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Inzamam-ul-Haq gets ready for his last Test match
© AFP
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Apart from looking light of paunch, not much about Inzamam-ul-Haq's last
touch-football training session appeared any different to the many that
preceded it. He ambled around on the periphery, occasionally roused
himself to sprint and throw passes, before stopping to amble again. The
others accorded him the respect they always have by not really running
after him that hard.
Cool as you like he had a bat in the nets, but admitted the occasion got
to him. "Today when I went to do batting practice in the nets I got a
little bit emotional."
The last year has been unkind to Inzamam and it has brought him to this:
resignation from the captaincy, ODI retirement and now from Tests, when he
feels he can still play on for a year. "It was a tough decision, but when
I looked at the youngsters in the dressing room, I thought they shouldn't
be put under pressure and it was better to quit. Every player should
realise himself when it is the right time for him to leave.
"There are lots of youngsters who have bright futures and I hope by the
time the next World Cup (2011) comes, the team will be in better shape. The
way we have performed in the World Twenty20, there are lots of encouraging
signs."
Inzamam praised the Pakistan board for affording him this send-off,
dignified if a little forced, but it's one very few ex-players have been
able to command. He wasn't thinking ahead just yet, however. "My priority
is to perform well and help Pakistan draw the series."
His return puts Pakistan in an unusual situation. Shoaib Malik, the
captain, rightly sees it as a bulking up of the middle-order, especially
with the return also of Mohammad Yousuf. But it could leave them
distracted as well, as Graeme Smith has pointed out.
"Both players are coming back after a while and it might affect Pakistan,"
said Smith. "We're making sure we concentrate on playing the style of
cricket we played in the first Test."
But Smith acknowledged that both were serious batsmen, no matter what the
situation or context. "We were prepared for Yousuf in the first Test and
we have played against Inzamam recently so our game-plan is pretty much in
place for these two batsmen. We are pretty comfortable but they are
world-class players. How they fit back in their setup is their challenge
and how we bowl is our challenge."
Over 20,000 international runs, 35 hundreds and 17 years after his debut,
against West Indies in 1991, Inzamam will play his last game at the venue
where it all began: the Gaddafi Stadium. "I still remember that game. It feels as
if it was only yesterday." If it was, then some day it's been.
Osman Samiuddin is the Pakistan editor of Cricinfo