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"Sami Aslam has a very bright future ahead of him" : Taufeeq Umar

Abdullah719

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The inability of Pakistan’s opening batsmen to make an impression in Test matches has been a source of intense debate over many years. Over the past five years, no less than fourteen pairs of batsmen have been tried out by exasperated Pakistan selectors but the failure to provide any sort of solidity at the top of the innings continues to spoil an otherwise satisfactory record of the Test team.

As an opener with nearly 3000 runs to his name which he has scored in forty-four Test matches, the left-handed Taufeeq Umar has played an important role in Pakistan’s Test successes of the past but like many others in that batting position, has not been able to cement his place in the national team.

Speaking to PakPassion.net, thirty-five-year-old Taufeeq expressed his views on issues surrounding some weak batting performances by Pakistan batsmen during the current tour of England, Mohammad Hafeez’s dip in form, Younis Khan’s stature as one of Pakistan’s top batsmen and his own aspirations of making a comeback to the national squad.


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Apart from the outstanding victories at Lord’s and The Oval, the Pakistan batting exhibited well known frailties against quality pace bowling by England. In particular, the Pakistan openers’ inability to provide a solid foundation for the relatively experienced middle-order to build upon was a major contributor to two back-to-back defeats in the second and third Tests of the recently concluded Test series.

In Taufeeq’s judgement, the problem with the Pakistan openers' inability to adjust to English conditions should not have been a surprise for the team management. Indeed, these weaknesses are well known and should have been addressed before their departure for this summer’s tour of England.

“In my view, conditions in England are always very tough for openers to come to terms with. This should not be a surprise to anyone. To counter this challenge, a player needs to have sound technique and if there were problems in this regard, they should have been fixed before embarking on this tour. I am afraid, it’s here that Pakistan’s preparations did not go according to plan.”

As many had feared, the Pakistan opening combination of the vastly experienced Mohammad Hafeez and young Shan Masood did not materialise into a significant advantage for Pakistan in the first two Tests. Whilst Shan Masood’s inexperience could be credited with his failures, no such explanation was logically possible for Mohammad Hafeez whose form took a nosedive resulting in him being excluded from the team for the do-or-die fourth Test at The Oval.

As a former opening partner, Taufeeq expressed his puzzlement at Mohammad Hafeez’s inability to score big and felt that this could simply be attributed to a temporary loss in form as he stated “I watched Hafeez’s progress during the Test series and my view is that he was suffering from a temporary dip in form. What he needed was one good innings to get back in to rhythm and regain his confidence. Unfortunately, he was unable to get his form back in the three Test matches he played and consequently found himself dropped for the fourth Test. I will, however, say that it is down to each batsman to try and iron out any flaws in his technique before coming to a tour of such importance. The homework needed to succeed at this level needs to be done beforehand, as each batsman is aware of the types of conditions he will face when he comes to England.”

One of the outstanding success stories for Pakistan in the Test series must surely have been the emergence of Sami Aslam as an excellent opening batsman. His innings of 82 and 70 in the Edgbaston Test rightly filled many Pakistan cricket followers with great hope but as Taufeeq pointed out, Aslam has significant work ahead to ensure he can continue to serve his team with distinction.

“Sami Aslam has had a wonderful re-introduction to Test cricket with two magnificent innings at Edgbaston played under immense pressure. However, I also know that England may have been surprised by Sami’s performance in the third Test and would have gone away and done their analysis to work him out. This is something we saw in the first innings of the fourth Test match and now the challenge is for Sami to concentrate harder to ensure he comes out on top against other oppositions in the future. If he continues to perform well then it would go a long way to solve Pakistan’s opening conundrum. I believe he has a very bright future ahead of him.”

Until the first innings of the fourth Test, Younis Khan had scores of 33, 25, 1, 28, 31, 4 which by his standards represented nothing but failure or at best, a serious dip in form. He managed to turn that around in dramatic fashion by scoring a match-winning double-hundred at The Oval. To many, like Taufeeq, the age old saying that form is temporary but class is permanent is the only real way to describe Younis Khan’s progress during the recently concluded Test series.

“Younis is a world-class batsman and there is no doubt in my mind about that fact. His below par performance until the fourth Test was a case of bad form and I am convinced that it just needed one good innings to bring him back to the type of excellence we are used to seeing from him. This is exactly what we saw in the first innings at The Oval and that too at a crucial stage of the game. His brilliant performances for Pakistan, including those achieved in England, are well known to all of us which is why his innings at The Oval should not really be a surprise to us. This Test series has ended now so unfortunately there aren’t more opportunities for him to demonstrate his capabilities this summer but the fact remains that he is one of the finest players to have ever represented Pakistan.”

