Selectors ignore young guns
While naming the Pakistan squad for Sharjah Cup last week, the selectors seemed to have overlooked the credentials of a couple of deserving candidates
Khalid H. Khan
16-Oct-2001
While naming the Pakistan squad for Sharjah Cup last week,
the selectors seemed to have overlooked the credentials of a
couple of deserving candidates. Imran Farhat and Faisal
Iqbal, two young batsmen who were part of the squad when the
national side toured New Zealand and England this year, must
feel desperately unlucky to be left out despite doing well
in the ongoing Patron's Trophy Grade- I Cricket Tournament.
Shadab Kabir, who turns 24 next month and already a
forgotten man of Pakistan cricket having last played at the
highest level several years, was the leading batsman with a
tally of 395 runs at the end of the fourth round of the most
competitive domestic national championship for several
years.
Likewise, young pace bowlers Shabbir Ahmed and Fazle Akbar
have grossly overlooked by clueless Wasim Bari and company.
Both had claimed 19 wickets, averaging below 18. Rana
Naveed-ul-Hasan, a budding pace bowling all-rounder, was
selected in the one-day squad for the aborted series against
New Zealand over three weeks ago. But now he finds himself
out of the reckoning.
Shoaib Akhtar, a known expensive tourist who appears to be
the favourite player among the PCB hierarchy without any
doubt, gets yet another chance to resurrect an otherwise
chequered international career. His batting was revelation
in the Patron's Trophy. In fact, such was his exploits with
the bat that it overshadowed his orindary bowling deeds in
the four matches he played.
One thing that clearly emerges from the selection of
Sharjah-bound team is that performance of the players in
country's premier events were not taken into consideration
by the selectors whereby making the whole exercise of
domestic cricket meaningless.
If Pakistan harbour hopes of repeating their World Cup
triumph of eight years ago, they must ensure that young
fringe players are given proper opportunities to prove their
mettle before it is too late.
Who can guarantee that the likes of ageing and veteran Wasim
Akram, Waqar Younis, the perennial injury-prone Shoaib
Akhtar and Saeed Anwar will be around during the 2003 World
Cup? Barely 15 months are left before theWorld Cup takes
place in South Africa. And yet the PCB has not been able to
work out a strategy to assemble a strong and importantly a
fit squad before the team flies out to South Africa in
February 2003.