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[VIDEOS] 22-yr-old Rizwan Hussain - Clean-striking left-hander signed by Islamabad United for PSL 4

he hit those sixes against imad sohail Sohail Kahn and Junaid, though against Junaid were fours but more impressive , good talent. Was scoring heavily in last I mean 2017 QEA trophy ok low scoring wicekts. LQ has got a good pick.


He is unlike Pakistani top order batsman in three ways :


1. Very Tall

2. Broad

3. Muscular, fit and powerhouse.


He wasn't picked my LQ. He is supplementary player of IU.
 
Looks another spin basher

Looks like you haven't seen his stroke-play against pace. :facepalm:

He hits through the line with superb timing and efficiency, most of his attacking strokes against both pace and spin are quality shots, playing the ball on its merit without premeditating to hack everything on the legside/offside.
 
He looks good and a not a hack. Plays all around the ground as well. I hope he works and improves
 
He'll be competing for one emerging spot at IU with highly "potential" Musa Khan, therefore it might be a difficult for him to find a spot in playing XI. Also, being batsman, his chances are even lower considering that PSL hardly gives a break to young PAK batsmen. But, what little I have seen, definitely he should start ahead of Farhan.
 
He'll be competing for one emerging spot at IU with highly "potential" Musa Khan, therefore it might be a difficult for him to find a spot in playing XI. Also, being batsman, his chances are even lower considering that PSL hardly gives a break to young PAK batsmen. But, what little I have seen, definitely he should start ahead of Farhan.

I think IU have played two emerging players before.

They'll probably play 2 if they feel it's warranted to form the best combination.
 
He'll be competing for one emerging spot at IU with highly "potential" Musa Khan, therefore it might be a difficult for him to find a spot in playing XI. Also, being batsman, his chances are even lower considering that PSL hardly gives a break to young PAK batsmen. But, what little I have seen, definitely he should start ahead of Farhan.

.He is in supplimentry cateogry/
 
Problem with these videos are they only show the shots being hit. They dont show u how well he defended the good balls
How many times he got beaten by the bowler.
How was his strike rotation.
Thats why You can never trust these sample videos boasting players like world beaters.
 
Problem with these videos are they only show the shots being hit. They dont show u how well he defended the good balls
How many times he got beaten by the bowler.
How was his strike rotation.
Thats why You can never trust these sample videos boasting players like world beaters.


Why don't you watch the match live and give your opinion on what you see ?
 
Problem with these videos are they only show the shots being hit. They dont show u how well he defended the good balls
How many times he got beaten by the bowler.
How was his strike rotation.
Thats why You can never trust these sample videos boasting players like world beaters.

These are T20s... I'm not sure what kind of emphasis on defence you are expecting, especially when a player is comfortably maintaining a very good strike rate on seemingly sluggish, low scoring pitches. In the shorter formats, firepower with the bat is a major area of weakness for Pakistan, and I think that is the void people want players like Rizwan to fill.

He probably hasn't played enough domestic cricket for us to assess whether he is a contender for Test/ODI cricket, but in T20Is you can be more adventurous with selections and pick players if they show they're capable of explosive batting.
 
just hanging with people Like Dean Jones and other players at IU will help him. Hoping to see him play for us in the PSL.
 
Rizwan Hussain first caught my attention in when, from complete obscurity, he quietly climbed the charts in the QeA trophy (FC) last season after scoring on very difficult wickets. He ended up scoring around 500 runs (tenth highest) in eight games with four fifties and one century at a strike rate of 61. IIRC the only reason he didn’t finish higher was because he was playing for such a weak region. Unfortunately no one had any info or footage on him at that time.

The first chance to watch him in a televised game came during the recent Pakistan Cup (April/May 2018). I had hoped he would play the whole tournament but Ahmed Shahzad only played him in two games. Rizwan’s first innings in the tournament was 67 (71) on a very flat wicket (his side chased 372!). Initial thoughts at that time were Rizwan was composed and his game was mainly based on rotating the strike and accumulating runs, with the occasional bit of aggression when it was in his zone. He has played well in the ongoing National T20 Cup (the first time he has had the chance to show off his T20 game) which in some sense vindicates his selection by IU for PSL4.

Observations from his complete televised innings from Pakistan Cup/National T20 Cup (i.e. not just highlights):

i. Rizwan has excellent timing (bat swing is golf like). His batting is a blend of mechanical and easy on the eye. Rizwan has good wrists and his modus operandi is to rotate the strike by dropping the ball/playing the ball through midwicket. He does this even if it is bowled on a fifth/sixth stump line which can get him into trouble (I come back to this later).

ii. His stance and trigger movement, especially against pacers, reminds me of Cook (watch his complete innings, not just highlights and you will see what I mean). Like Cook he is strong off his legs and square of the wicket, particularly on the offside, and he cuts anything a tad short. Unlike Cook, he actually has a power game. There is a lazy elegance to some of Rizwan’s shots; he hits through the line beautifully and his hitting area is in the V, especially between wide mid-on and straight down the ground.

iii. He is very confident against spin and sweeps well. To date, he has played pace okay but the pitches he has played on have been pretty slow (lifeless in the case of the Pakistan Cup) so too early to judge his game against pace.

