Pakistan captain Waqar Younis demanded more say in selections and
threatened that he would not play if his views on team compositions
were not given due consideration. Waqar, who looked fit and
enthusiastic, revealed that he had not been consulted on the selection
of 27 probables.
"I would like to have more say in team selections. If the selectors
won't listen to me, I will not play," Waqar warned a week after being
retained captain until the home series against New Zealand. Waqar's
stubborn and apparently inflexible stand clearly conveys the message
that no matter what steps the cricket managers take to include Wasim
Akram, he would decide the fate of his one-time deadly new ball
partner.
In an apparent somersault, the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) said last
week that practice matches would be organized and those not invited to
the camp would be considered for selection if they impressed in those
matches.
Waqar rested all the blame on the selectors for the omission of former
captains Wasim Akram and Moin Khan. "I was told at the last minute
about the 27 probables. I can't say if I had pressed for the inclusion
of senior players had I been consulted. But I was told late that Wasim
had not been invited for the camp," the skipper told reporters at the
National Stadium Tuesday.
The paceman said the selectors should be questioned what was the basis
of selecting 27 probables for the camp. He, however, said he believes
that the selectors wouldn't have considered them good enough to be
invited. "I mean the best players are in the camp and the immediate
answer to the exclusion of senior players means they might not be good
enough. But I am not talking specifically of Wasim or Moin, there were
some deserving young boys who have not been called."
When asked if he was satisfied with the probables at his disposal in
the background that Mohammad Sami, Shabbir Ahmad and Shoaib Akhtar
lack match fitness, Waqar said: "I can't say if I am satisfied because
I have not been consulted on these players. "I have been given these
boys to prepare for the season but that doesn't mean that they form
the nucleus." Waqar said Wasim has never been a "problematic"
character for him. "It is insulting for a great cricketer to say that
he has been dropped or discarded.
"The simple fact is that when you struggle, you take time off and sort
out things," Waqar, who has seen rough times in the recent past,
remarked. The toe-crusher, however, later toed the line of the
selectors and the administrators when he said the policy of the PCB is
to prepare a young team for the 2003 World Cup. He said inviting more
youngsters could be in line with that strategy because more players in
the camp means lesser opportunity for the youngsters to impress the
selectors.
Waqar said he would ensure that there was no inconsistency in
selection because he thought it was also one of the reasons for
Pakistan's four successive home series losses. "I haven't played much
in those series' and was only called in the last games or so, but I
will try to end the win drought and see that there were not many
changes in the team." Waqar said he was satisfied at being retained
captain for the first half of the international season and he was also
personally keen to judge his fitness and form on series-by-series
basis.
"In the past, a captain has been appointed on a long term basis but
has been sacked if his performance drops in two series'. By going on
series-by-series basis, the captain can be replaced but not sacked,"
he said with direct reference to Moin Khan.
Waqar said the entire forthcoming season would be important but the
showpiece match would be the Test against India at Lahore from Sept 12
and 16. "It (match against India) will be the most important and
showpiece game of the season. I am anxiously looking forward to it."