Your Australia tour wasnt as successful as your overall Test career.
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. What do you recall of the Test series from 1983? I had just one tour to
Australia, and I can safely say it was a failure for me. There are many reasons
for that.One of them was the sandy outfields in all the Australian grounds. I
used to apply dry mud from the outfield to my fingers and use saliva to tighten
my grip on the ball. But due to the sandy soil, I wasnt able to grip it. I didnt
find that out until my last Test. I was actually never in control with the ball.
It was really very frustrating, and my entire tour was a chaotic one.I took five
wickets at the MCG, but theres a background involved. I was surprised,
frustrated and worried about my bowling and was always thinking about it. One
day, just to clear my mind, refresh my thoughts, I went to the dance floor in my
hotel in Melbourne. I was standing next to a pillar, lost in my thoughts, when
someone came up behind me and covered my eyes. I thought it was Immy [Imran
Khan] - no other Pakistan player would dare to do that to me - but then I
realised it was the great Dennis Lillee.Hes a charming man with beautiful
thoughts. He said to me: Abdul, I can understand what you are feeling. A bowler
like you when you are not performing, how it feels. You looked depressed to me,
and why not, when a great bowler is not performing, he must be upset. I have
gone through this as well. You are still a great bowler and we admire you.I was
touched because a bowler like Lillee was praising me regardless of the fact that
I was bowling badly all tour. This really lifted my spirits and I went on to
take five wickets.You conceded 166 runs for those five wickets. Yes, the problem
was still there. I wasnt really up to my own standard. It was like Yasir Shah or
Danish Kaneria, not Qadir at his best. I remained dissatisfied despite the crowd
standing on their feet and clapping for my fifer. I looked happy but I was
hollow inside.Also, maybe I was missing bowling with Imran. We had such a great
time bowling together. I had a good bunch of bowlers [in that series], but it
didnt go well.Commentators like Bill Lawry, Ashley Mallett and Clarrie Grimmett
were arguing that I should be bowling from over the wicket, but my problem was
the grip. I didnt bother which side I was bowling from. The main worry was that
I was wasting my deliveries, as I was not able to concentrate.Because Qadir was
a bowler with killer instincts, I would have gone all out for the kill. But
something was missing.I spoke to Nazar Junior [Mudassar Nazar] about the problem
with the mud not staying on my fingers. I actually used to spin the ball with my
last three fingers, but the ball wasnt gripping. Nazar told me that the outfield
was made of sand. When I realised the problem, the series was over.In the ODI
series, I used the soil and made it wet with saliva, and I made the headlines
after that - Abdul takes revenge. I still have those newspaper clippings with
me.So legspin in Australia is all about how you grip the ball? In my case it
was.Why do you think you were so popular in Australia? Australians are naturally
aggressive cricketers and they have always had a great regard for the art [of
legspin]. They always came to me and told me that one thing they liked about me
was that I was a spin bowler with the attitude of a fast bowler.See, in cricket
legspin is the most difficult art because the mechanics involved in it arent
easy to master. I am satisfied with my overall career - in an era of fast
bowlers, I took more than 200 wickets as a spinner. Other spinners came, got
hammered and faded away, but I hung around and did well in that era.You returned
to Australia to play club cricket. What was your experience? Oh yes, it was a
learning curve for me. Only by the end of that 83 tour had I realised how to
bowl in those conditions, but I never returned to Australia for Pakistan again.
I did return some eight years after the 83 tour to play club cricket in
Melbourne for Carlton. Being older and much more experienced, I managed to take
72 wickets and won the Ryder Medal at a time when Shane Warne was also playing.
I dont remember, but I think it was a record and it earned great praise.Richie
Benaud always rated you highly. Did you ever get a chance to meet him? He came
to Lahore once and we had a chat for two or three hours sitting in the Holiday
Inn hotel. He asked a lot of questions, and we had a long discussion on how many
types of deliveries a legspinner can bowl. We were surprised that I had more
ways of delivering and spinning the ball, while he, despite being a legendary
spinner, knew only a few, traditional ways of doing legspin bowling.I told him
that, unlike other legspinners, I used my last three fingers, with the middle
finger generating most power. I would use a combination of my last three fingers
in such a way as to manage the workload of my fingers. I used to flick with my
middle finger to make the ball turn, and would hide the ball from the batsman to
prevent him from reading it early. The index and ring fingers were my triggers
for the googly, and that was the main art.Benaud appreciated me and praised me,
and I was humbled that I had won his praise. You cant bullshit with a guy like
Richie. He was a legend and his knowledge of the game was immense. We both
walked away with more respect for each other. I am glad that I was able to add
something to his knowledge.Captaincy didnt sit well with you? I played in an era
with Imran Khan and Javed Miandad, so I never even thought about the captaincy.
