RedwoodOriginal
Senior T20I Player
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2018
- Runs
- 17,367
- Post of the Week
- 4
Maybe its just me but for me the appeal of test cricket has always been the idea of man battling adversity and succeeding only through sheer will, determination and hardwork. You don't necessarily have to even be a good cricketer to succeed at limited-overs cricket, but you have to be a damn good one to succeed at test cricket. Talent matters but guts, determination and character separate the best from the rest.
It is for this reason that I was always a big fan of limited cricketers who still find ways to be successful. Why I think Faf du Plessis's match-saving 110 against Australia at Adelaide in 2010 is one of the greatest innings every played on a cricket pitch and why I am a massive fan of Dean Elgar and Azhar Ali today.
But at the same time though I have also accepted that despite being an outstanding cricketer and humble servant who has done great things for Pakistan cricket, Azhar Ali will never get the respect he truly deserves from most Pakistani fans even as he nears 100 tests and continues to stamp his authority at the age of 37...standing at 5th in Pakistan's all-time run-scorer list, seemingly poised to go past Mohammad Yousuf.
For Pakistani fans it does not matter that he has the highest average against Australia in the world in test cricket during the last decade. A team that has always haunted even the best Pakistani batsmen, and a team against whom only Miandad and Zaheer Abbas have amassed more runs than him at a far inferior average. It does not matter to such fans that he has scored more hundreds than Sourav Ganguly and VVS Laxman in fewer innings. Or that only Alaister Cook and David Warner have scored more runs than him since his test debut. Either they simply donot know all these things or they choose to ignore them over their personal dislike for the guy.
His monster run from 2016 or his marquee knocks such as the triple hundred against West Indies, the double ton in Australia or the match-saving 141 in England are never given their due appreciation. And regardless of how he is doing, the conversation generally tends to center around when he is going to be replaced. As if the second coming of Bradman is just waiting in the wings to take his spot.
For me however, Azhar's lack of flair or limited repertoire of shots have always been what makes him so great. The fact that he is such a limited batter and still manages to be successful. The fact that he finds ways to persevere through tough situations and play crucial knocks that most people don't even notice because of how understated they are. In short, he personifies the very values of character, grit and determination that define great test cricketers.
After the dismal years he had in 2018 and 2019, even I thought that his career was nearing its end. But such was the man's character and temperament that not only did he come back from that slump but followed it by scoring more runs than anyone in the world in the next two years.
Yeah, that's right. No one in the world has scored more test runs than Azhar Ali since the start of 2020. And he has done it at an average of 48. The next Pakistani is 150 runs behind him.
The next conversation from his detractors would inevitably center on how he has dominated Zimbabwe and Bangladesh and Zimbabwe during this time period to pad up his stats. But if you take out his performances against those two teams he still averages 46.
Even as he smacked Lyon and the Australian pacers around Rawalpindi yesterday and scored the lions-share of runs in his century stand with Babar, it was almost as if he was playing second fiddle because all the crowd was interested in cheering was Babar's name. But that didn't stop Azhar from putting one of the best bowling attacks in the world to the sword. Without his impeccably calculated knock---where he batted patiently for his first hundred runs and then ramped it up to a strike-rate of 80+ for his next 85---Pakistan might not have even reached 450 by the end of the day.
But ofcourse none of that mattered as one of the first questions in the press conference to him was not a question, but a statement..."have you calculated how damaging you century is to the team?"
While it is laughable though that a so called journalist thought Azhar's marathon 185 against one of the best bowling attacks in the world...scored at a SR of 51 was damaging to the team cause it certainly isn't the least bit surprising because most Pakistani fans likely hold the same view.
Azhar's time will eventually come. And it isn't the least bit surprising to imagine that most strike-rate obsessed young Pakistani fans who grew up in the age of Afridi will likely breathe a sigh of relief and be happy. But the small number of others--of which I am a part of---who recognize everything this man has done for Pakistan cricket will know perfectly well who they will be losing.
So before that moment comes, I would just like to say thank you Azhar Ali...for everything you have done for Pakistan cricket. What certain out of touch fans think about you matters little in the grand scheme of things because when all is said and done, history will remember you as a fighter who always punched above his weight and achieved great things for Pakistan cricket.
