Friday, April 10, 2026

Kensington Oval, 1990: When Pride Collided with Pace

There are Test matches that drift into memory, and then there are those that reshape it. The fourth Test at Kensington Oval in 1990 belonged emphatically to the latter, a contest where pride, wounded early in the series, found redemption through fire, fury, and one devastating spell of fast bowling.

England had drawn first blood at Sabina Park with a commanding nine-wicket victory. The second Test at Bourda dissolved into rain, and at Queen’s Park Oval, England had been within touching distance of a chase before time, controversially managed by Viv Richards, intervened. As the teams arrived in Barbados, the series stood delicately poised. But beneath that balance lay a deeper tension: the West Indies were no longer merely defending dominance, they were fighting to reclaim authority.

Selection, Memory, and Miscalculation

England’s decisions before the match hinted at a subtle misreading of both history and conditions. By omitting off-spinner Eddie Hemmings, they entrusted everything to a four-man pace attack, a strategy that appeared logical on a surface expected to aid seamers. Yet Kensington Oval had long punished such linear thinking.

Allan Lamb, leading England, chose to bowl first, a decision that ignored recent scars. In 1980-81 under Ian Botham and again in 1985-86 under David Gower, England had made the same choice and suffered crushing defeats. This was not merely a tactical call; it was a lapse in historical consciousness. And against a side like West Indies, history rarely forgives repetition.

Day One: The Rhythm of Resistance and Ruin

Gladstone Small struck early, removing Desmond Haynes, briefly justifying England’s decision. But what followed was not control, it was escalation.

Gordon Greenidge counterattacked with violence, and though England clawed back to 108 for three, hope proved fleeting. The arrival of Viv Richards altered not just the scoreboard, but the psychological landscape. Alongside Carlisle Best, Richards constructed a partnership that was less about accumulation and more about assertion.

Devon Malcolm, England’s spearhead, unravelled. His pace remained, but control deserted him. Against Richards, such generosity is fatal. The West Indian captain dismantled the attack with calculated brutality, 70 runs that bent the game’s tempo irreversibly.

After Richards’ departure, Gus Logie continued the momentum, but the day belonged to Carlisle Best. Playing before his home crowd, he stitched elegance with intent, reaching his maiden and ultimately only Test century. By stumps, West Indies stood at 311 for five, not merely ahead, but advancing with purpose.

Day Two: Expansion and English Defiance

Best transformed promise into permanence the following morning. His 164 was not just an innings; it was a declaration of narrative control. Supported by Jeff Dujon, he extended the lead beyond comfort, anchoring West Indies to 446.

Yet Test cricket thrives on resistance. England, though rattled early, Wayne Larkins departing for a golden duck, found resolve in Alec Stewart’s defiance and, more crucially, in the partnership between Robin Smith and Allan Lamb.

Here, the match briefly shifted shape. Lamb counterattacked, forcing the bowlers back; Smith absorbed pressure with stoic patience. Against a fearsome quartet, Bishop, Ambrose, Marshall, Moseley, England refused collapse. By day’s end, they had not recovered, but they had stabilized.

Day Three: Survival as Strategy

The third day was not about dominance; it was about endurance. Lamb and Smith extended their partnership to 193, dragging England beyond the follow-on threshold. Their innings redefined the contest, not as a one-sided assertion, but as a duel of persistence.

However, once the partnership broke, the inevitable followed. England were dismissed for 358, still trailing significantly. West Indies, sensing opportunity, ended the day cautiously at 17 for one, their lead stretching to 105.

The question was no longer whether they could win, but how aggressively they would pursue it.

Day Four: Acceleration and Declaration

West Indies chose intent over caution. Despite early setbacks, Richards falling cheaply and Best unable to bat, it was Desmond Haynes who provided the defining innings. His 109 was not flamboyant but authoritative, a measured acceleration that ensured a declaration with purpose.

At 267 for eight declared, Richards set England a target of 356, a figure less about realism and more about psychological pressure. Time, however, hovered as a silent variable. Had the declaration come too late?

