Tendulkar closed his eyes facing Shoaib’s bouncers: Asif

Published May 28, 2020
Mohammad Asif recalls how Pakistan snatched victory from the jaws of defeat in 2006 Test in Karachi. — AFP/File
Mohammad Asif recalls how Pakistan snatched victory from the jaws of defeat in 2006 Test in Karachi. — AFP/File

ISLAMABAD: Former seamer Mohammad Asif has revealed that Indian batting legend Sachin Tendulkar closed his eyes while facing speedster Shoaib Akhtar’s bouncers during India’s tour to Pakistan in 2006.

While speaking about the third Test of the series in Karachi, where Indian left-arm paceman Irfan Pathan took a hat-trick in the first innings, Asif recalled how Pakistan snatched victory from the jaws of defeat.

“When the match started, Irfan claimed a hat-trick in the first over [dismissing Salman Butt, stand-in Pakistan skipper Younis Khan and Mohammad Yousuf]. Our morale was down before Kamran Akmal scored a sensational century [113] to rescue us as we reached 245,” said Asif during an interview. “The Indians were playing on the back foot and we didn’t allow them to score more than 238 in their first innings. Actually we snatched victory from the jaws of defeat.”

The right-armer, who captured 4-78 in India’s first innings before adding three more wickets in the second innings, also opened up on Tendulkar’s battle against Shoaib, which saw the legendary right-handed batsman close his eyes while facing bouncers from the fiery Rawalpindi Express.

“When we began bowling, Shoaib bowled at express pace in that match. I was fielding at square leg near the umpire and saw that Tendulkar closed his eyes while facing a couple of bouncers,” Asif narrated.

With a slender lead of seven runs, the hosts then amassed 599-7 declared in their second innings — the first seven batsmen all crossing the half-century mark with Faisal Iqbal contributing 139, Yousuf 97 and Abdul Razzaq 90 — and went on to win that Test by 341 runs and the three-match series 1-0.

But later on Asif’s career went sideways after his involvement in the infamous 2010 spot-fixing scandal. After serving a seven-year ban, he returned to first-class cricket but never got a chance to don Pakistan colours again.

Published in Dawn, May 28th, 2020

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