Things to work on/Points to Note:


i. He favours the onside. The one time he tried playing a drive in his 67 in the Pakistan Cup he was bowled by Hammad Azam. His innings in the T20 Cup show he can drive through the offside but he nevertheless needs to work on aspects of his offside game, particularly (i) when it comes to rotating the strike and (ii) against pacers. He seems to be particularly limited when it comes to hitting it through cover/extra cover (yet that is where sides are putting their fields!) The few times bowlers have got it right to him, Rizwan has ended up getting frustrated and swiping across the line.

ii. Has looked uncomfortable against the short ball at times.

iii. Rizwan’s defence is a little loose at times and at times he plays away from the body. This was a surprise given how good a FC season he had last season on some very difficult tracks. It’s not a huge issue in white ball cricket but something for him to work on in red ball cricket.

Summary

He is obviously talented and he has played well in the T20 Cup, but he has been helped in his reent performances by the fact opposition sides haven’t done their homework and bowled to his strengths and set the wrong fields (can write more on this if people want me to). The true test will be how he fares against sides who actually do their homework and set the right fields/bowl in the right areas. Also want to see him play on better wickets (particularly to assess his game against pace). In other words, good going but he is yet to be properly tested.
 
He is a serious talent, looks like natural stroke maker. He plays each and every shot perfectly.
 
Rizwan Hussain first caught my attention in when, from complete obscurity, he quietly climbed the charts in the QeA trophy (FC) last season after scoring on very difficult wickets. He ended up scoring around 500 runs (tenth highest) in eight games with four fifties and one century at a strike rate of 61. IIRC the only reason he didn’t finish higher was because he was playing for such a weak region. Unfortunately no one had any info or footage on him at that time.

The first chance to watch him in a televised game came during the recent Pakistan Cup (April/May 2018). I had hoped he would play the whole tournament but Ahmed Shahzad only played him in two games. Rizwan’s first innings in the tournament was 67 (71) on a very flat wicket (his side chased 372!). Initial thoughts at that time were Rizwan was composed and his game was mainly based on rotating the strike and accumulating runs, with the occasional bit of aggression when it was in his zone. He has played well in the ongoing National T20 Cup (the first time he has had the chance to show off his T20 game) which in some sense vindicates his selection by IU for PSL4.

Observations from his complete televised innings from Pakistan Cup/National T20 Cup (i.e. not just highlights):

i. Rizwan has excellent timing (bat swing is golf like). His batting is a blend of mechanical and easy on the eye. Rizwan has good wrists and his modus operandi is to rotate the strike by dropping the ball/playing the ball through midwicket. He does this even if it is bowled on a fifth/sixth stump line which can get him into trouble (I come back to this later).

ii. His stance and trigger movement, especially against pacers, reminds me of Cook (watch his complete innings, not just highlights and you will see what I mean). Like Cook he is strong off his legs and square of the wicket, particularly on the offside, and he cuts anything a tad short. Unlike Cook, he actually has a power game. There is a lazy elegance to some of Rizwan’s shots; he hits through the line beautifully and his hitting area is in the V, especially between wide mid-on and straight down the ground.

iii. He is very confident against spin and sweeps well. To date, he has played pace okay but the pitches he has played on have been pretty slow (lifeless in the case of the Pakistan Cup) so too early to judge his game against pace.

Things to work on/Points to Note:


i. He favours the onside. The one time he tried playing a drive in his 67 in the Pakistan Cup he was bowled by Hammad Azam. His innings in the T20 Cup show he can drive through the offside but he nevertheless needs to work on aspects of his offside game, particularly (i) when it comes to rotating the strike and (ii) against pacers. He seems to be particularly limited when it comes to hitting it through cover/extra cover (yet that is where sides are putting their fields!) The few times bowlers have got it right to him, Rizwan has ended up getting frustrated and swiping across the line.

ii. Has looked uncomfortable against the short ball at times.

iii. Rizwan’s defence is a little loose at times and at times he plays away from the body. This was a surprise given how good a FC season he had last season on some very difficult tracks. It’s not a huge issue in white ball cricket but something for him to work on in red ball cricket.

Summary

He is obviously talented and he has played well in the T20 Cup, but he has been helped in his reent performances by the fact opposition sides haven’t done their homework and bowled to his strengths and set the wrong fields (can write more on this if people want me to). The true test will be how he fares against sides who actually do their homework and set the right fields/bowl in the right areas. Also want to see him play on better wickets (particularly to assess his game against pace). In other words, good going but he is yet to be properly tested.

