'I want to teach players to become big hitters'
Former Pakistan allrounder Abdul Razzaq talks about his biggest six, his best coach, and the toughest bowlers he faced

"If you've got talent, don't spoil it" • AFP
You have to perform. Every match, you have to perform.
This is a good question. My intention always was wanting to do well for my team; doesn't matter whether it's in the league, county or whatever. I had sympathy with my counties, but they didn't treat me as well. At Leicestershire and Hampshire we won the T20 and they didn't give me another contract, which is very painful. I wanted to do well, and I did. We were successful. But they didn't give me respect for that. They released me.
The happiest day is whenever you perform, when you get the Man of the Match. Everybody is praising you. Your name is in the newspaper. I had a Man of the Match against India in Hobart in 2000. They had a good team at that time. It was my lucky day, and that really kick-started my career.
I belong to a very poor family. Our bread and butter is cricket, you know. We take it very seriously. So any day you don't perform, or it's not your day, that's very painful. So you have to be committed. You have to say, "Razzaq, come on. Show your talent."
I played for Pakistan. Pakistan doesn't have good catchers! But I suppose you can say Younis Khan was a good catcher.
I'd say Bob Woolmer. He was a good motivator. He was very friendly with the players. When you coach, you should give confidence to the players. If you're friendly with the players, they will tell you everything, they will never come under pressure, and they will perform.
Wasim Akram.
I will blame the PCB, all the chairmen who have come. They don't understand the feelings of the players. They don't know how to respect the players. That's where we're lacking. That's why we're not creating many good players nowadays.
It was in Karachi, against Balaji, in a series against India in 2004. It went out of the park - over the stands - and it's a huge ground.
I started as a bowler, but I'm a good observer. I watch very closely when the match is on. As time went on, batting gave me more enjoyment.
Shahid Afridi, most of the time.
"The PCB don't understand the feelings of the players. They don't know how to respect the players"
Mohammad Yousuf was very funny. Also, Shoaib Malik.
I like badminton, but I don't have time to play other sports. Cricket is my passion.
Shane Warne and Muralitharan. Of the fast bowlers, I was really impressed by Damien Fleming. Australia had world-class bowlers - McGrath, Brett Lee - but I felt comfortable against them. Fleming swung the ball. Very good bowler.
Shoaib Akhtar, in first-class cricket in Pakistan.
Waqar Younis.
Younis Khan.
I have 279 wickets and over 5000 runs in ODIs, but I missed 70, 80 one-day matches because of problems with the PCB chairman from 2007. So if I could have played those games, I might have been able to break a lot of records.
Dale Steyn, Saeed Ajmal, and AB de Villiers.
Dilshan, Ajmal, Shahid Afridi, Jos Buttler, Aaron Finch, de Villiers…
England. I like the cold weather, rain, everything. England has discipline, law and order. It's a perfect lifestyle for me.
If you've got talent, don't spoil it, don't waste it. Talk to the right people. I'm doing Level 2 coaching and want to teach players to become hard hitters. I hope I will make more Abdul Razzaqs.
You cannot say one person. What matters is quality practice that you enjoy. With Pakistan we had an eight-hour session when Javed Miandad was coach, and that was ridiculous. Eight-hour session!
You know, you need a good man as PCB chairman. If you're not bringing them on merit, these kind of problems will come out. Everybody is out to become famous, not to help Pakistan cricket. They don't have good intentions for cricket. They want to help themselves.
Scott Oliver tweets here