England’s response began disastrously. Bishop struck early; Ambrose induced uncertainty; chaos followed. By stumps, England were 15 for three, teetering between survival and surrender.

Day Five: The Illusion of Safety

The final day began with resistance. Stewart and Jack Russell consumed time, frustrating the bowlers, inching England toward the safety of a draw. Their partnership was not spectacular, but it was effective, eroding the urgency of West Indies’ pursuit.

Even after Stewart’s dismissal, Russell and Lamb extended the defiance. At 97 for five, with time steadily slipping away, England appeared to have weathered the storm.

Viv Richards tried everything, part-time options, field changes, even himself. Nothing worked. The match seemed to drift toward stalemate.

And then, he took the new ball.

Ambrose: The Spell That Redefined Greatness

Curtly Ambrose had been formidable. But greatness, in sport, often hinges on a single moment, a spell that transcends statistics and enters mythology.

This was that moment.

He returned with purpose, extracting life from a fifth-day pitch, maintaining relentless accuracy. There was no extravagance, just discipline, hostility, inevitability.

Russell, England’s pillar of resistance, fell first, bowled by a delivery that kept low. The crack appeared. Then came collapse.

Hussain, Capel, DeFreitas, all undone by precision and pressure, many leg-before, victims not just of movement but of inevitability. England’s resistance dissolved within minutes.

The final act was symbolic. Devon Malcolm, exposed and vulnerable, fell leg-before. England were all out for 191.

From 166 for five, comfortably placed, to collapse. From safety to surrender.

Epilogue: Beyond Numbers

Ambrose’s figures, eight for 45, ten for 127, tell only part of the story. What mattered more was the timing, the context, the transformation. This was not just a spell; it was a passage into greatness.

For West Indies, it was restoration, of pride, of dominance, of identity.

For England, it was a lesson in the unforgiving nature of Test cricket: that matches are not lost in moments of collapse alone, but in earlier misjudgments, of selection, of history, of tempo.

And for the game itself, Kensington Oval 1990 became a reminder of its most enduring truth:

In Test cricket, time is never neutral. It waits, quietly, for greatness to seize it.


Chanderpaul’s Last-Ball Miracle: A Port of Spain Thriller Etched in Drama and Grit

In the sultry twilight of Port of Spain, with Caribbean rhythms throbbing through Queen’s Park Oval, Shivnarine Chanderpaul stood alone against fate. Needing ten runs from the final two deliveries, a near-impossible equation even in the era of Twenty20 audacity, he summoned a defiance that belongs more to folklore than match reports. A classical straight drive pierced the field, followed by a flick, a calculated act of precision—sending Chaminda Vaas’s full toss into the night sky and over deep midwicket. The ball sailed over Mahela Jayawardene's outstretched arms and into the delirium of the stands. Victory was seized from the brink, West Indies victorious by one wicket in an unforgettable ODI finish.

A Match of Pendulum Fortunes

This contest, the first of the series, will be remembered not merely for its dramatic climax, but for the unpredictable oscillation of momentum. Sri Lanka, floundering at 49 for 5, seemed destined for humiliation. Yet Chamara Kapugedera, once a peripheral figure struggling to cement his place, produced a coming-of-age innings. His 95, crafted in a record 159-run sixth-wicket stand with Chamara Silva, was a blend of aggression and timing, especially in the final overs as he lofted Benn and Edwards into the stands. Silva, more conservative yet equally effective, rotated the strike masterfully during his 67, punctuated with deft nudges and unconventional angles.

West Indies, in contrast, began with controlled dominance. At 109 for 1 with Chris Gayle in full flow, the chase seemed elementary. Gayle, who struck a fluent 52, looked set for a defining innings before Mendis’s web unraveled the middle order. What followed was chaos disguised as cricket: a cascade of wickets, a run-out born of panic, and a procession of batters unsure whether to consolidate or counterattack.

