Pete Rose
Senior ODI Player
- Joined
- Nov 2, 2011
- Runs
- 22,848
- Post of the Week
- 2
I was watching one of the post-game analysis shows on PTV a few weeks ago. Shoaib Akhtar was also part of the panel. I will be the first to admit that he does not offer particularly insightful commentary. But something he said on the post game analysis on day 4 struck with me. Shafiq had scored a century and all kinds of hopes were kindled for day 5. His words (I paraphrase for clarity):
"This boy has done really well, but tonight he should be thinking I can be a superstar, I can do something no one has done before. And thats what I want all these boys to think: that the world is watching and we can all become superstars here"
I will be the first to admit that our teams of the past have been massive underachievers: these were teams with guys like Wasim, Waqar, Anwar, Inzi, Razzaq, Afridi, Azhar Mahmood. They were individually talented, but prone to implosions and as time went on they became even worse due to various well documented issues.
But I would rather not focus on their full career, I would focus on how these guys began their careers. They all made their mark very early in their careers. They were not manufactured cricketers. Sure they has plenty of weaknesses. But despite call that, I can list a few things:
- Wasim was man of the match in his second test match
- Waqar's first tour to Australia had the wicketkeeper standing near the boundary
- Afridi's first batting innings in an odi was a 37 ball century, and his first test match was 5-fer vs. Australia
- Inzi had his world cup (despite failing through most of it)
- Aamer Nazir bamboozled richie richardson and a few others on his maiden tour of the windies
- Basit Ali averaged above 40 for his maiden test tour of the then world test champions, west Indies
- Saeed Anwar's first tour of Australia had the commentators astonished that an opener was charging at fast bowlers
- Shoaib Akhar had those two wickets in Calcutta
- Saleem malik had the nehru cup
I fully realize that a lot of the guys that I used as examples above did not have the grit or the discipline or the mental toughness to sustain their initial spark or perhaps failed when up against tougher competition, once the opposition figured out how to shut them down. But nonetheless, as corny as it is they had the brashness, the madness, the self confidence to take the world take notice.
Take Lebron James: he has gone in to pressers before finals saying stuff like "I feel confident because I am the best player in the world......its the finals everybody dreams of playing in the finals and doing well"
Of course with Lebron all of that sounds credible given what he has achieved, but at the beginning of his career he was driven be fear of failure. "I wanted to avoid failure at all costs"
I know that the team has had psychiatrists and specialists coaches and what not, but those guys don't go with you when you get in to the ring. Once you are in the ring: you have to want it, you have to dream of beating the other guy to a pulp. And perhaps this mindset has left Pakistan's limited over teams. Too many of our players go in there, shoulders drooped, grim expressions, forever thinking about re-building, resurrecting, surviving. I am not going to get into useless debate on whether its Misbah's fault or selection inconsistency or lack of backing.
All I will say is that some of the guys that I mentioned above came from lesser backgrounds and had even less staff room support. What they had was a burning desire to stand out to make a difference.
I watched Umar Akmal's innings today, sure it was the usual brainless stuff and sure his game is too loose. But at least in that short innings, he was trying to do stuff that others hadn't done. He wanted to get after the opposition's best bowler. And I think there is something that Pakistan can take away from that - you have to dream big , you have to want to be a superstar. There is a time and place for winning ugly. But there is also dividends if you think like a superstar. The results will come, but until then you have to fake it till you make it.
"This boy has done really well, but tonight he should be thinking I can be a superstar, I can do something no one has done before. And thats what I want all these boys to think: that the world is watching and we can all become superstars here"
I will be the first to admit that our teams of the past have been massive underachievers: these were teams with guys like Wasim, Waqar, Anwar, Inzi, Razzaq, Afridi, Azhar Mahmood. They were individually talented, but prone to implosions and as time went on they became even worse due to various well documented issues.
But I would rather not focus on their full career, I would focus on how these guys began their careers. They all made their mark very early in their careers. They were not manufactured cricketers. Sure they has plenty of weaknesses. But despite call that, I can list a few things:
- Wasim was man of the match in his second test match
- Waqar's first tour to Australia had the wicketkeeper standing near the boundary
- Afridi's first batting innings in an odi was a 37 ball century, and his first test match was 5-fer vs. Australia
- Inzi had his world cup (despite failing through most of it)
- Aamer Nazir bamboozled richie richardson and a few others on his maiden tour of the windies
- Basit Ali averaged above 40 for his maiden test tour of the then world test champions, west Indies
- Saeed Anwar's first tour of Australia had the commentators astonished that an opener was charging at fast bowlers
- Shoaib Akhar had those two wickets in Calcutta
- Saleem malik had the nehru cup
I fully realize that a lot of the guys that I used as examples above did not have the grit or the discipline or the mental toughness to sustain their initial spark or perhaps failed when up against tougher competition, once the opposition figured out how to shut them down. But nonetheless, as corny as it is they had the brashness, the madness, the self confidence to take the world take notice.
Take Lebron James: he has gone in to pressers before finals saying stuff like "I feel confident because I am the best player in the world......its the finals everybody dreams of playing in the finals and doing well"
Of course with Lebron all of that sounds credible given what he has achieved, but at the beginning of his career he was driven be fear of failure. "I wanted to avoid failure at all costs"
I know that the team has had psychiatrists and specialists coaches and what not, but those guys don't go with you when you get in to the ring. Once you are in the ring: you have to want it, you have to dream of beating the other guy to a pulp. And perhaps this mindset has left Pakistan's limited over teams. Too many of our players go in there, shoulders drooped, grim expressions, forever thinking about re-building, resurrecting, surviving. I am not going to get into useless debate on whether its Misbah's fault or selection inconsistency or lack of backing.
All I will say is that some of the guys that I mentioned above came from lesser backgrounds and had even less staff room support. What they had was a burning desire to stand out to make a difference.
I watched Umar Akmal's innings today, sure it was the usual brainless stuff and sure his game is too loose. But at least in that short innings, he was trying to do stuff that others hadn't done. He wanted to get after the opposition's best bowler. And I think there is something that Pakistan can take away from that - you have to dream big , you have to want to be a superstar. There is a time and place for winning ugly. But there is also dividends if you think like a superstar. The results will come, but until then you have to fake it till you make it.