What's new

Wahab Riaz and Pakistani speed demons

Menace2Society

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
May 2, 2011
Messages
10,410
Reaction score
7
Country
Pakistan
Location
United Kingdom
I don't care too much about the World Cup. I knew with this team they would not win it.

However what I did want to see were younger players taking responsibility.

Wahab just like in World Cup 2011 bowled ferocious speeds with wicket taking intent. If Pakistan had 3 more bowlers with his passion they would win many more games.

2 successful world cups by Wahab surely makes him part of the long lineage of Pakistani fast bowlers. I hope youngsters watched him and will try to do the same as him.

wahab-riaz---shane-watson.jpg


Just a small reminder of Pakistan bowling history.

Fazal Mahmood
Fazal-Mahmood-e1320517263403.jpg


Sarfraz Nawaz
Sarfraz%20Nawaz_17124.jpg


Imran Khan
2013-Imran-Khan-images-161.jpg


Wasim Akram
abf0d9d3733f5b2a2e55f64f3dcb0fd7_ls.jpg


Waqar Younis
Waqar-Younis.jpg


Shoaib Akhtar
214513-md.jpg


Mohammed Amir
_48663385_009947465-1.jpg
 
Last edited:
. . .
Pakistani fast bowlers are great. I hope BD players take training in pakistan bowling academies. I liked the bowler Asif.
 
.
I don't care too much about the World Cup. I knew with this team they would not win it.

However what I did want to see were younger players taking responsibility.

Wahab just like in World Cup 2011 bowled ferocious speeds with wicket taking intent. If Pakistan had 3 more bowlers with his passion they would win many more games.

2 successful world cups by Wahab surely makes him part of the long lineage of Pakistani fast bowlers. I hope youngsters watched him and will try to do the same as him.

Just a small reminder of Pakistan bowling history.

Fazal Mahmood
Fazal-Mahmood-e1320517263403.jpg


Sarfraz Nawaz
Sarfraz%20Nawaz_17124.jpg


Imran Khan
2013-Imran-Khan-images-161.jpg


Wasim Akram
abf0d9d3733f5b2a2e55f64f3dcb0fd7_ls.jpg


Waqar Younis
Waqar-Younis.jpg


Shoaib Akhtar
214513-md.jpg


Mohammed Amir
_48663385_009947465-1.jpg
That's okay but there are legacy of pakistani batsmen also
Pakistan forgotten javed miadaad ,ramiz Raja, Inzimam-ul-haq, saeed Anwar , muhammad yusuf many others and their Legacy.
 
. .
The problem is finding not 1 but 11 player with that intensity. If you do not have harvested talent then the thirst to win is what could put you over the top. Wahab showed pure controlled rage. That blood lust pumped up the whole team till that dropped catch.
 
.
great great attitude by wahab yday,i was betting on a pak win,That drop by Rahat was brutal.

At 83/4, pak would have won for sure.

and do add mohammad asif/mohammad zahid/aizaz cheema/aaquib javed too in this list.

all very fast bowlers.
 
. .
such a shame,india pak semi would have been a dhamaka or rather mauka.

:)
 
.
Mohammed aamer... Isnt his ban period over????


Im expecting a grand comeback.. the lad was awesome
Yes ICC has now allowed him to participate in domestic cricket .......... and guess what he played his first match in domestic cricket and got 4 wickets ......... he would come back very soon .
 
. .
That epic moment when even 213 looked like defendable against mighty Aussie battling line up.

Only Pakistani bowlers can do this. :yahoo:
 
.
man....i am sure people are dying to see the same scary pakistan team...the kind of bowlers they have produced is mind boggling...i wish somehow there idiot board is fixed....rest will follow...

I loved every second of wahab's spell and was feeling like killing Rahat.....i was so much in the game as if India was playing :)
 
.
Mohammed aamer... Isnt his ban period over????


Im expecting a grand comeback.. the lad was awesome
I know right at such a young age he was bowling 145kph and plus at times,swinging the new and old ball.Such a great prospect wasted .Asif (his partner) was a genius himself,the swing he had oh my daysss.
On topic;Damn Wahab,that aggression , that line , really a master piece.It shows you what Pakistan cricket is all about.Pakistan has learnt a lesson here,a team cannot win with one mans brilliance alone,if the fielders aren't backing him,if the batsmen aren't backing him,he can't win it for you.
10394073_10153167054354313_3545186351124574816_n.jpg

10858507_931356576885367_7222949696049223802_n.jpg

1796620_931266983560993_8691561758690651040_n.jpg


What a great read , @Pomegranate ,@Green Arrow ,@DESERT FIGHTER ,@Imran Khan ,@Jazzbot .
"Are you holding a bat?"

When Shane Watson stalks in from the slips to lean in and spit those words at Wahab Riaz, does he know? Does he have any bloody idea, what he is really doing to Wahab, and 90 minutes later, to himself?

