One of a new generation of Pakistan fast
bowlers, Mohammad Sami initially forced his way into
the Test team with outstanding performances in domestic
cricket and had an immediate impact in his first Test
with five wickets against New Zealand. Then, in only
his third Test, he notched a hat-trick, eking out the
last three Sri Lankans in the Asian Test Championship
final and he also has an ODI hat-trick. But since those
early years, and especially after the World Cup 2003,
when he was expected to become the Pakistan spearhead
after the retirements of Wasim and Waqar, his story
has been a fitful and thus far disappointing one.
Series after series has seen him disappoint as a
stream of promising paceman have overtaken him, including
the likes of Rana Naved-ul-Hasan, Umar Gul and Mohammad
Asif. Occasionally when the mood takes him, he can
be threatening, as he was for some of the India series
in 2005, especially at Kolkatta and the occasional
ODI. For the most part he has been surprisingly ineffective
and prone to leaking runs. So poor was his form after
the India series in early 2006, he was finally dropped
from the tour to Sri Lanka was lucky to be selected
for the tour to England that summer, after a number
of Pakistan's frontline bowlers were injured.
Nobody seems to be entirely sure where the problem
lies either - he has been given the new-ball with
license to attack, he has come on as first-change.
He is fit - one of the fittest in the team - and athletic.
From a shortish run-up and high action he generates
surprising pace, settled in the mid-to-late eighties
but with occasional forays into the nineties. He also
quickly mastered traditional outswing and reverse-swing
and bowls a mean yorker. Some say it is a confidence
thing but a bowling average of nearly 50 after 26
Tests (and a strike rate of over 80) means that opportunities
might be limited when other pacemen are fit again.
It would have been an unthinkable thought when he
took eight wickets on his Test debut.
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