Raja launches blistering attack on media, critics (3 Sep 1997)
KARACHI, Sept 2: Pakistan captain Ramiz Raja fired all cylinders at his critics and the media for projecting him as `Majid Khan's favourite boy'
03-Sep-1997
03 September 1997
Raja launches blistering attack on media, critics
By Our Sports Reporter
KARACHI, Sept 2: Pakistan captain Ramiz Raja fired all cylinders
at his critics and the media for projecting him as `Majid Khan's
favourite boy'.
"I am being criticised because they (critics and media) know my
relationship and the respect I have for Majid Khan (chief
executive, PCB)," Ramiz Raja, normally a soft-spoken man, said
in an unusually strong interview here on Tuesday.
"As far as the media is concerned, I am least bothered about
them because I know they are biased. They (media) cannot do
anything and this I have learnt from my experience," Ramiz Raja
said, adding: "A section of Press (Karachi) is specially very
hostile."
The Pakistan captain stated that he was the target of criticism
"just for the sake of criticism." He added that he was being
attacked because the critics wanted to prove that Majid Khan's
decision of appointing him captain was wrong.
"In particular, Hasib Ahsan has been very aggressive. I feel
that his statements are anti-Pakistan. At this age, he should be
a little more objective," said the 34-year-old Raja.
Raja, a business administration master by qualification, said he
was not trying to step in the shoes of Imran Khan or Majid Khan
who have openly criticised the Karachi Press. "I am fed up
reading every day that I am being attacked by one or the other.
I don't mind constructive criticism but if is to settle accounts
with Majid Khan, then it is not acceptable. It is not the
performance which normally triggers a diatribe."
Ramiz Raja has led Pakistan in five Tests losing two and winning
one. In 15 one-day internationals, Raja's team emerged winners
on six occasions, losing eight with one match against India in
Sri Lanka being washed out. Ramiz Raja claimed that he deserved
to be the captain of the Pakistan cricket team. "I have all the
ingredients that are required to be a leader," he emphasised,
adding: "Most of all, my achievements and experience are no
secrets."
Raja stressed that he has mostly led the team outside Pakistan
and there he was showered with praise. "In India and Sri Lanka,
I was appreciated for projecting a good picture of the country
as well as of the team. But here (in Pakistan), I am criticised
because some think that I don't deserve to be in the team and
some say I am given undue favours by the PCB chief executive."
Raja admitted that this stigma will now remain throughout his
career. "I know that I will be labelled as Majid Khan's boy but
I am least concerned. I know my abilities and I enjoy cricket
and leading Pakistan."
Raja claimed that despite being a target of the critics and the
media, he was under no pressure. "To tell you the truth, I have
now started enjoying cricket even more.
"If the team starts winning and I start getting big scores, the
intensity of the hostility will be reduced but it will not
finish." Asked what are the basic ingredients needed to be a
captain in his books, Raja said: "The individual should be
decent enough, a model for others, should lead from the front
and produce positive results. "But sadly, the previous set-ups
have given importance just to only one factor - how big a player
was. Honestly, it has done no good to the image of the team and
the country."
Raja said he was happy with whatever he was getting. "I am not a
firm believer of the theory that a captain should be appointed
for the whole season. If the team starts losing, then what
happens? I support the logic of appointment on series-by-series
basis."
Source:: Dawn (https://dawn.com/)