Australia had, at one stage, spoken in team meetings about easing off Kevin Pietersen verbally. "It fires him up," was Brett Lee's reasoning. They had not had this meeting about Wahab. When Mitchell Starc beats his edge with an outswinging yorker in the 39th over, the bowler slithers forward. He tells the batsman: "It's the white thing, you have to hit it." Wahab, already cranky at another middle-order meltdown from his team-mates, follows Starc down the pitch. He seethes at the bowler, complains to the umpires.





'Wahab one of the best in the world'
Misbah-ul-Haq on Wahab's spell

"Nobody in this world is very good against a bowler who is bowling 150kph and with this sort of deceptive pace and bounce. Today he's shown his class again. At one stage we were pretty much in the game, and the way he was bowling, that catch could have made a big difference, but this the way it is."

On Wahab's World Cup

"He was a different bowler in the World Cup. You could rate him at the moment one of the best bowlers in the world - the kind of pace he's generating and the way he's bowling. I think still, to become Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis, he needs a lot of experience and especially the kind of yorkers and reverse swing they really bowled. But I think he's a much improved bowler, and he could just be a leading bowler for Pakistan."





Next over, James Faulkner throws Wahab a stare. Brad Haddin, running close to the stumps to collect a return throw, sticks his own verbal shiv in Wahab's side. Watson's sledge is only one of many, but it's Watson's sledge Wahab remembers. Before the end of the night, Watson would know best of all, this is not a man worth ruffling; that Wahab's blood boils when you turn up the heat.

Eighteen overs and an innings break later, it is Wahab with the white thing in his hands. Third ball, he rushes David Warner into an uppercut, which settles in the palms of third man Rahat Ali. Tenth ball, Michael Clarke arches his creaking back and fends the white thing to Sohaib Maqsood at short leg.

The first ball to Watson would have flattened the batsman's grille. He dips beneath it with only a little discomfort, but for Wahab, ducking is tantamount to submission. He gets in Watson's face, claps him sarcastically. The next ball is 150kph, Watson dare not play.





209067.jpg

Wahab Riaz smelled blood and did not stop © Getty Images






The next over is even more intense. Wahab is an inferno. The white thing is a meteor. Watson goes through series of evasive full-body spasms. His back and limbs are aping the shape of half the alphabet, but his mouth can form no words now. In the stands, 35,516 people all smell leather, voices hoarse, fidgeting, pumping fists from the edge of their seats. In the slips, Haris Sohail's face contorts at the climax of each delivery, sometimes with glee, other times with desperation. On occasion his eyes are filled with fear. Is he afraid for Watson?

Steven Smith, who is bending space-time to appear in a parallel universe from his partner, routinely takes a single early in the overs that follow and coolly observes the combat from the best vantage point in the world. Does he feel the heat pouring off Wahab? Is he enjoying the view?



All through the match, the cricket had not failed to be interesting. This spell is transcendental. Of the tens of thousands in the ground, there is only one protagonist, and one victim, but the cricket so good, all are drawn in. Wahab's anger is felt as keenly as Watson's timidity. So bent is Wahab on embarrassing Watson, he taunts him after every ball.

In one over, he does it so many times, it's as if Wahab rides a conveyor belt from the bowling crease into Watson's personal space. In the crowd, nothing of their exchange is heard, but its details are intimately understood. The Adelaide Oval playing surface covers acres of land. The stands themselves are vast and high. But in those moments, it's as if the whole stadium exists in the burning space between these two men.





209069.3.jpg

Shane Watson experienced an onslaught like no other © Getty Images






"When I was batting Watson just came up to me and said, 'Are you holding a bat?' And that was going through my mind," Wahab later said. "I let him know that even he is having the bat, but he couldn't touch the ball. I know that nowadays, he's not good on the short ball. It was a plan of myself that we discussed in the team meeting."

Eventually, Watson is defeated. Having ducked, arched and hopped, he is eventually humiliated into playing a hook shot off the first ball of Wahab's fifth over. Australian crowds so often scream insults at foreign fielders lining up high catches, but in the seconds this top-edged ball hung in the air, the wind's rustling through the trees at the Cathedral End was heard in perfect silence. When Rahat spilt the simple chance, 35,000 yelped - more in relief than frustration. A sheepish Watson is avoiding gazes at the non-striker's end. A disbelieving Wahab is keeled over, mid pitch.

In the limp finish, an hour later, Australia cruise to the semi-final with six wickets in hand and 97 balls remaining. On the scoreboard, Wahab's figures read 9-0-54-2. Watson has 64 not out from 66. Few will remember in years to come, the ins and outs; that Pakistan had been bowled out for 213.

But few will forget the theatre, and the unbridled, oscillating emotion of this spell. Tattooed into their nerves will be the night a fast bowler filled a stadium with his fury; the half-hour their collective pulses raced in sync with a batsman's heart.
11079626_763437040422066_8860221740443613389_n.jpg
 
Last edited:
.
Back
Top Bottom