Mendis: The Debutant Who Dazzled

The architect of much of this unraveling was a debutant: Ajantha Mendis, a spinner of arcane mystery and surgical control. Possessing the guile of a street magician and the discipline of a Test match veteran, Mendis captured three crucial wickets, including the well-set Gayle and a flummoxed Darren Sammy. His variations, subtle carrom balls, deceptive flippers, left West Indies uncertain and occasionally frozen at the crease. For Sri Lanka, Mendis’s emergence offered a shimmering light in the post-Muralitharan landscape.

Nuwan Kulasekera, too, responded to the challenge. His dismissals of Smith, Sarwan, and Samuels in a fine burst of swing bowling gave Jayawardene rare moments of hope in an attack missing its frontline arsenal: Malinga, Maharoof, and Fernando all sidelined, Muralitharan deliberately rested as part of Sri Lanka’s transitional experimentation.

Bravo’s Brilliance and Folly

Dwayne Bravo's performance was a study in duality. With the ball, he was electric, removing Jayawardene, Silva, and the dangerous lower order to finish with four wickets. With the bat, he played strokes of mesmerizing beauty: a pull off one leg through midwicket and a soaring back-foot drive over extra-cover that landed, ironically, on the head of a photographer. Yet his recklessness also nearly cost his side. A calamitous mix-up with Chanderpaul, both men stranded at the same end, handed Sri Lanka a lifeline.

That run-out left West Indies requiring 67 runs from 72 balls, a manageable equation made steep by mounting pressure and crumbling composure. Wickets tumbled, and when Patrick Browne attempted a foolhardy encore after striking a six, only to find Mendis in the deep, the situation teetered on collapse.

Chanderpaul: A Study in Solitude and Steel

Then came the silence before the storm. Chanderpaul: stoic, crab-like, and quietly intense—held firm as his partners perished. For long stretches, he was starved of strike, the clock running against him. Yet there was no visible panic. His was an innings of quiet rebellion, unembellished yet ironclad. With 10 needed from 2, he exploded into action. The straight drive was a declaration of intent; the six, a statement of finality.

Jayawardene's reaction to Vaas’s last over, one of visible exasperation, was understandable. The veteran seamer had done little wrong throughout the match, but one misjudged full toss tilted the game. Still, as captain, Jayawardene would reflect on more than just that final over: a young team, a debutant spinner announcing himself to the world, and a middle order that rose from the ruins.

A Night of Lessons and Legends

This match was more than just a one-wicket thriller. It was a canvas painted with debut brilliance, veteran grace, and the unforgiving drama of ODI cricket. For West Indies, it was vindication of grit over elegance. For Sri Lanka, a loss laced with promise, Mendis, Kapugedera, Silva, all presenting arguments for a bright future.

But above all, it was Chanderpaul's night, a reminder that sometimes, the quietest cricketer can script the loudest crescendo.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar 

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

The Ad-Hoc Takeover: When Bangladesh Cricket Lost Its Voice

There are moments in a nation’s sporting history when the boundary between administration and politics dissolves, when decisions taken in boardrooms echo far beyond stadiums, shaping questions of sovereignty, dignity, and identity. The recent dissolution of the elected Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) and the installation of an ad-hoc committee is one such moment.

This is not merely a change in leadership. It is a rupture.

It is the quiet replacement of institutional autonomy with executive convenience, of elected legitimacy with curated compliance.

A Board Dismantled, A Precedent Set

The official justification rests on allegations of electoral irregularities, vote rigging, coercion, and procedural violations. These are serious charges, and if proven, they demand accountability.

But accountability must follow process.

Instead, what unfolded was swift and decisive executive intervention: the elected board dissolved, an ad-hoc committee installed, and a three-month electoral promise offered as reassurance. Yet history teaches us that temporary arrangements in South Asian governance often outlive their intended lifespan.

The deeper concern is not whether irregularities occurred, but whether due process was respected, and whether the cure is more damaging than the disease.

Because when a government dissolves an elected sporting body through administrative fiat, it does more than correct an election, it rewrites the rules of institutional independence.

The Removal of Aminul Islam: Punishment or Pretext?

At the center of this controversy stands Aminul Islam Bulbul, a figure whose removal is officially tied to governance failures, yet politically interpreted through a far more complex lens.