That is a proper analysis!
 
These are T20s... I'm not sure what kind of emphasis on defence you are expecting, especially when a player is comfortably maintaining a very good strike rate on seemingly sluggish, low scoring pitches. In the shorter formats, firepower with the bat is a major area of weakness for Pakistan, and I think that is the void people want players like Rizwan to fill.

He probably hasn't played enough domestic cricket for us to assess whether he is a contender for Test/ODI cricket, but in T20Is you can be more adventurous with selections and pick players if they show they're capable of explosive batting.

If you looking just for a slogger in t20 then uts a different story.. pak team is struggling in odi test formats. They need batsmen who are technically strong.
 
If you looking just for a slogger in t20 then uts a different story.. pak team is struggling in odi test formats. They need batsmen who are technically strong.

If he can prove himself as a good power-hitter in T20Is, we can try him in ODIs too as we seriously lack firepower in both the shorter formats.

It's too early to judge his potential, or lack thereof, in the longest format, though I recall him saying he's had a good First-Class season in a recent post-match interview.
 
If you looking just for a slogger in t20 then uts a different story.. pak team is struggling in odi test formats. They need batsmen who are technically strong.

Also, from what I've seen he isn't what I'd call a slogger. He plays some really good orthodox strokes, for example, his classy straight driven four against Junaid Khan.
 
There we go.

Sami bowling across him, Rizwan's feet are planted, inside edge onto the stumps.

Yeah Sami worked him over, really good spell by him today.

45 off 40 in chase of 180 is a poor knock. Plus the other batsmen can't stop failing so it's pretty much a one-man team.
 
Yeah Sami worked him over, really good spell by him today.

45 off 40 in chase of 180 is a poor knock. Plus the other batsmen can't stop failing so it's pretty much a one-man team.

Agreed. Sami was impressive.

The (right arm) seamers who have succeeded against Rizwan all have a straightforward plan. Bowl over the wicker and angle it across off stump/outside off stump on a back of a length/good length. That is exactly what you need to do; Rizwan’s feet end up getting stuck and he reaches for the ball. Eventually he gets frustrated and is dismissed. It’s not rocket science but very few seem to have got the memo.
 
Agreed. Sami was impressive.

The (right arm) seamers who have succeeded against Rizwan all have a straightforward plan. Bowl over the wicker and angle it across off stump/outside off stump on a back of a length/good length. That is exactly what you need to do; Rizwan’s feet end up getting stuck and he reaches for the ball. Eventually he gets frustrated and is dismissed. It’s not rocket science but very few seem to have got the memo.

There’s a reason why Chacha Iftis and Khurram Bradmans of the domestic cricket piles up so many runs in the domestic cricket.
 
Nasir Nawaz is a much better prospect.

This guy is spin basher at most.
 
Agreed. Sami was impressive.

The (right arm) seamers who have succeeded against Rizwan all have a straightforward plan. Bowl over the wicker and angle it across off stump/outside off stump on a back of a length/good length. That is exactly what you need to do; Rizwan’s feet end up getting stuck and he reaches for the ball. Eventually he gets frustrated and is dismissed. It’s not rocket science but very few seem to have got the memo.

Didn't Sharjeel had a similar issue initially ? He used to struggle on that fourth stump line with the ball going across. Maybe Dean Jones can sort Rizwan's technique in PSL.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">There's a bit of Sharjeel Khan in his batting and his favourite player is Kumar Sangakkara - Rizwan Hussain's 58 off 41 balls today for Lahore Region Blues against Multan Region <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/NationalT20Cup?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#NationalT20Cup</a> <a href="https://t.co/f2sgYqqzXZ">pic.twitter.com/f2sgYqqzXZ</a></p>— Saj Sadiq (@Saj_PakPassion) <a href="https://twitter.com/Saj_PakPassion/status/1074306656857661440?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">December 16, 2018</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Looks like a fitter and younger version of Sharjeel. But, yet to be seen as to how he does against pacers and at PSL, where bowlers will be of higher quality.
 
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Nowhere near Sharjeel's Quality.

Sharjeel wasnt very good when he debuted, he can into groove when he was around 27,28.

Rizwan is just 22, hopefully he can be at the top of his game soon.
 
What really impresses me is his footwork, he also has couple of FC centuries which shows he has the basic technique and decent temperament.
 
He has pretty poor record in List A and First Class, averages over 50 in T20s though (granted it is just from a handful of matches).


Might be another tullaybaaz type. I hope Inzi does not make the same mistake that was made with Asif Ali. If he performs in T20s then select him for T20s and not every format.
 
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