Whilst Mohammad Hafeez may well be suffering from a temporary dip in form, it is a fact that the opening slot for Pakistan is a matter of constant worry and this is where the experienced hand of Taufeeq Umar could well be needed to steady the ship. Having last represented Pakistan in a Test match in November 2014, Taufeeq is very keen to re-establish himself in the team. However, Taufeeq knows that mere words will not find him a place in the Pakistan team and the only way forward is via the tried-and-tested route of performing at the domestic level.

“I have been playing First-Class cricket for my domestic team, SNGPL, and hope to put in my best efforts in the upcoming season as well. My aim is to perform well and give myself the best chance to make a comeback to the national team”, he concluded.
 
However, Taufeeq knows that mere words will not find him a place in the Pakistan team and the only way forward is via the tried-and-tested route of performing at the domestic level.

Hopefully Ahmed Shehzad is reading this. Time to score in FC to come back to national XI.

And I think Taufeeq was being politically correct here: “I watched Hafeez’s progress during the Test series and my view is that he was suffering from a temporary dip in form". It is not dip in form. Hafeez is hopeless outside UAE.
 
One of Pakistan's better test openers. Not always fairly dealt with. I wish him good luck.
 
It is rather sad the way he never came back into the Pak side but lovely comments on all his contemprories as well as Sami
 
Everyone is now on the Sami band wagon forgetting how he performed against Bangladesh. A classic example of recency bias.

He has a F/C ave. of 35 right now which tells me he is a hit and miss kind of a player. He still needs to improve and be consistent in scoring runs.
 
Everyone is now on the Sami band wagon forgetting how he performed against Bangladesh. A classic example of recency bias.

He has a F/C ave. of 35 right now which tells me he is a hit and miss kind of a player. He still needs to improve and be consistent in scoring runs.

He is allowed to improve.
 
Everyone is now on the Sami band wagon forgetting how he performed against Bangladesh. A classic example of recency bias.

He has a F/C ave. of 35 right now which tells me he is a hit and miss kind of a player. He still needs to improve and be consistent in scoring runs.

Azhar Ali's FC average - 36.9.
Asad Shafiq's FC average - 38.8.
 
Azhar Ali's FC average - 36.9.
Asad Shafiq's FC average - 38.8.

He is an opener and should be judged by a different yardstick. I still think he needs to demonstrate that he belongs at this level. Cannot be called the next saviour for Pakistan's opening woes after just one good performance.
 
Taufeeq seems like a class act. Unlike others not in the side, its good to see him not crying or lobbying for his return in the media in this interview.

Thought he was one of our better Test openers we tried post-Anwar/Sohail.
 
Taufeeq was actually a good opener who never really got going in ODI's but he's been pretty decent in Tests. I felt he was hard done by and that he should work hard to make a comeback into the side.
 
He is an opener and should be judged by a different yardstick. I still think he needs to demonstrate that he belongs at this level. Cannot be called the next saviour for Pakistan's opening woes after just one good performance.

I don't follow your argument.

Openers generally don't average as high as middle-order batsmen.

I don't think anyone calls him our 'saviour' but the patience, concentration and judgement he showed in the matches he played was miles ahead of anyone who has opened for Pakistan in the recent past. Even after Azhar scored a hundred, the pundits (including the English ones) were all gushing about Aslam's innings because of what he showed in the time he spent in the middle.

He has a long way to go, agreed.
 
There are some similarities between Taufeeq Umar and Sami Aslam.

We have seen that Sami Aslam judged line and length very well on a flat pitch. But he didn't do so well on the quicker, bouncier track at The Oval, and he has some hard work to do to ensure that he adapts to the conditions in Australia and New Zealand.
 
I use to like the way Taufeeq batted he was a good opener

Sami certainly has a bright future ahead of him he needs to be dealt with well. Azhar needs to be sacked after this series if he doesn't perform. Then Sami and Sharjeel need to open in ODI's.
 
Lovely, he was better opener than Hafeez and Shaani, don't know on which basis he got dropped from the team.

I hope Sami Aslam will be treated well, indeed this kid has a bright future.
 
I don't follow your argument.

Openers generally don't average as high as middle-order batsmen.

I don't think anyone calls him our 'saviour' but the patience, concentration and judgement he showed in the matches he played was miles ahead of anyone who has opened for Pakistan in the recent past. Even after Azhar scored a hundred, the pundits (including the English ones) were all gushing about Aslam's innings because of what he showed in the time he spent in the middle.