The timing and narrative surrounding his exit raise uncomfortable questions.

Was this purely about electoral malpractice?

Or was it also about a man who, at a critical moment, chose to assert Bangladesh’s autonomy in the geopolitics of cricket?

Bulbul’s tenure coincided with tensions involving India, particularly around tournament participation, player treatment, and broader cricketing diplomacy. His reluctance to align unquestioningly with regional power dynamics has been reframed as administrative failure.

But in another reading, it was an assertion of self-respect.

And in South Asian cricket, self-respect often comes at a cost.

The Shadow of Influence: Cricket Beyond the Boundary

To speak of cricket in the subcontinent without acknowledging the gravitational pull of India, and by extension, the BCCI, is to ignore reality.

India is not just a participant in global cricket; it is its economic engine, its broadcaster magnet, its political center of gravity.

But influence becomes problematic when it transforms into expectation.

When compliance becomes the price of cooperation.

The concern emerging from this episode is not direct interference, it is something more subtle, and perhaps more enduring: alignment through pressure, normalization of dependency, and quiet erosion of agency.

The very fact that validation of the new ad-hoc structure seems to hinge on acceptance from external bodies signals a troubling shift.

From independence to consultation.

From sovereignty to accommodation.

The Tamim Paradox: Icon or Instrument?

The appointment of Tamim Iqbal as the face of this transition is both strategic and controversial.

Few can question his cricketing legacy. He is, without doubt, one of Bangladesh’s finest batsmen, a symbol of an era when Bangladesh cricket found its voice on the field.

But administration is not batting.

Leadership in governance demands neutrality, institutional vision, and the ability to operate above factional alignments.

And this is where the paradox emerges.

Tamim’s elevation is seen by some as a stabilizing move, a familiar face to calm turbulent waters. But for others, it raises deeper concerns:

Is he independent, or positioned?

Is he leading, or fronting?

Is this continuity, or camouflage?

His past associations, political perceptions, and the speed of his ascent into an ad-hoc structure born out of executive intervention all contribute to a credibility deficit that cannot be ignored.

Popularity, after all, is not the same as legitimacy.

Institutional Cost: Reputation, Stability, and the ICC Lens

The consequences of this intervention extend beyond domestic debate.

The International Cricket Council (ICC) has historically maintained a strict stance against government interference in cricket boards. Even perceived encroachment can trigger scrutiny, sanctions, or reputational damage.

Bangladesh now risks being seen not as a stable cricketing nation, but as one navigating internal turbulence.

This has tangible costs:

Hosting rights may come under question

Commercial partnerships may hesitate

Investor confidence may erode

More importantly, it sends a signal to players, administrators, and stakeholders that institutions can be reshaped not through consensus, but through decree.

And once that precedent is set, it rarely remains contained.

A Crisis of Direction

What makes this episode particularly troubling is not just what has happened, but what it represents.

Bangladesh cricket has, over the past two decades, built itself from the margins to a position of competitive relevance. That journey required resilience, vision, and, above all, institutional continuity.

Ad-hoc governance disrupts that continuity.

It replaces long-term planning with short-term management.

It turns strategy into survival.

And in doing so, it risks undoing years of progress in the name of immediate correction.

Between Sovereignty and Submission

A cricket board is more than an administrative body, it is a custodian of national pride.

To dismantle it without exhausting institutional remedies is to weaken that pride.

To replace elected authority with appointed oversight is to blur the line between governance and control.

And to do so in a context where external influence looms large is to invite questions that cannot easily be dismissed.

The central question remains:

Can Bangladesh cricket truly progress if its autonomy is negotiable?

Because progress built on compliance is not progress, it is dependency.

And a game that once gave a nation its voice risks becoming, once again, an echo of someone else’s power.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar 

When Priorities Shift, Empires Tremble: Real Madrid at the Crossroads

There are seasons in football when decline does not arrive like a storm, but seeps in quietly, through hesitation, distraction, and misaligned priorities. Real Madrid’s current campaign feels precisely like that: not a collapse of talent, but a slow erosion of clarity.

