It's always sunny in Lala land
Game Changer is a madcap, chaotic and often fact-free ride through the mind of Pakistan's most enigmatic allrounder
Things we learned from his book: Shahid "Age is just a number" Afridi cares little for numbers of any sort • AFP
Yes. No. Maybe.
Javed Miandad ("He lives in the past. His shadow is larger than himself. I feel it's the trait of a weak man." Ouch.) Gautam Gambhir, who also shouldn't read Paddy Upton's book. The PCB (there's no book in which they come out smelling of roses). Waqar Younis ("He was a mediocre captain but a terrible coach" - zing!). Politicians. Females. Salman Butt. Mohammad Yousuf (yeah, chapter 18, which starts with the midnight conference-revolt against Younis Khan's captaincy is about you, even if Afridi chooses to not name you).
Shahid Afridi. He hasn't.
A fact-checker. The age thing you know about - he tried to reveal his real age only to get the year of birth wrong (1977, not 1975, as he writes, or 1980, as we've all recorded). The rest include one that turns up even before the book begins, in Wasim Akram's foreword: one of Afridi's finest Test innings - the 141 in Chennai - becomes 144. The most famous six in Pakistan history is so famous everyone should know that it was struck in 1986, not 1987. And Salahuddin "Sallu" Ahmed - absolutely key through Afridi's career - a multiple-time selector and Pakistan offspinner is not Salahuddin Satti, who is a fairly significant army figure.
Not.
He loves politics. Also, he hates politics. Politicians are scum. Politics is a dirty business. He will never get into it.
a) The Army
b) The Army
c) The Army
Is to go how Sachin Tendulkar went. Like a hero, he won the World Cup on his home ground in 2011 and walked off into a golden Bandra sunset.
Afridi's playboy reputation in his younger years was legendary. Surprisingly, given his own transformation since, he gives us a little peek into that time. That time, for example, when a female fan turned up at his house in full bridal outfit, ready to marry him.
But then, within four sentences, he segued into telling us how he came to marry his wife. Which, don't get me wrong, is also love.
Instead: "I padded up. I went in. I stopped the first ball. Then I hit the second ball for six. After that I don't remember much about what unfolded."
The trick with ghostwritten autobiographies is to bring out an authenticity in the subject's voice but also to season it with some writerly chops. Simon Jones' (and Jon Hotten's) The Test is one of the best examples of the genre.
Tape-ball cricket helps batsmen and hurts fast bowling. My mind... it can't comprehend.
By way of explaining army coups in Pakistan, Afridi says they only "step in" (ROFL, right?) once there is a vacuum created by the democrats. Just like when Inzamam-ul-Haq had to bowl a few overs in matches where the bowlers weren't doing their job.
When Afridi can solve all the world's problems? In the last chapter, he brings solutions for Kashmir and Pakistan-India, the civil-military imbalance in Pakistan and Afghanistan. In an earlier chapter he's already sorted out the PCB: hire a foreigner, check; leave me in charge of the domestic system, not yet checked. On which note of optimism…
"By the time this book is published, the Afghan peace process may have lead to something."
Shahid Afridi with Wajahat S Khan
Harper Collins
297 pages, Rs 437
Osman Samiuddin is a senior editor at ESPNcricinfo