But it did fall in my lap when Javed got injured. So I was lucky to have got it
somehow, and the matches I lost as captain were close ones. I can also tell you
that I was offered the captaincy in the presence of Javed Miandad, but I
refused. I told Haseeb Ahsan [PCB secretary at the time] that I wouldnt accept
the offer. I stood by that principle and never accepted the captaincy, except
for that one series when Javed was injured. He was my captain at HBL and it
wouldnt have been proper to promote me while bypassing him.What do you think of
Yasir Shahs progress? He is a good bowler and he was always in our plans when I
was chief selector in 2009. He was among 20 players I had told the PCB to keep
an eye on and select as soon as possible. But, without a googly and a flipper, a
legbreak bowler will struggle at some point, and I have seen his form
fluctuating. I think he tries to bowl the googly but it goes too flat. For his
flipper, he might not really be gripping the ball well.Has he ever come to you
to talk about his bowling? No, never. And I am not surprised at all. Because he
probably sees Shane Warne as his idol and he is more tempted to approach him
[smiles]. There were so many bowlers who came to me, and that is the blessing of
Allah. Shane, Kumble, Afridi, MacGill [all approached me] but it is up to them
to give back the credit if they are willing to.Mushtaq [Ahmed] replaced me in
the team in the early 90s and - you can ask him - he came to me and I told him
why I had struggled in Australia and what he needed to do to get wickets there.
He was really good, bowling long spells and had good control over his line and
length. He needed to bring variation in his bowling, but I liked his spirit and
ambition. He was very positive about the game.
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. - Oakland Raiders running back Rashad Jennings was speaking to a group of
local high school students earlier this week when the conversation turned to the
importance of being prepared when opportunities in life arise.
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. Breaking three of his own world records on his way to winning in Paris, Chan
silenced the critics and left the audiences standing in appreciation and awe.
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. Pedro scored from a pass by Lionel Messi in the 33rd minute and added two more
goals in the 47th and 72nd after Valdes saved his second penalty in four days
following his stop in Wednesdays 4-0 over Ajax in the Champions League. The
shake-up of Indias cricket administration in the wake of the Lodha Committees
reforms continued as veteran administrator Sharad Pawar announced that he will
step down as Mumbai Cricket Association (MCA) president within six months.The
Lodha Committee had recommended, among other things, that there be caps on age
and duration of tenure of elected office bearers of the BCCI and state
associations. These proposals were signed off on by the Supreme Court on July
18, and Pawar does not qualify on both grounds, being over 70 years of age and
having served as an office bearer for over nine years. The court said the
proposals would have to be implemented by the BCCI and its members within six
months of the date of issue of the order.As per the Supreme Court guidelines, I
can continue [as MCA president] for six months, not beyond that. After that
khushi se alvida [I will happily bid goodbye], Pawar said following the MCAs
managing committee meeting, from where it emerged that the state association
will accept all the Lodha reforms in total. I am quite happy to retire because
Supreme Court has said nobody above 70 can continue. Secondly, Supreme Court has
said about [the maximum period of] nine years, so I come in both categories, and
therefore I should not expect to continue.A powerful regional politian, Pawar,
75, took charge of the MCA in 2001. Four years later he became BCCI president,
before taking up the same role in the ICC in 2010.The Lodha Committee is
entrusted with the task of overseeing the implementation of its recommendations
and, its secretary, Gopal Sankaranarayanan, had warned that if the BCCI or any
of the the states were to violate any of the rules laid out in the Lodha report,
they will be guilty of contempt of court.Pawar admitted that most of MCAs other
elected officials will have to vacate office as well, but said he was confident
the transition will be smooth and that all the recommendations will be
implemented within the stipulated six months. The association will begin the
process of reform by amending its constitution, he said.The core group [of the
MCA] will draft the proposed constitution, then it will be discussed in the
managing committee here, and we will then call a special general meeting where
the draft of the constitution will have to be approved.
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The only thing is we need to have to complete procedure.However, Pawar said, the
MCA wanted clarification on one point: the one-state-one-vote proposal, by which
no state can have more than a single vote in the BCCI elections. Currently
Maharashtra contains three associations eligible to vote, the Maharashtra
Cricket Association, the Mumbai Cricket Association and the Vidarbha Cricket
Association. The Lodha Committee recommended that in such cases, the
associations vote by rotation; so each of Maharashtra, Mumbai and Vidarbha will
get a vote once in three years.We have no objections on that [one-state,
one-vote] but the important issue is the jurisdiction of that member who is
going to vote, Pawar said. When question comes [regarding] selection of teams,
there might be some unnecessary differences. [If] the voting right goes by
rotation to Maharashtra, so Maharashtras jurisdiction will be Maharashtra,
Vidarbha and Mumbai. So, the Maharashtra team can select anybody from Mumbai
also [and] it will affect Mumbai team.Thats why we will have to write to the
BCCI that this is the position, and we want clarification on that. The BCCI
should discuss this, if possible, with Justice Lodha [the head of the Lodha
Committee].When asked if the presence of a nominee of the Comptroller and
Auditor General on the BCCIs Apex Council - the proposed body that would replace
the Working Committee, the BCCIs highest decision-making body - will ensure
transparency, Pawar pointed out that the CAG is a government entity. My worry is
only about the ICC rules. ICC has a rule that no government should depute their
representative in a cricketing body.But BCCIs old constitution had a
representative of Services [which is a] direct government [entity]. ICC has
never taken objection to that, so we hope Mr Shashank Manohar [the ICC chairman]
will not take objection to this.
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