La Liga, once the sacred theatre of weekly dominance, has been allowed to drift into the background. What remains is a singular obsession, the Champions League. And with it, a dangerous gamble: that Europe alone can redeem a season already fraying at its domestic edges.

A Night That Was Meant to Define

The quarter-final clash against Bayern Munich was framed as a referendum on Real Madrid’s season. Not just a match, but a verdict.

The lineup itself hinted at both ambition and uncertainty. Kylian Mbappé spearheaded the attack, a symbol of galáctico expectation. Fede Valverde, entrusted with the captain’s armband, embodied urgency and energy. Yet, the presence of Jude Bellingham on the bench suggested something more troubling: hesitation in identity, a team still unsure of its strongest self.

From the opening whistle, that uncertainty translated into vulnerability.

Control Without Authority

The first ten minutes told the story. Bayern Munich did not simply attack, they imposed. Real Madrid were not playing; they were reacting.

Álvaro Carreras’ desperate goal-line clearance was not an act of brilliance, but of survival. Vinícius Júnior’s fleeting attempt on goal felt more like a reminder of potential than a declaration of intent.

Bayern, meanwhile, moved with purpose. Their possession was not decorative, it was surgical. Every pass probed, every movement unsettled. Real Madrid’s defense, usually a bastion of composure, appeared fragile, almost unfamiliar with itself.

The inevitable arrived through Luis Díaz, whose finish was less a moment of genius than a consequence of sustained pressure. It felt deserved, not spectacular, but inevitable.

At halftime, the scoreboard read 0–1. But the psychological margin felt wider.

The Collapse of Structure

If the first half exposed Madrid’s hesitation, the second half punished it.

Harry Kane’s early strike was ruthless in its simplicity. A lapse in positioning from Carreras, a moment of disorganization, and Bayern doubled their lead. In elite football, these are not mistakes; they are invitations. Bayern accepted without hesitation.

From there, control turned into dominance.

Real Madrid, a team synonymous with comebacks and resilience, looked curiously passive. Their attacks came in fragments, isolated flashes rather than sustained waves. Vinícius Júnior’s missed opportunity, striking the side netting, symbolized a team close, yet disconnected.

A Flicker, Not a Fire

Mbappé’s goal, crafted by a precise delivery from Trent Alexander-Arnold, offered a glimmer of hope. It was efficient, almost clinical, but lacked the emotional surge that usually accompanies Madrid’s European revivals.

There was no tidal shift. No sense that the Bernabéu had awakened.

Instead, the final minutes unfolded with an uncomfortable truth: Bayern remained the more coherent, more dangerous side. Jamal Musiala’s near miss, along with a series of squandered chances, only reinforced the narrative. Bayern could have buried the tie; Madrid merely survived it.

Between Hope and Illusion

A 1–2 defeat is, on paper, recoverable. In Madrid’s mythology, it is almost an invitation, fuel for another legendary comeback.

But mythology can be deceptive.

This was not a performance that hinted at imminent resurgence. It was one that exposed structural fragility: defensive uncertainty, midfield imbalance, and an overreliance on moments of individual brilliance.

The deeper concern lies beyond this single match. Real Madrid appear to be navigating their season without a coherent hierarchy of priorities. By sidelining La Liga in pursuit of European glory, they have placed themselves in a precarious position—where failure in one competition risks defining the entire campaign.

The Second Leg: Redemption or Reckoning

The return leg now carries a weight far heavier than qualification. It is not just about overturning a deficit, it is about rediscovering identity.

Can this team, fragmented in rhythm and uncertain in structure, summon the collective clarity required to challenge Bayern Munich?

Or will this season be remembered as one where ambition outpaced execution, where the pursuit of continental glory came at the cost of domestic stability, and ultimately, both slipped away?

Real Madrid have built their legacy on defying logic. But even legends require foundations.

Right now, those foundations look dangerously unstable.

Monday, April 6, 2026

The Day Pakistan Breached the Caribbean Fortress

Some victories are worth more than the scoreboard that records them.

Some defeats are heavier than the margin suggests.

Pakistan’s triumph in the First Test at Georgetown in 1988 belonged to that category. On paper, it was a convincing nine-wicket win. In history, it was something far larger: the first home defeat West Indies had suffered in a decade, the first breach in a fortress that had seemed sealed by fast bowling, swagger, and a near-mythic aura of invincibility.

For ten years the Caribbean had been cricket’s citadel. Teams arrived, resisted for a while, and then were swallowed by pace, pride, and inevitability. West Indies did not merely win at home; they imposed a political kind of dominance. They dictated tempo, inflicted fear, and made defeat feel like a law of nature. Since Australia’s surprise win at Georgetown in April 1978, no side had beaten them in the islands. Twenty-five home Tests had passed: fifteen wins, ten draws, no defeats. The series came and went. England had recently been whitewashed 5-0. The empire stood untouched.

Then Pakistan arrived in 1988, fresh from a one-day series in which they had been thoroughly outclassed, and almost nobody imagined the script would change.

But cricket, particularly Test cricket, is often most dramatic when it overturns its own logic. And at Bourda, it did so through a convergence of fate, timing, tactical intelligence, and one man’s extraordinary comeback.

A Fortress with One Hidden Crack

West Indies still looked formidable, even in partial disrepair. Their batting retained Greenidge, Haynes, Richardson, Logie, Dujon, and the emerging Hooper. Their pace stocks still contained Courtney Walsh, Winston Benjamin, Patrick Patterson, and a debutant who would soon grow into one of the game’s towering horrors: Curtly Ambrose.

And yet, beneath the intimidating exterior, there were fractures.

Vivian Richards was absent, recovering from haemorrhoid surgery. Malcolm Marshall, the most complete fast bowler in the world, was missing with a knee problem. Those two absences mattered profoundly. One removed the psychological centre of the batting order; the other the supreme intelligence of the bowling attack. West Indies were still dangerous, but they were no longer fully themselves.

Pakistan, meanwhile, had recovered something even more valuable than form: they had recovered Imran Khan.

His return itself carried a touch of folklore. Retired from international cricket, reluctant to come back, resistant even to public pleading, he was eventually persuaded. There is the now-famous anecdote, preserved in Peter Oborne’s Wounded Tiger, of a holy man near Lahore telling Imran that he had not yet left his profession, that it was still Allah’s will for him to remain in the game. Whether prophecy or coincidence, the result was the same. Pakistan’s greatest cricketer returned for one last assault on the final frontier that had long obsessed him: beating West Indies in the Caribbean.

That made the Georgetown Test more than a series opener. It became an act of return, almost of resurrection.

The Importance of Place

Even the venue seemed chosen by history with deliberate irony.

If one searched for the likeliest site of a West Indian stumble, Georgetown was the place. Their last home defeat had come there in 1978. Since then, despite all their global dominance, they had not won a Test at Bourda. England’s 1981 match there was cancelled amid the Robin Jackman controversy. India had drawn in 1983. Australia had drawn in 1984. New Zealand had drawn in 1985. The great Caribbean machine had ruled the region, but this one ground remained curiously resistant to its authority.

That did not mean Pakistan were favourites, far from it. But it did suggest that if the impossible were to happen, it might happen there.

And so it did.

The Mighty Khan

Greenidge, standing in for Richards, won the toss and chose to bat on a newly laid pitch. It looked like a reasonable enough decision. Newly laid surfaces can be uncertain, but a side as powerful as West Indies generally backed itself to establish command. Yet the choice soon ran into the sharp intelligence of Imran Khan.

This was not merely a fast bowler charging in. This was a captain reading an opportunity few others would have trusted. Imran understood that without Richards and Marshall, West Indies were not merely weakened, they were disoriented. Their usual certainties had been interrupted. He attacked that uncertainty at once.

Haynes edged behind. Then came another shrewd intervention. Instead of going straight to Abdul Qadir, Imran threw the ball to Ijaz Faqih, the off-spinner. It looked an odd decision until it succeeded immediately. Simmons was bowled on the first ball. Faqih, who a year earlier in India had famously taken a wicket with his first delivery after a mid-series call-up, repeated the trick. Imran had trusted instinct over hierarchy, surprise over convention.

For a while, the West Indies steadied. Greenidge and Richardson added 54. Then Richardson and Logie, and later Logie and Hooper, rebuilt with intelligence. By tea, the score was 219 for 4. The innings seemed to be moving toward something substantial.

Then Imran broke it open.

Logie’s dismissal triggered a collapse, but a collapse alone does not explain what happened next. What followed was a concentrated exhibition of fast bowling authority. Imran took the last five wickets, including four for 9 in three overs. The lower order did resist briefly, Ambrose and Patterson adding 34 for the last wicket, but that only delayed the inevitable. West Indies were all out for 292.

The significance of the figures - 7 for 80 in the innings, 11 for 121 in the match - lies not just in their scale but in their symbolism. In his first Test after retirement, Imran did not ease himself back. He returned as if to remind the cricketing world that no West Indian empire, however intimidating, was exempt from examination.

And he did it while carrying an infected toe.

Pakistan’s Answer: Discipline, Resistance, and Miandad’s Correction of History

A great bowling performance can create opportunity. It does not guarantee that a team will take it. Pakistan still had to bat against a snarling pace attack of Patterson, Walsh, Benjamin, and Ambrose. This was not the classic West Indian quartet of Marshall, Holding, Roberts, and Garner, but it was hardly a soft alternative. If anything, it was younger, rawer, more erratic - and at times every bit as quick.

Ramiz fell early. Mudassar resisted until Ambrose, in a moment of dark foreshadowing, yorked him for his maiden Test wicket. Pakistan were vulnerable.

Then came Javed Miandad.

This was not just another Test innings from Pakistan’s greatest batsman. It was a correction. Miandad’s greatness at home was already established, but abroad, his record, though still impressive by ordinary standards, had long carried a faint criticism. Against West Indies, especially, he had not yet produced the defining innings his stature demanded. In eight Tests before this one, he had averaged only 27 against them, without a century. For a batsman of his class, that remained an irritant.

Imran, a master of provocation as leadership, had quietly made sure Miandad knew it.

The response was vintage Miandad: combative, cunning, stubborn, argumentative, and utterly alive to the theatre of confrontation. He survived a no-ball reprieve on 27. He was dropped by Dujon on 87. Benjamin tried to unsettle him with intimidatory bowling and was warned by umpire Lloyd Barker. Miandad, predictably, did not retreat. He challenged the bowlers, baited them, and batted with the kind of theatrical defiance that made him uniquely Miandad.

But to reduce the innings to attitude alone would be unfair. It was built with a method. He added 70 with Shoaib Mohammad, then 90 with Saleem Malik. He absorbed time, denied rhythm to the bowlers, and gradually changed the moral texture of the match. When he ended the second day on 96 not out, Pakistan had already moved from response to resistance.

The next morning added an almost novelistic pause: stranded on 99 for 38 minutes, Miandad waited, worked, and finally reached his sixteenth Test hundred, his first against West Indies. When he was dismissed for 114, after six and three-quarter hours and 234 balls, he had done more than score a century. He had removed a blemish from his own record and, in the process, given Pakistan a basis for belief.

Yet Miandad was not the innings’ only architect. Saleem Yousuf played a dedicated 62, adding steel to style. Others contributed enough. And the West Indians, in their haste to blast Pakistan out, contributed an astonishing amount themselves.

Pakistan finished on 435, leading by 143, and 71 of those runs came in extras.

That number deserves analytical emphasis. It was not just an oddity; it was a tactical failure. There were 53 no-balls in total, and the final extras tally exceeded by three the previous highest conceded in a Test innings. This was not mere bad luck or a few misjudged strides. It was a symptom of imprecision, of a pace attack operating with aggression but without control. Marshall’s absence mattered here perhaps more than anywhere else. What he offered West Indies was not only hostility but discipline - the ability to threaten constantly without losing shape. Without him, their quicks produced intimidation without economy, violence without full command.

Pakistan’s lead, in other words, was not just earned through batting. It was donated in part by West Indian indiscipline. Great teams are not usually so careless. That was another sign that this was not a normal West Indian performance.

The Rest day, the Antibiotics, and the Return of the Captain

Imran’s infected toe prevented him from bowling more than two overs late in the West Indies’ second innings, and that introduced a note of uncertainty. Was Pakistan’s captain about to be reduced to spectator just when the game was opening? The rest day intervened at exactly the right moment. Antibiotics helped. So did time. When the fourth morning came, Imran returned.

That return changed the psychological field as much as the tactical one.

Qadir struck first, dismissing Simmons and Richardson, leaving the West Indies tottering. Greenidge and Logie tried to counterattack, adding 65 in brisk time. For a moment, the old Caribbean habit of wresting back control threatened to reappear. Then Imran dismissed them both.

Again, the sequence matters. Whenever the West Indies appeared to be reconstructing themselves, Imran cut away the foundations.

The lower order then drifted into a slow attempt at survival through Hooper and Dujon. Here came another captaincy decision that reveals something essential about Imran’s cricketing intelligence. He introduced Shoaib Mohammad’s occasional off-spin. It may not have been conceived as genius; by some accounts, it was simply a change of ends. But great captains often create their own myths by acting at exactly the right moment without overthinking why. Shoaib removed Dujon and Benjamin with successive balls. Suddenly, the innings was broken.

Qadir accounted for Hooper. Imran then deceived Walsh and Patterson in successive deliveries, ending with match figures of 11 for 121 and a hat-trick ball still pending. West Indies were all out, and Pakistan needed 30.

By tea, the match was effectively over. Soon after, it was officially over.

Pakistan won by nine wickets.

A Historic Triumph

The immediate explanation is obvious: Pakistan bowled superbly, batted with patience, and exploited a weakened opponent. All true. But the deeper significance of the win lies in what it revealed.

First, it showed how dependent even a great empire can be on its core figures. Without Richards and Marshall, West Indies were still formidable, but they were not invulnerable. Richards’ absence weakened their emotional command of the game; Marshall’s absence weakened their tactical command of it. Great teams often appear like systems. In reality, they are often held together by a few extraordinary individuals.

Second, it reaffirmed Imran Khan’s uniqueness. He was not merely Pakistan’s best player. He was the force that gave Pakistan its most ambitious dreams. His bowling won the match. His leadership shaped the interventions that tilted it. His presence transformed the team’s self-belief. Javed Miandad may well have been the subtler tactician, but Imran was the greater mobiliser of men and occasion. He made players believe that history, however improbable, could be negotiated.

Third, the match hinted that even the West Indian fortress contained vulnerabilities when confronted with patience and conviction. This was not yet the fall of the empire. West Indies remained too strong, too proud, too deep for that kind of conclusion. But it was a disturbance - a reminder that domination is never eternal, however inevitable it may seem while it lasts.

The Return to the Highest Echelon

When Imran walked up to receive the Man of the Match award, it felt larger than the ceremony itself. The award recognised 11 wickets, brave leadership, and the orchestration of one of Pakistan’s finest away wins. But symbolically, it recognised something else: his restoration to greatness.

This was not a sentimental comeback. It was a commanding one.

He had returned from retirement not as a fading star seeking one last curtain call, but as a giant still capable of deciding history. The infected toe, the spells of swing, the captaincy hunches, the refusal to let West Indies settle, all of it contributed to a performance that felt almost mythic in its timing. Pakistan had not merely won a Test. Their leader had re-entered the game’s highest chamber and announced that he still belonged there.

And so the First Test at Georgetown became more than a result. It became a moment of rupture in one narrative and renewal in another.

For the West Indies, it was the end of ten years of untouched home.

For Pakistan, it was the discovery that the impossible might, after all, be reachable.

And for Imran Khan, it was the Second Coming, not in metaphor alone, but in command, force, and consequence.

Thank You

Faisal Caesar