Younis Khan hits out for four runs. — AP/File
They have both acquired a cricketing status wherein they should themselves decide when it is time for them, but it seems that after the success of the England tour, there is no cause for panic over what will happen when they go.
We have a strong nucleus of a Test side that is more than good enough to take Pakistan into the future and that nucleus would consist of Azhar Ali, Asad Shafiq, Sarfraz Ahmed, Wahab Riaz and Yasir Shah.
There is every reason to hope that youngsters like Imad Wasim, Babar Azam and Hassan Ali will also be part of this nucleus in the very near future and that Sami Aslam will be able to prove that he too deserves his place in there.
If I have a criticism to make at all, it would be that perhaps Pakistan has given too much importance to the horses for courses philosophy by selecting very different ODI and Test sides.
Thus Imad Wasim, Babar Azam, Hassan Ali and Mohammad Nawaz should, I feel, not be restricted to the ODI arena but given a chance to prove themselves at the Test level too. I see no reason why they should not succeed in the longer format of the game.
On the other hand, an explosive batsman like Sharjeel Khan is obviously best suited for white ball cricket. He is an explosive talent and if groomed properly, should be an asset for Pakistan cricket.
In Umar Akmal too, Pakistan have another explosive talent who on merit alone would certainly find his place in the ODI and T20 sides.
Pakistan’s cricket administrators have decided to keep his alleged misdemeanours to themselves, so I cannot comment on whether his exclusion from the Pakistan squad is justified, although I have no reason to believe that he would have been excluded unless it was necessary.
It should be up to the manager, captain, coach and senior PCB officials to ensure that Akmal falls in line. However, if he proves incapable of doing so, it would perhaps be best to keep him out as a disruptive element in the dressing room, no matter how talented, can have a net negative effect on the team.
After all, the T20 side did well enough without him against England who, at least on paper, are perhaps the best T20 side in the world at the moment altbeit that this is not reflected in the ICC’s T20 rankings.
If there is one aspect of Pakistan’s cricket that needs special attention, it is ODI cricket.
As their coach Mickey Arthur said, they still seem to be playing their ODI cricket in the 90s when you tried to keep wickets in tact till the 40th over or so and then let loose a blitz hoping that you could post a score of 260 or thereabouts.
In those days, that was a good score, but the bar has gone up considerably since then and these days you need in excess of 300 if you are to give your bowlers a reasonable chance. You therefore need more players who are big stroke players and who can get going more or less from the word ‘go’.
That shift in style and method will take some time to accomplish and Mickey Arthur, who seems to be well aware of the problem, should be given all the support he needs without interference from any quarter.
Perhaps most important of all, the tour was a great success off the field as well, with no untoward incidents being reported.
Misbah-ul-Haq has been a great captain and much of the credit for making this tour a success must go to him. There were some incidents of bad behaviour on the field but they all came from the England side, some of whose players would be well advised to take lessons on good behaviour from their Pakistani counterparts.
But in creating this new image of Pakistan cricket, I think some TV commentators also played a leading role and the most prominent among them were Nasser Hussain and Michael Atherton, ably supported by Shane Warne and Michael Holding.
Pakistan’s cricket authorities would be well advised to ensure good relations with them and other sympathetic journalists. But the real credit goes to Pakistan’s three captains — Misbah, Azhar and Sarfraz — and to the team who played with fervour, giving their all but did it always with a smile on their lips.