PakWarrior
Tape Ball Star
- Joined
- Jun 1, 2018
- Runs
- 990
- Post of the Week
- 1
For those of us old enough to have followed Waqar from his young Surrey days, I think we can all agree that he was one of the fastest bowlers of all time.
Waqar wasn't 95mph+ during the Australia one day series in 1989 when he made his debut under Imran's captaincy. He was skinny and raw and was perhaps 86mph to 92mph that year.
But then the remarkable transformation began. Waqar's young body began to develop and his pace went up a level. From 1990 to 1993, I believe Waqar may have crossed the 100mph barrier.
We all know about his back injuries and his pace began to drop at the end of 1994. He had two choices. To change his action and lose 5mph in speed or to retire from the sport. He chose the former.
Waqar was still clocked at 90 to 92 mph from 1996 to 1997. Then after more surgeries he was bowling from 86 to 88mph from late 1997 until late 1998.
From 1999 to 2003 he was a 83mph to 85mph bowler. He was still successful as wisdom trumped pace.
Also we should take speed gun measurements from the 2003 world cup with a pinch of salt due to various geographical factors (sea level etc), 2 to 3mph were being added on top of true bowler speeds.
I think most of us will agree that he was one of the fastest bowlers of all time, if not the fastest.
Waqar wasn't 95mph+ during the Australia one day series in 1989 when he made his debut under Imran's captaincy. He was skinny and raw and was perhaps 86mph to 92mph that year.
But then the remarkable transformation began. Waqar's young body began to develop and his pace went up a level. From 1990 to 1993, I believe Waqar may have crossed the 100mph barrier.
We all know about his back injuries and his pace began to drop at the end of 1994. He had two choices. To change his action and lose 5mph in speed or to retire from the sport. He chose the former.
Waqar was still clocked at 90 to 92 mph from 1996 to 1997. Then after more surgeries he was bowling from 86 to 88mph from late 1997 until late 1998.
From 1999 to 2003 he was a 83mph to 85mph bowler. He was still successful as wisdom trumped pace.
Also we should take speed gun measurements from the 2003 world cup with a pinch of salt due to various geographical factors (sea level etc), 2 to 3mph were being added on top of true bowler speeds.
I think most of us will agree that he was one of the fastest bowlers of all time, if not the fastest.