Pakistan's progress ... and lack of it
Pakistan's approach has changed in many ways since Woolmer became coach -- in many ways that inspire confidence for the future -- but one aspect that remains bewildering is the extreme variability in performance
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In our globalised world we are not divided by international boundaries, but we are separated by language, which leads you to wonder just how Bob Woolmer and Inzamam-ul-Haq manage? At press conferences Woolmer fields the questions in English, followed by Inzamam who tackles the ones in Urdu.
After Pakistan's defeat of India I asked Woolmer why Pakistan were now more focused than a few months earlier against India. Woolmer diplomatically replied that he hadn't been involved with the India series, so was unable to specify what had changed, but was satisfied with the commitment of his team. My attempts to subvert the process by asking Inzamam the same question in Urdu met a rather grumpy response. I was wrong, he suggested, to imply that Pakistan had found it hard to beat India in the home series and his team was as focused as ever.
Inzamam, I've come to learn, is a man who defends his decisions and his behaviour as stoutly as he defends his wicket. This is an admirable trait in a captain - but so is a touch of contrition, and after the incredible decision to bat first at the Rose Bowl perhaps a spoonful of contrition would not have gone amiss.
First, let's be clear, there are certain signs that the team of Bob and Inzy is heading on an upward trajectory. Pakistan's bowlers perform with a dash of discipline, the fielders have a swagger of professionalism, and the batsmen appear to have a plan. These developments are a miracle. But Pakistan cricket, and Bob and Inzy in particular, have much to consider, and the main points are these:
Pakistan's approach has changed in many ways since Woolmer became coach -- in many ways that inspire confidence for the future -- but one aspect that remains bewildering is the extreme variability in performance. Unless Woolmer finds a solution for this unpredictability his time with Pakistan will remain bitter-sweet.
Kamran Abbasi is a London-based cricket writer and acting editor of the British Medical Journal.
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