He has a long way to go, agreed.

Azhar and Asad having slightly higher averages in tests as compared to F/C cricket is an exception rather then the norm. Normally batsmen struggle to score in international cricket at an average that is higher than their F/C average. For openers it is more difficult as they are dealing with the new ball under conditions they are not familiar with.

Yes Sami played well in the 3rd test but we have to see how he performs long-term under different conditions. It could be that the Egbaston pitch suited his style of play and Oval pitch didn't.

As I keep saying the key metric we should be judging all batsmen on is their batting average as that tells you how they have done over the long-term not based on one or two good innings.

Sami deserves a good run and at the same time whenever he gets the chance, he should score bucket load of runs in F/C circuit to get that average up. This will show he has the ability to be consistent and occupy the crease for longer periods of time.

If the batsman is talented enough to score runs in international cricket I don't any reason why he cannot do the same against domestic bowlers who are less talented.
 
I don't follow your argument.

Openers generally don't average as high as middle-order batsmen.

I don't think anyone calls him our 'saviour' but the patience, concentration and judgement he showed in the matches he played was miles ahead of anyone who has opened for Pakistan in the recent past. Even after Azhar scored a hundred, the pundits (including the English ones) were all gushing about Aslam's innings because of what he showed in the time he spent in the middle.

He has a long way to go, agreed.

This. Not really a controversial point.
 
Azhar and Asad having slightly higher averages in tests as compared to F/C cricket is an exception rather then the norm. Normally batsmen struggle to score in international cricket at an average that is higher than their F/C average. For openers it is more difficult as they are dealing with the new ball under conditions they are not familiar with.

Yes Sami played well in the 3rd test but we have to see how he performs long-term under different conditions. It could be that the Egbaston pitch suited his style of play and Oval pitch didn't.

As I keep saying the key metric we should be judging all batsmen on is their batting average as that tells you how they have done over the long-term not based on one or two good innings.

Sami deserves a good run and at the same time whenever he gets the chance, he should score bucket load of runs in F/C circuit to get that average up. This will show he has the ability to be consistent and occupy the crease for longer periods of time.

If the batsman is talented enough to score runs in international cricket I don't any reason why he cannot do the same against domestic bowlers who are less talented.

I'm a big advocate for taking domestic stats seriously, as comparative indicators. In other words, a bowling average of 18 by itself means very little, but when the alternatives average 25-30, it gets me very interested. Because no matter how bad are domestic conditions, they are the same for everyone. The thing is right now there are no alternatives trumping Aslam for numbers. Shan was tried and I think had a decent run. So its not really controversial to let Sami have his chance.

The other problem with using stats for young players like this is that it could still be said of them that they are in development, ie Sami played only 30 FC matches at age 18 and 19. This is a different issue from sample size. If a 30-32 year old fast bowler has played 17 Test matches for instance, I am inclined to think that their stats are not going to get better with time. A spinner may be a different issue.
 
Taufeeq didn't deserve to be dropped. He's made comeback before and I'm sure if he's fit enough should be pushing for selection.
 
A right hander like Azhar, Khurram or Shehzad.

LOL! On what grounds do they make selection ahead of Aslam? Highest scoring U19 captain for Pakistan averaging 50 in LA cricket at SR 90 and 40+ in international ODIs. Let's see if Sharjeel performs before we throw away our most promising bats to accommodate him.
 
Back to Taufeeq and I always felt he was the more stable of the Hafeez-Taufeeq duo. Really not good the way he was discarded after an "injury"
 
Back to Taufeeq and I always felt he was the more stable of the Hafeez-Taufeeq duo. Really not good the way he was discarded after an "injury"

As I recall Sheheryar sb gave an interview where he nudged misbah to look beyond the previously tested players. This was before the Australian series in UAE I think.
He was really poorly treated throughout his career tbh.
I hope he puts up tons of runs in the forthcoming season and misbah can rope him in: not sure whether Mickey would be on the same page.
 
There was a sense of calmness about Taufeeq when he batted.

In a way Sami Aslam reminds me a bit of him. Knew where his off stump was, generally played straight and looked very calm at the crease.
 
Hope Aslam isn't dropped after this, give him a solid run
 
A chance for Sami to impress on what looks like a flat track today.
 
41 years old today, Happy Birthday Taufeeq Umar
 
I feel so sorry for Sami. Sami and Imam should have the red and white ball opening pair for Pakistan.
 
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