You made me love test cricket even more than I thought I did and for that I will always be grateful to you.
It is for this reason that I was always a big fan of limited cricketers who still find ways to be successful. Why I think Faf du Plessis's match-saving 110 against Australia at Adelaide in 2010 is one of the greatest innings every played on a cricket pitch and why I am a massive fan of Dean Elgar and Azhar Ali today.
But at the same time though I have also accepted that despite being an outstanding cricketer and humble servant who has done great things for Pakistan cricket, Azhar Ali will never get the respect he truly deserves from most Pakistani fans even as he nears 100 tests and continues to stamp his authority at the age of 37...standing at 5th in Pakistan's all-time run-scorer list, seemingly poised to go past Mohammad Yousuf.
For Pakistani fans it does not matter that he has the highest average against Australia in the world in test cricket during the last decade. A team that has always haunted even the best Pakistani batsmen, and a team against whom only Miandad and Zaheer Abbas have amassed more runs than him at a far inferior average. It does not matter to such fans that he has scored more hundreds than Sourav Ganguly and VVS Laxman in fewer innings. Or that only Alaister Cook and David Warner have scored more runs than him since his test debut. Either they simply donot know all these things or they choose to ignore them over their personal dislike for the guy.
His monster run from 2016 or his marquee knocks such as the triple hundred against West Indies, the double ton in Australia or the match-saving 141 in England are never given their due appreciation. And regardless of how he is doing, the conversation generally tends to center around when he is going to be replaced. As if the second coming of Bradman is just waiting in the wings to take his spot.
For me however, Azhar's lack of flair or limited repertoire of shots have always been what makes him so great. The fact that he is such a limited batter and still manages to be successful. The fact that he finds ways to persevere through tough situations and play crucial knocks that most people don't even notice because of how understated they are. In short, he personifies the very values of character, grit and determination that define great test cricketers.
After the dismal years he had in 2018 and 2019, even I thought that his career was nearing its end. But such was the man's character and temperament that not only did he come back from that slump but followed it by scoring more runs than anyone in the world in the next two years.
Yeah, that's right. No one in the world has scored more test runs than Azhar Ali since the start of 2020. And he has done it at an average of 48. The next Pakistani is 150 runs behind him.
The next conversation from his detractors would inevitably center on how he has dominated Zimbabwe and Bangladesh and Zimbabwe during this time period to pad up his stats. But if you take out his performances against those two teams he still averages 46.
Even as he smacked Lyon and the Australian pacers around Rawalpindi yesterday and scored the lions-share of runs in his century stand with Babar, it was almost as if he was playing second fiddle because all the crowd was interested in cheering was Babar's name. But that didn't stop Azhar from putting one of the best bowling attacks in the world to the sword. Without his impeccably calculated knock---where he batted patiently for his first hundred runs and then ramped it up to a strike-rate of 80+ for his next 85---Pakistan might not have even reached 450 by the end of the day.
But ofcourse none of that mattered as one of the first questions in the press conference to him was not a question, but a statement..."have you calculated how damaging you century is to the team?"
While it is laughable though that a so called journalist thought Azhar's marathon 185 against one of the best bowling attacks in the world...scored at a SR of 51 was damaging to the team cause it certainly isn't the least bit surprising because most Pakistani fans likely hold the same view.
Azhar's time will eventually come. And it isn't the least bit surprising to imagine that most strike-rate obsessed young Pakistani fans who grew up in the age of Afridi will likely breathe a sigh of relief and be happy. But the small number of others--of which I am a part of---who recognize everything this man has done for Pakistan cricket will know perfectly well who they will be losing.
So before that moment comes, I would just like to say thank you Azhar Ali...for everything you have done for Pakistan cricket. What certain out of touch fans think about you matters little in the grand scheme of things because when all is said and done, history will remember you as a fighter who always punched above his weight and achieved great things for Pakistan cricket.
You made me love test cricket even more than I thought I did and for that I will always be grateful to you.
Last edited: