Although rumours buzzed that Shahid Afridi and Mishabul Haq did not get along, Haq is one of the few players Afridi praised in his book | AFP
Recently when I was talking about Shahid Afridi’s autobiography, Game Changer, with a sports journalist, he asked me, “How can you be a Misbahul Haq fan as well as an Afridi fan? They are polar opposites.” Indeed they are polar opposites. One is subtle, cautious, thoughtful and perceived to be an introvert; the other is impulsive, spontaneous and extroverted. That’s why one of the most interesting bits in Afridi’s book for me is the way he so nonchalantly lays to rest the myth that when they were playing together for the Pakistan team, they never got along. In the book, Afridi praises Haq for being a decent man — something he doesn’t do unconditionally for some other players that he mentions.
Written with journalist Wajahat S. Khan, Game Changer is a rapid read. The pace is fast, just the way Afridi bats: explosive but always threatening to implode. This is how he talks as well: hastily. He is a challenge to those trying to keep up with his rambling stream of thought. But Khan, himself an impulsive character, does well to empathise with Afridi’s disposition. He succeeds in converting Afridi’s ramblings into coherent opinions about his stints as a former “party animal”, captain, hero, anti-hero, villain and an international cricketing phenomenon.
I am not surprised that the book has already become controversial. Afridi being Afridi, refuses to hold back. Unlike another ‘bad boy’ and impulsive Pakistani cricketer — Shoaib Akhtar — whose 2011 autobiography, Controversially Yours, written with an Indian journalist, was rather disappointing and inexplicably restrained, Game Changer takes no prisoners.
Former cricketer Shahid Afridi’s memoirs of his career are as freewheeling and explosive as his batting and will likely draw out as many critics as admirers for its no-holds-barred style
Although a Pashtun born in the tribal regions of Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, Afridi continues to identify himself as a red-blooded Karachiite, the city he grew up in. He gladly romances his youthful years running with the hares and hunting with the hounds in the city’s mean streets and rough neighbourhoods. He even goes on to inform that, at one point, he became very close to some MQM toughies and might have ended up the way many such lads did in the early 1990s: dead. A tight slap from his elder brother restored his senses.
According to Afridi, Karachi’s streets and club cricket make cricketers street-smart and tough — tougher and more innovative compared to cricketers emerging from other cities and towns of Pakistan. He insists that his sensational beginning, as the world’s then fastest ODI century-maker in 1996 at the age of 19 (he says the media misattributed his age as 16), did not put much pressure on him because that innings was entirely instinctive. He almost says that he wasn’t conscious of what he was doing as he smashed the Sri Lankan bowlers for sixes and fours to reach a century in just 37 balls. After that innings, his father — who used to give him a thrashing for playing cricket — finally made peace with his son’s passion for the game.
The book picks up pace very early on. After all, as a batsman, Afridi was known to often try to hit the very first ball for a six. But the sixes do begin to rain once he begins to talk about former teammates and coaches. He is particularly harsh on former captains and coaches Javed Miandad and Waqar Younis. He accuses Miandad of trying to cut short his career when Miandad was coach of the team in 1999, and calls him selfish and a man who “is still living in a past in which he was a revered batsman and star.” He calls Younis a “terrible captain” who failed to inspire the team during the 2003 World Cup. He thinks Younis was an equally terrible coach. Afridi calls his tussles with Younis “ego clashes”; however, he does mention that he eventually made peace with Younis. He found Shoaib Malik to be a disastrous captain as well, but blames the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) for putting Malik on the spot by making him captain when there were more experienced players in the team.
There’s another myth which Afridi crushes. When Younis Khan was captain, many cricket journalists had more than alluded that Afridi was leading a rebellion against him. In the book, however, Afridi accuses another star for this whom he doesn’t name, but he says enough to suggest that it was the stylish batsman Mohammad Yousuf he is talking about. He is all praise for Younis Khan and claims that he became a victim of dressing room politics — politics which also threatened to topple Afridi’s own captaincy.
Then comes the part in which Afridi says that he was warned by former Pakistani all-rounder Abdul Razzaq who suspected that Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir were being shadowed by a shady bookie. According to Afridi, he alerted PCB’s then chairman Ijaz Butt and manager Yawar Saeed, but they did nothing. Afridi lambasts Salman Butt for almost destroying young Amir’s career and then lying through his teeth when he was apprehended for spot-fixing.