In cricket, Shahid Afridi is the maddest
of mad maxes. A flamboyant allrounder introduced to
international cricket as a 16-year-old legspinner, he
surprised everyone but himself by pinch-hitting the
fastest one-day hundred in his maiden innings.
Afridi is a compulsive shot-maker and although until
2004 it was too often his undoing, causing him to float
in and out of the team, a combination of maturity on
and off the field and a sympathetic coach in Bob Woolmer,
has seen Afridi blossom into one of modern-day cricket’s
most dangerous players and a vital cog in Pakistan’s
revival in 2005. A string of incisive contributions
from June 2004 culminated in a violent century against
India in Kanpur in April 2005; remarkably it was the
joint second fastest ODI century in terms of balls faced.
A few weeks before, by smashing the joint second fastest
Test half-century at Bangalore and taking crucial last
day wickets, Afridi had helped Pakistan memorably level
the Test series. So his year continued; a Test century
against the West Indies and contributions against England
at the end of the year. He went berserk against India
on the flattest of pitches with two centuries, including
a Test best 156 in January 2006. An Afridi virtuoso
is laced with fearless lofted drives and short-arm jabs
over midwicket.
He is at his best when forcing straight and at his weakest
pushing at the ball just outside off. The biggest improvement
has been in Afridi’s legspin; previously underrated,
they are now integral in the ODI side and curiously
effective at key moments in Tests. When the conditions
are with him, he gets turn as well as some lazy drift,
but his box of tricks is the key, boasting a vicious
faster ball and a conventional off-spinner as well.
His allround skills are completed by agile fielding
and among the strongest arms in the game; he also possesses
the firmest handshake in international cricket.
Again he shocked everyone but himself when, after finally
becoming a fixture in the Pakistan side, and a thrillingly
bombastic one at that, he announced a temporary ’retirement’
from Test cricket, citing an increasingly heavy playing
schedule. To less surprise, he retracted his retirement
two weeks later. Since then he has been dropped again
from the Test team in England and his place in the ODI
side has been in flux. He remains, though, an original
and a dangerous one at that. . |