test average of 52.29<br>ODI average of 41.71<br>39 international centuries<br>97 international fifties<br>Most Test centuries in a calendar year<br>Most Test runs in a calendar year<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Cricket?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Cricket</a> <a href="https://t.co/igFUbHQ7XB">pic.twitter.com/igFUbHQ7XB</a></p>— Saj Sadiq (@Saj_PakPassion) <a href="https://twitter.com/Saj_PakPassion/status/1431173554519826437?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 27, 2021</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
He could have a very important part to play as a coach. He seems to understand how to talk about batting methods and of course, has the respect of current players, he could every beneficial in improving potential Test players' techniques.
 
I wonder who would make such accusations that he was forced to convert to Islam? Although I know the answer really as I am a regular reader and contributor on Time Pass and it's one demgraphic which generally pushes the forced conversion mantra.
 
Behind Inzi the 2nd most talented batsman we have produced since I have been watching PK cricket but like Inzi, didn't produce against the big guys often enough.
 
In the wake of abuse directed at Shami, some are saying MoYo was also subject to this.

Please read his interview above.
 
A supreme talent who produced some amazing numbers. Definitely a Pakistan great, though am not sure about top tier ATG status — there is probably still a consensus discussion to be had on that one. But one of the very best batters to be produced by Pakistan for sure. Looked utterly impregnable and aesthetically beautiful against any bowler when at his best.
 
The sad part is that just when he started dominating and proving his ATG status, the PCB started a chain of events that got very ugly and shortened his career.

There was obviously blame on yousuf too and it can seem to the outside world that he was being petty. But you have to understand the cricketing culture in Pakistan to fully evaluate the situation. It might not be right, but I can understand why he was upset.

Pakistan were so fortunate to have the likes of Saeed and Yousuf’s careers overlapping. Two of the most stylish and talented batsmen you’ll ever see. I’ve been fortunate enough to be at the ground during some of their great innings (Saeed 176 at the oval, saeed 99 semi final knock, yousuf 200 at lords). Money definitely well spent!

And on the so called forced conversion - I’m just lost for words. Why can’t people accept the fact that he embraced Islam? It happens all the time in the world.
 
A great batsman, behind Inzi our 2nd best naturally talented bat but an absolute tool, who lacked the intelligence to deal with people. His greed cost him years at the top.
 
Don’t think it was greed. Maybe pride or ego. Both are found in buckets in our people.

He was also not very happy when Malik was made captain and complained about how seniority should have been looked at.
Loved him as a batsman but he was never very intelligent with other things and let’s his ego get in the way.
 
Visiting players who have hit three centuries in a Test series in England this century:

Mohammad Yousuf - 2006
Rahul Dravid - 2002 & 2011
Steve Smith - 2019
Daryl Mitchell - 2022
 
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