Dissecting Pakistan's 'Hail Mary' squad for World Cup 2019
In American football, or hand-egg (as internet trolls would say), a Hail Mary pass refers to a desperate last-ditch attempt to hurl the ball forward with the hope that something, if anything, happens.
At this point, all calculations, all strategies, all playbooks, all everything goes out the window and hope takes over.
It rarely ever works out, and almost always doesn't, and thus the name.
On Thursday, Pakistan Chief Selector Inzamamul Haq said that he is sending a Champions Trophy-shaped Hail Mary squad to England, hoping that some divine intervention and some blind luck reproduce the same results as they did two years ago.
He did not say that out loud, but then not everything meant to be said also has to be explicitly spelled out.
The chief se-luck-tor did admit this much that it was his, the coach's and the captain's joint idea to recreate as much of the 2017 Champions Trophy squad as they could. Probably in his reasoning, if the fortune favoured the brave that one time, why wouldn't it again a second time? Ever the optimist, Inzamam is probably a firm disbeliever of adage: lighting never strikes twice.
"It does so twice and thrice and fourice..." is something you can almost imagine him saying.
So 11 of the 15 picked for World Cup are the same ones that were also on the England-bound plane two years ago. And if the rest hadn't retired, weren't injured or hadn't done Umar Akmal-esque things to their careers, they would have earned Inzamam's nod too.
While there is nothing wrong in throwing Hail Mary passes and hoping against hope, some would say there is a time and a place and a particular set of circumstances for that. You resort to that mindset when your plans A, B, C and D have failed.
When heading into the flagship quad-annual tournament of the cricketing world, you rely on form, numbers, fitness, experiences, analytics and all those things. You take all that is concrete and all that minimises the possibility of the equation reaching the point where 'hope' comes into play.
Consider these eye-opening look: