Showing posts with label Abdul Qadir. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Abdul Qadir. Show all posts

Friday, March 6, 2026

Karachi 1984: A Test Match Lost in Memory but Rich in Drama

Whenever Pakistan and England meet in a Test series, the cricketing memory tends to wander not merely towards great contests but also towards a long catalogue of controversies. Over the decades, cricket between the two nations has often been accompanied by disputes, umpiring rows, political tensions, and allegations that strained the relationship between the teams.

Yet beneath this turbulent surface lies a remarkable cricketing history. Pakistan and England have produced several unforgettable Test encounters, matches that embodied the drama, unpredictability, and psychological warfare that define the longest format of the game.

Most of these classics unfolded on English soil. In Pakistan, the narrative was often different: flat pitches, attritional draws, and debates surrounding umpiring decisions. But occasionally, amid the monotony of stalemates, a Test would erupt into something extraordinary.

One such contest took place in Karachi in 1984, a match that evolved into a gripping battle of nerves and remains one of the most underrated Tests between the two sides.

A Series Framed by Transition

In 1984, England toured Pakistan for three Tests and two One-Day Internationals. The visitors were captained by the veteran fast bowler Bob Willis, a leader whose tenure had been steady rather than spectacular. England arrived in the subcontinent eager to restore pride after a disappointing winter tour of New Zealand where they had suffered a 1–0 series defeat.

Despite that setback, England carried confidence into the series. Historically they had enjoyed a formidable record against Pakistan, particularly in the latter’s backyard. Before the Karachi Test, England had remained unbeaten in 13 Tests in Pakistan, a statistic that gave the tourists both psychological and historical leverage.

Their squad was rich with experience: Ian Botham, David Gower, Mike Gatting, Allan Lamb, Bob Taylor, Vic Marks, and Willis himself formed a strong core capable of competing in any conditions.

Pakistan, however, were navigating a period of transition.

Two of their most influential cricketers, Imran Khan and Javed Miandad, were absent due to injuries. Leadership therefore fell to the elegant yet aging Zaheer Abbas, a batsman of rare artistry who now carried the burden of guiding a youthful team.

Emerging players such as Rameez Raja, Saleem Malik, Anil Dalpat, Azeem Hafeez, Tauseef Ahmed, and Qasim Omar were still establishing themselves at the international level. Pakistan’s hopes rested heavily on the bowling partnership of Abdul Qadir, the mercurial leg-spinner, and Sarfraz Nawaz, the veteran fast bowler renowned for his mastery of reverse swing.

Karachi and Two Debutants

The opening Test was staged at National Stadium, Karachi, a venue where Pakistan traditionally enjoyed a formidable record.

The hosts introduced two debutants:

Anil Dalpat, who became the first Hindu cricketer to represent Pakistan in Test cricket

Rameez Raja, the younger brother of Pakistan international Wasim Raja

Their inclusion reflected Pakistan’s willingness to place faith in a new generation.

The Karachi pitch appeared batting-friendly, though subtle signs suggested that deterioration might occur as the match progressed. Recognizing his team’s relative discomfort against spin bowling, Bob Willis chose to bat first after winning the toss, hoping to place early pressure on Pakistan.

England’s Promising Beginning

England opened with Christopher Smith and Mike Gatting. Facing the new-ball pairing of Sarfraz Nawaz and Azeem Hafeez, the English openers encountered considerable movement off the pitch.

Yet patience defined their approach. Rather than attacking recklessly, Smith and Gatting embraced the traditional virtues of Test batting, discipline, watchfulness, and measured accumulation. Their partnership of 41 runs was less flamboyant than functional, reflecting the tempo of the era.

Seeking a breakthrough, Zaheer Abbas introduced spin early. The decision proved effective when Tauseef Ahmed bowled Gatting, ending the opening resistance.

Still, England seemed comfortable. With David Gower joining Smith, the visitors moved to 90 for 1 before tea, appearing well placed to dictate the match.

Reverse Swing and the Turning Tide

At this moment the game shifted dramatically.

Sarfraz Nawaz, wielding an aging ball, began producing reverse swing, still a mysterious phenomenon to most of the cricketing world in the early 1980s. Within successive overs he dismissed Smith and Allan Lamb, abruptly dismantling England’s momentum.

Then came Abdul Qadir, whose artistry with the leg-break and googly would soon mesmerize the visitors. He deceived Derek Randall with a delivery that spun sharply back to hit the stumps.

England ended the first day at 147 for 4, their early dominance suddenly replaced by uncertainty.

Pakistan’s Bowlers Seize Control

The following morning England hoped that Botham and Gower could stabilize the innings.

Instead, Pakistan’s bowlers tightened their grip on the match. Qadir’s variations and Sarfraz’s late movement proved irresistible. The last six wickets collapsed for just 35 runs, leaving England all out for 182.

Qadir finished with 5 for 74, while Sarfraz claimed 4 for 42, a decisive display of skill and experience.

Nick Cook’s Counterattack

Pakistan’s reply began brightly.

Openers Mohsin Khan and Qasim Omar played with fluency, adding 67 runs without loss and suggesting that the hosts might quickly seize control.

But Willis made a shrewd tactical move by introducing Nick Cook, the left-arm orthodox spinner.

Cook transformed the match.

With subtle flight and accuracy he dismantled Pakistan’s top order, triggering a collapse that left the hosts reeling at 105 for 5. Mohsin, Qasim, Rameez, and Wasim Raja all fell to Cook, while Botham removed Zaheer Abbas for a duck.

Pakistan’s promising start had dissolved into crisis.

Salim Malik’s Defiance

At this precarious moment, Salim Malik emerged as Pakistan’s unlikely saviour.

Still early in his international career, Malik displayed maturity beyond his years. With Anil Dalpat, he steadied the innings before Dalpat fell early on the third morning.

At 138 for 6, Pakistan’s position looked fragile.

Then came an unexpected alliance.

Abdul Qadir, better known for his bowling brilliance, joined Malik and provided invaluable resistance. The pair constructed a 75-run partnership that gradually shifted the psychological balance of the match.

Malik’s innings of 74 was a study in patience and technical discipline. Qadir contributed a resilient 40, frustrating England’s bowlers and draining their momentum.

By the time Pakistan were dismissed, they had secured a 95-run lead, a remarkable recovery considering their earlier collapse.

Cook, meanwhile, finished with six wickets, confirming his influence on the game.

England Collapse Again

England began their second innings cautiously, ending the third day at 54 for 2.

But on the fourth morning their resistance disintegrated.

A series of controversial decisions added to their frustration, yet Pakistan’s bowlers deserved equal credit. Qadir deceived Randall again with a clever googly, Tauseef bowled Botham attempting a sweep, and Sarfraz struck with a vicious in-cutter.

When David Gower edged to slip shortly after lunch, England were 128 for 7, leading by just 33 runs.

Their innings soon ended at 159, leaving Pakistan a modest target of 65 runs.

A Chase That Became Chaos

What appeared a routine chase soon evolved into chaos.

Nick Cook, enjoying the match of his life, ripped through Pakistan’s top order. Within minutes Qasim Omar, Mohsin Khan, and Zaheer Abbas were dismissed, reducing Pakistan to 26 for 3.

Panic intensified.

Salim Malik was run out in confusion, and further wickets followed quickly. At 40 for 6, England seemed on the verge of an astonishing comeback.

Botham’s brilliance in the slips and Norman Cowans’ spectacular boundary catch had transformed the contest into a nerve-shredding spectacle.

Composure Amid Crisis

Amid the turmoil, Anil Dalpat displayed remarkable composure.

Supported by Abdul Qadir once again, Dalpat resisted England’s relentless pressure. Their partnership nudged Pakistan closer to victory before Cook removed Qadir.

At 59 for 7, the match hung precariously in balance.

Then, with the tension almost unbearable, Sarfraz Nawaz edged a boundary, sealing Pakistan’s victory 25 minutes before the close of the fourth day.

The triumph was historic.

Pakistan had finally secured their first victory over England in 13 home Tests.

The Forgotten Classic

Despite its drama, the Karachi Test of 1984 rarely features in discussions about memorable Pakistan–England encounters. Conversations often drift instead toward controversies that have overshadowed the cricketing relationship between the two nations.

Yet this match offered everything that defines Test cricket: tactical intrigue, individual resilience, sudden collapses, and a finish balanced precariously on a knife’s edge.

More than four decades later, the memory of that battle in Karachi deserves revival, not merely as a statistic in scorebooks, but as a reminder that beneath controversy, Pakistan and England have often produced cricket of extraordinary drama.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar 

Tuesday, October 28, 2025

The Day Giants Crumbled: Pakistan’s Historic Conquest of the Invincibles

A Battle Against Cricketing Gods

In the 1980s, defeating the West Indies was nothing short of a cricketing miracle. They were the undoubted emperors of the game — a team forged in fire, feared for their batting might and legendary pace battery that terrorized opponents into collapse. Yet, in the 1986 Test at Faisalabad, Pakistan, battling injuries, pressure, and the odds, scripted a performance that would carve its own myth into cricketing folklore. It was not merely a victory but a conquest of invincibility; a moment where defiance triumphed over dominance.

West Indies Assert Supremacy: The Pace Quartet Strikes Early

Pakistan’s decision to bat first seemed destined for disaster when Malcolm Marshall, Patrick Patterson, and Tony Gray, debuting with fire, wreaked havoc. Reduced to 37 for 5, Pakistan looked set for humiliation.

Yet, captain Imran Khan stood like a lone pillar, his, fighting 61 a testimony to leadership under siege. Salim Malik’s painful injury, a fractured arm inflicted by a brutal delivery, added physical drama to the tension. Still, Pakistan scrapped their way to 159, a total that felt both fragile and significant.

West Indies responded with expected authority, amassing a commanding 89-run lead. But the seeds of reversal were already sown: Wasim Akram’s six-wicket burst announced his arrival as more than a prodigy — he was becoming a force. Tauseef Ahmed reinforced the attack with suffocating off-spin, denying West Indies acceleration and breathing Pakistan back into hope.

Pakistan’s Steadfast Resistance: The Fight for Survival

The second and third days belonged to grit, determination, and slow defiance. Pakistan refused to panic even after losing Mudassar Nazar and Ramiz Raja early in the second innings. They played not for speed but survival, a strategic retreat with the intention to attack later.

Salim Yousuf, sent as a night-watchman, batted with admirable calm for 61, his maiden Test fifty, while Javed Miandad and Mohsin Khan displayed monk-like patience. The scoreboard moved sluggishly, but Pakistan’s resistance gained moral ground.

Akram the Catalyst: A Young Lion Roars

Day Four tilted destiny. 

Enter Wasim Akram, the 20-year-old left-arm hurricane. His 66 was audacity in motion: sixes off Marshall and Patterson, partnerships with Tauseef and a plastered Salim Malik defying both pain and fear.

Pakistan’s lead swelled to 240, enough to create pressure, perhaps enough to dream.

The West Indies entered the chase with four sessions to play and destiny on their side… or so they believed.

The Dramatic Collapse: Qadir’s Spell of Destruction

Cricketing chaos unfolded. Imran Khan bowled with deceptive pace and accuracy and opened the gates, dismissing Haynes and Greenidge LBW, early cracks in an iron wall.

Then came the sorcerer: Abdul Qadir.

His wrist-spin, a blend of venom, artistry, and sheer audacity, reduced West Indies into startled mortals.

Larry Gomes bowled for 2

Viv Richards gone for a duck

Roger Harper for 2

Richardson, the top scorer, undone for 14

On and on it went…

West Indies crashed to 43 for 9 by stumps, their aura shattered. Next morning, Qadir finished the job, six wickets for 16 runs, a spell forged for legend. West Indies were humiliated for 53, their lowest Test score at the time and still the lowest ever recorded in Pakistan.

Akram rightfully earned Man of the Match, but Pakistan celebrated a collective triumph, of belief over fear.

Voices From the Battlefield: Reflections on a Miracle

Players from both sides later acknowledged the uniqueness of the battle:

Ramiz Raja spoke of the hunger:

“We looked at it as an opportunity to beat the best, not a reason to surrender.”

Tauseef Ahmed highlighted West Indies’ kryptonite:

“They struggled against legspin, and we had the very best.”

Richie Richardson recognized Pakistan’s fierce leadership:

“Imran Khan and his warriors were never easy. They matched our aggression.”

West Indies players, too, confessed to lapses — a lack of mental preparation and even a food-poisoning mishap that hit their captain Viv Richards. Yet, none denied Pakistan’s superior skill and intensity.

Akram’s rise, Qadir’s sorcery, and Imran’s command formed a holy trinity that brought down cricket’s most feared empire.

A Victory That Rewrote Perception

The Faisalabad Test was not just a cricket match, it was a statement.

Pakistan proved that giants can fall, that bravery can outshine fear, that belief is the beginning of all greatness.

From 1976 to 1995, West Indies lost only 19 Tests in 142 attempts but four of those losses came against Pakistan.

On that unforgettable afternoon, Pakistan didn’t just win a Test match, they made the invincibles taste defeat.

Faisalabad became a fortress of memory, and the date a reminder to the cricketing world:

Even legends can crumble when confronted by a team that refuses to bow.

Monday, August 11, 2025

Pakistan’s Glorious Summer of 1987: A Triumph Beyond Cricket

Pakistan’s introduction to Test cricket was nothing short of remarkable. Despite losing their inaugural series against India in 1952 by a respectable margin of 2-1, they quickly established themselves as a formidable competitor on the global stage. Their tour of England in 1954 further cemented this reputation, as they managed to draw the series 1-1—a feat that underscored their potential. While debates persist over whether England fielded their strongest XI in every match, the broader implication was undeniable: Pakistan was a team with the capability to challenge the traditional powerhouses of the game.

Yet, the promise of their early years did not immediately translate into sustained success against England. Over the next three decades, Pakistan endured a series of setbacks, failing to secure a single series victory against their English counterparts. In ten subsequent encounters—both home and away—England triumphed in six series, while the remaining four ended in draws. A five-Test series in 1962 seemed to signal Pakistan’s growing stature, but England’s commanding 4-0 victory had the opposite effect. Subsequent series were reduced to three matches, reflecting the perception that Pakistan was yet to develop the depth required to consistently compete with the best.

During this period, Pakistan produced a handful of world-class players—most notably the legendary Hanif Mohammad and the formidable Fazal Mahmood. However, the team as a whole lacked the structural integrity to consistently challenge the elite Test nations. This dynamic began to shift in the 1980s. A narrow 2-1 series loss in England in 1982 hinted at Pakistan’s growing resilience, and by 1984, they had secured a significant 1-0 series victory at home. The cricketing world took further notice when Pakistan held the mighty West Indies to a thrilling 1-1 draw in 1986—a result that confirmed their emergence as a genuine force. England, acknowledging Pakistan’s rise, extended an invitation for a five-Test series in 1987, marking the first such engagement between the two nations in 25 years.

At the helm of this resurgent side was Imran Khan. At 34, he was considered by many to be in the twilight of his illustrious career, yet his leadership and all-round brilliance remained undiminished. First appointed captain in 1982, his tenure had been interrupted by injuries, most notably debilitating shin splints. In his absence, Javed Miandad had briefly assumed the captaincy in 1985, before Imran returned to lead Pakistan to a historic 1-0 series victory in India in early 1987. With this triumph fresh in their minds, Pakistan arrived in England that summer with quiet confidence, believing they could defy expectations.

Beyond Imran’s inspirational presence and Miandad’s batting genius, Pakistan’s squad boasted an impressive blend of youthful exuberance and seasoned experience. A young Wasim Akram, already showing glimpses of his prodigious talent, was complemented by the guile of spinners Abdul Qadir and Tauseef Ahmed. The batting order, long considered a weak link, now carried greater stability with Ramiz Raja, Shoaib Mohammad, Mudassar Nazar, Mansoor Akhtar, and Salim Malik forming a formidable top order. With a balanced squad and a sense of purpose, Pakistan stood poised to challenge England on their home soil, seeking to rewrite history and stake their claim among the cricketing elite.

England Beckons: A Tour Clouded in Controversy

Buoyed by their success in India, Pakistan set sail for England in May, embarking on a tour that would test both their resilience and their reputation. The selection committee—effectively an extension of Imran Khan’s strategic mind—made a few alterations to the squad. One omission, however, ignited an off-field storm. Qasim Umar, aggrieved by his exclusion, unleashed a barrage of allegations involving drug abuse within the team. His claims cast a shadow over the touring party, leading to an uncomfortable reception at Heathrow, where sniffer dogs were waiting for them. The scandal, though never substantiated, marked the abrupt end of Umar’s international career. 

Once on the field, Pakistan found themselves in a dogged three-match Texaco Trophy ODI series. England edged the decider at Edgbaston by a single wicket, setting the stage for an enthralling five-Test series. Both teams arrived battle-hardened, having recently vanquished their fiercest rivals—Pakistan against India, and England against Australia. The hosts, fresh from reclaiming the Ashes, were considered favourites. Yet Imran Khan, a man never shackled by preordained narratives, had other plans. 

Weathering the Storm: A Series Shaped by the Elements

Pakistan entered the first Test at Old Trafford with a squad that was far from full strength. Imran Khan, despite leading the side, was restricted to playing purely as a batsman due to a strained stomach muscle sustained just before the match. The absence of Abdul Qadir, who remained in Pakistan attending to his ailing wife, further weakened the team’s bowling arsenal. Javed Miandad, a pivotal figure in the batting lineup, arrived late on tour following the birth of his son and was consequently short of match practice. However, these setbacks ultimately proved inconsequential, as relentless rain ensured that fewer than 15 hours of play were possible over the five days, rendering the match a dampened affair.

Opting to bat first after winning the toss, England compiled a commanding total of 447, anchored by a composed and methodical 166 from opener Tim Robinson. The young Wasim Akram, celebrating his 21st birthday on the eve of the match, continued to impress, claiming 4 for 111 in what was only his 16th Test appearance. Pakistan’s response was less assured, as they stumbled to 140 for 5 before the persistent rain forced an inevitable draw.

A little over a week later, the teams reconvened at Lord’s for the second Test, where once again the weather played a decisive role. England, the only side to bat, posted 368, with Bill Athey justifying the selectors’ continued faith in him by crafting a well-earned 123. However, rain delays prolonged England’s innings until the close of play on day three, and further downpours on day four ensured that Pakistan never even had the opportunity to bat. Despite the frustrating conditions, there were silver linings for the visitors—most notably, Imran and Qadir, now reunited with the squad, managed to get valuable bowling practice, hinting at a more competitive contest ahead.

Turning the Tide at Headingley

Pakistan required only five overs and one ball on the fourth morning to formalize their victory, a swift conclusion that left England with an all-too-familiar sense of despair. It was a dismal echo of their defeat by India on the same ground a year earlier. The pitch, riddled with cracks and offering erratic bounce, drew criticism, yet England’s batsmen bore greater culpability. Of their bowlers, only Foster adapted to the conditions with precision, skillfully moving the ball both in and away, compelling the batsmen into error. His spell, a masterclass in fast-medium bowling, yielded eight wickets, a performance as commanding as Imran’s. In contrast, Dilley’s away-swing rarely troubled the batsmen, Capel’s line and length lacked menace, and Edmonds oscillated between attack and containment. England’s decision to exclude Emburey in favour of a fourth seamer, Capel, proved misguided, while Richards deputized for the French, still recovering from chickenpox. Pakistan remained unchanged.

England’s decision to bat first under a sky of high clouds and little breeze seemed sound, yet within a mere 63 minutes, they were reeling at 31 for five. The collapse was a testament not just to Pakistan’s pace and swing but to England’s technical frailties. Robinson, hesitant, fell to the third ball. Athey, playing late, perished in the seventh over. Broad, caught in indecision, succumbed in the eighth. Gatting shouldered arms to his demise, and Gower, in an ill-fated attempt to withdraw his bat, dragged onto his stumps. Imran, with figures of 7-1-16-3, was relentless; Wasim Akram, equally incisive, returned 10-4-20-2 before making way for Mudassar.

Botham, adopting a watchful approach, resisted for nearly two hours before Mudassar, having already bruised his instep—a blow that would prevent him from fielding—enticed him into an ill-judged drive at a gentle outswinger. Richards, inexplicably, left an inswinger from Wasim and paid the price. When the young left-armer tired, Mohsin Kamal stepped in, claiming three wickets in nine balls. Capel, resolute, reached a debut fifty with his sixth boundary but fell immediately after, driving a full-length delivery back to Mohsin, who plucked the return catch above his head. His innings, a study in patience and technique, lasted three hours and thirteen minutes, underscoring the value of a committed forward defence.

Pakistan, in response, faced 27 overs before stumps, during which England squandered three opportunities off Foster’s bowling. Mansoor survived two difficult chances, first to Edmonds, then to Emburey in the slips, while Yousuf, dropped the second ball, capitalized on England’s generosity, occupying the crease throughout Friday morning’s session.

Salim Malik, embodying quiet authority, orchestrated the second day’s play with an innings of discipline and refinement. His 99, compiled over five and a half hours from 238 deliveries, featured eight boundaries and was a lesson in application. His partnership of 72 with Ijaz Ahmed had already tilted the match decisively in Pakistan’s favour, and on the third morning, Ijaz and Wasim Akram extinguished any lingering English hopes. Ijaz, with audacious strokeplay, enthralled the Saturday crowd—back-foot drives behind point, a pair of dancing steps down the pitch for a straight boundary, and a flick of the wrists for a ninth four en route to his fifty. Wasim Akram’s innings, a cavalier 43 from 41 balls, was adorned with four sixes and two fours before Edmonds, sprinting in from fine leg, ended his spree with a tumbling catch.

England’s second innings unravelled almost immediately. Broad and Robinson departed in Imran’s first and second overs. Athey and Gower, displaying an air of reckless defiance, added 35 in the 38 minutes before lunch. Broad, adjudged caught behind off Imran’s second ball, was doubly unfortunate—the replay, scrutinized repeatedly, suggested the ball had merely brushed his left hand after he had withdrawn it from the bat, an injustice compounded by the wicketkeeper’s sharp reflexes. Yousuf, however, fared worse in the afternoon session when, after fumbling the ball and recovering it, he made an unsuccessful appeal for Botham’s wicket. The umpire dismissed the claim, and an incensed Botham had to be restrained by umpire Palmer, while Imran, ever the disciplinarian, reprimanded Yousuf in no uncertain terms.

With Qadir applying a vice-like grip at one end through 23 successive overs, Pakistan’s fast bowlers exploited the pitch’s fickle bounce from the Football Stand end. Imran, immaculate in his craft, claimed his 300th Test wicket with the dismissal of Richards, smartly taken at forward short leg, becoming only the eighth bowler to reach the milestone. On the fourth morning, he added three more to his tally, finishing with match figures of ten wickets. Capel, once again, exhibited resilience, batting for three hours, but England’s fate had been sealed from the moment their innings crumbled on Thursday morning. That Gatting might have made the same decision at the toss was of little solace; the execution, not the intent, had dictated England’s downfall.

A Battle of Attrition at Edgbaston

A placid Edgbaston pitch seemed destined for a tame draw from the outset, as Pakistan negotiated Gatting’s decision to bowl first with ease. Yet, the match, languid for much of its course, sprang to life dramatically after lunch on the final day, setting the stage for an improbable English victory.

An incisive spell of fast bowling from Foster, ably supported by Botham, dismantled Pakistan’s second innings with unexpected haste, leaving England with an ambitious yet attainable target of 124 from the final eighteen overs. Broad’s aggressive 30 in an opening stand of 37 off just five overs provided England with the perfect platform, and for a fleeting moment, parity in the series seemed within reach. However, Pakistan, marshalled by the relentless Imran Khan and the fiery Wasim Akram, expertly curtailed England’s charge. Unshackled by the constraints of one-day cricket—no fielding restrictions, no curbs on short-pitched bowling—Pakistan dictated terms as wickets tumbled. England, in the end, fell tantalizingly short by just 15 runs.

Both captains concurred that England, given their wealth of one-day experience, should have secured victory. Yet, it was Gatting who bore the brunt of criticism, particularly from the tabloid press, for his miscalculations in the early days of the match. He had gambled on the assumption that the prolonged spell of wet weather would render the pitch greener than usual, offering early assistance to his seamers.

Curiously, England omitted Radford from their twelve, despite his standing as the leading wicket-taker in the County Championship, opting instead for two spinners. The decision left England short of a paceman, a deficiency Pakistan exploited, amassing 250 for three by stumps on the first day. The innings was anchored by Mudassar Nazar, who compiled his ninth Test century with unwavering discipline, sharing a pivotal third-wicket stand of 135 with Javed Miandad. Miandad, reprieved on 15 when Botham spilt a straightforward chance at slip, capitalized to score 75.

Rain and bad light plagued the second day, delaying the start until 1:25 p.m. and causing several stoppages. One such interruption proved particularly farcical: umpires Whitehead and Meyer emerged from the pavilion, poised to restart play, only to be left standing alone on the square as England’s players remained oblivious in their dressing room. The miscommunication, later dissected with blame apportioned in multiple directions, was met with derision. Ultimately, the light deteriorated once more, and to the bemusement of the crowd, the umpires retreated, still without a sign of the England team.

Despite the interruptions, Dilley disrupted Pakistan’s momentum, dismissing Mudassar—after an epic vigil of nearly seven hours—along with Malik and Imran in a four-over burst. However, England failed to capitalize fully, allowing Pakistan to reach 439. A costly drop by Botham when Salim Yousuf was on 4 enabled the wicketkeeper to compile a career-best 91.

England’s response on the third day was propelled by a commanding opening stand of 119 between Broad and Robinson. The innings lost momentum in the middle phase as Imran, extracting prodigious movement, engineered yet another five-wicket haul—his 21st in Test cricket. Yet, Gatting, defying his critics, produced a defiant 124. His six-hour, 39-minute innings, punctuated by sixteen boundaries, ensured England a hard-earned 82-run advantage, aided by late-order contributions from Emburey and Foster.

Pakistan’s second innings commenced with just under an hour remaining on the fourth day, and all signs pointed towards an inevitable draw. By lunch on the final day, at 74 for one, they had nearly erased the deficit. However, Foster ignited a dramatic collapse, removing Shoaib, Mansoor, and Miandad in quick succession. Botham compounded Pakistan’s woes with a stunning return catch to dismiss Malik before clean bowling Ijaz. Yet, a crucial 13-minute break for bad light, coupled with Imran’s obdurate 37, prolonged England’s toil until the final hour.

England’s pursuit of victory was derailed by a series of run-outs, with Athey—though not solely culpable—embroiled in all of them. His inability to accelerate in the closing stages, managing a mere 14 runs in seven overs, proved costly and ultimately led to his omission from the Fifth Test.

Poor weather over the first four days restricted the attendance to 42,500, with gate receipts totaling £287,080. Thankfully, there was no repeat of the crowd disturbances that had marred the one-day international between these sides at Edgbaston in May. However, the necessity of a substantial police and stewarding presence significantly diminished the match’s profits. In the end, what had seemed a meandering contest transformed into a gripping spectacle, a testament to the unpredictable drama of Test cricket.

The Oval: Where Legends Are Forged

 Gatting and Botham’s stoic resistance on the final day provided England with a rare moment of solace in a summer of dwindling fortunes. Their unwavering defiance for over four hours ensured that Pakistan's dominance translated into only a 1-0 series victory—their first in England—rather than a more emphatic margin.

To unsettle such a formidable opponent, England needed to seize the initiative by batting first on a measured, albeit slowish, pitch. Yet fate favoured Pakistan, as Imran Khan, winning his first toss of the series, set the stage for England’s third consecutive home series defeat. By the second day’s lunch, Pakistan’s batsmen had already dictated the match’s trajectory, and by the evening of the fourth, England—following on—remained a staggering 381 runs adrift with seven wickets in hand.

Seeking fresh impetus, England replaced Athey with Moxon, ending the former’s fourteen-Test run, and once again overlooked Radford in favour of a dual-spin attack. Pakistan, meanwhile, reintroduced Ramiz Raja and Tauseef Ahmed, sidelining Shoaib Mohammad and Mohsin Kamal for the first time in the series. The early removal of Ramiz and Mansoor by Botham and Dilley hinted at an opportunity for England to exert pressure, but Javed Miandad soon dismantled their aspirations. His long-overdue maiden Test century against England was merely a prelude to a masterful double-century—his fourth in Tests—making him only the seventh batsman to achieve such a feat. Having survived a difficult chance to Foster at long leg when on 9, Miandad reached 6,000 Test runs on the first day, guided by the steady Mudassar and the flamboyant Malik. England’s cause was further weakened by injuries to Dilley (ankle) and Foster (strained side), forcing the latter out of action for the remainder of the innings.

Malik, a picture of controlled aggression, surged from 64 to the 90s early on the second day before securing his sixth Test hundred—the first outside his homeland. His innings of 237 balls, spanning over four and a half hours, contained just six boundaries yet yielded a record 234-run partnership with Miandad for Pakistan’s fourth wicket against England. Imran Khan, in what he declared to be his final Test, added another milestone by registering his first century against England, accelerating from 57 to three figures while Miandad momentarily paused his own scoring. Though Miandad harboured ambitions of challenging Sobers’ record 365 not out, fatigue overtook him, and after a marathon ten-hour vigil—facing 521 balls and striking 28 fours and a six—he offered a simple return catch to Dilley. Imran’s innings, marked by his signature audacity, ended in an attempt to snatch a fourth run off Ijaz’s stroke, bringing Pakistan’s total to 600. His innings of four and a quarter hours featured a six and eleven fours.

On the third morning, Ijaz and Yousuf extended their seventh-wicket stand to 89—a record for Pakistan against England—before Dilley’s late burst secured him a career-best six for 154. Imran’s hopes of an early declaration were dashed by deteriorating light, forcing Pakistan’s innings to reach its full, imposing length. Their final total of 708, amassed over 13 hours and 40 minutes, surpassed their previous highest of 674 for six against India in Faisalabad (1984-85) and ranked as the sixth-highest in Test history—the second largest total ever conceded by England. Botham’s figures of 217 runs conceded in 52 overs set an unenviable England record, surpassing I. A. R. Peebles’ 204 from 71 overs against Australia at The Oval in 1930.

England’s plight deepened when Broad edged behind off Imran’s fourth ball, and at 78 for four, the prospect of a humiliating defeat loomed large. Gatting’s determined half-century and Botham’s dogged support saw them through to stumps, but their task on the fourth day was formidable. Survival depended on one of them batting through the day, yet Qadir’s probing leg-spin soon exposed England’s vulnerability. Only Emburey offered any significant resistance, striking a six and six fours as Qadir tore through the lineup with his finest Test figures of seven for 96, including a devastating spell of three for 13 in 37 balls.

Following on, trailing by 476, England faced the ignominy of an unprecedented margin of defeat. That humiliation became a tangible reality when Moxon, Robinson, and Gower fell cheaply. However, on the final day, with Wasim Akram sidelined for an appendix operation, England’s resistance stiffened. Gatting’s ninth Test hundred—his fifth in fourteen matches—anchored the innings, despite a series of missed chances at 5, 23, 58, 60, and 107. His undefeated 150, compiled over five and three-quarter hours with 21 fours, stood as a testament to his resilience. Botham, suppressing his natural attacking instincts, displayed remarkable discipline, eschewing risk and ensuring England’s survival. Joining Gatting 45 minutes before lunch, he remained steadfast until the job was completed at 5:25 p.m., salvaging a draw from the wreckage of an otherwise one-sided contest.

More Than a Victory: A Statement to the World

The years that followed solidified this team's claim to being arguably the greatest Pakistan has ever produced. From early 1985 until their away loss in Australia in 1990, Pakistan remained undefeated in a Test series, a testament to their dominance on the international stage. During this period, they secured series victories over formidable opponents such as the West Indies, England, India, and Australia, while also engaging in two fiercely contested drawn series, both at home and abroad, against the West Indies. These accomplishments underscored their status as a force to be reckoned with in world cricket.

Although their 1987 World Cup campaign ended in the semifinals, it did little to diminish the team's growing reputation. Imran Khan, ever the stalwart leader, continued both his playing career and his stewardship of the side, ultimately guiding them to the pinnacle of cricketing achievement—the 1992 World Cup. His leadership, marked by both resilience and tactical brilliance, became the defining feature of Pakistan’s golden era.

The 1987 series against England, however, was not without its share of controversy. The air was thick with allegations of cheating, unsporting conduct, and complaints over umpiring decisions. While these issues were undeniably contentious at the time, they now seem secondary in the broader narrative. What remains most significant is that this series served as a crucial turning point, solidifying Pakistan’s reputation as a genuine, world-class Test cricketing nation—one that could stand toe to toe with the best in the world.

Thank You

Faisal Caesar

Saturday, April 19, 2025

Five Balls from Defeat, Five Balls from Glory

 If the First Test at Georgetown had cracked open the walls of the Caribbean fortress, the second at Queen’s Park Oval revealed something even more compelling: Pakistan’s victory had not been an accident, nor merely the product of West Indian absences. It had altered the emotional terms of the series.

Now the hosts had their king back. Vivian Richards returned. So did Malcolm Marshall. The old aura was restored, or so it seemed. Yet by the time this extraordinary Test ended, with Abdul Qadir surviving the last five balls of the match from Richards himself, West Indies had discovered a troubling truth: Pakistan were not merely capable of upsetting them once. They were capable of standing toe to toe with them over five days of attrition, pressure, and nerve.

That was the true significance of the drawn Test at Trinidad. It preserved Pakistan’s lead in the series, yes. But beyond that, it transformed the contest into something far bigger, a genuine struggle for supremacy between two teams who, in those days, possessed entirely different temperaments but increasingly equal conviction.

And in the middle of it all stood Javed Miandad, playing one of the great fourth-innings hundreds by a Pakistani batsman: 102 of immaculate judgment, defiance, and control, compiled over seven hours and seven minutes, and ended only when victory had briefly come into view.

After Georgetown: from shock to belief

The effect of Pakistan’s victory in the First Test was profound. A side that had arrived in the Caribbean with the usual burden of inferiority suddenly carried itself differently. The win had revitalised the entire touring party. Confidence swelled not only among the established names but across the squad. Even in the tour match that followed, with Imran Khan and Javed Miandad rested, Pakistan crushed a West Indies Under-23 side by 211 runs, Abdul Qadir taking nine wickets in the match. The teenage captain of that Under-23 team, Brian Lara, scored 6 and 11. A future genius was only beginning; Pakistan, for the moment, were fully alive in the present.

This changed atmosphere mattered. Tours of the West Indies had often been mental collapses before they became cricketing ones. But Pakistan, after Georgetown, no longer carried that fear in the same way. They had seen the empire bleed.

Even so, Queen’s Park Oval was a different challenge. If Georgetown had offered opportunity, Trinidad promised restoration. Richards returned after his operation. Marshall returned too. Patterson was unfit, but Winston Benjamin retained his place. To the home crowd, the reappearance of Richards in particular meant the natural order might soon be restored.

 

Instead, the match became a reminder that series are not reset by personnel alone. Momentum, once created, has its own force.

Imran Gambles Again

Imran Khan won the toss and, buoyed perhaps by the success of his boldness in the First Test, put West Indies in. It was a characteristically aggressive decision. Whether it arose from a close reading of conditions or from sheer conviction hardly matters now. What mattered was that Pakistan’s captain once more refused to play the part expected of a touring side.

And for much of the opening day, the decision looked inspired.

Greenidge was gone in the first over. Haynes followed with only 25 on the board. Richardson and Logie added 55, but the innings never settled into complete command. Richie Richardson counterattacked; Gus Logie consolidated. Hooper, so elegant yet still so vulnerable to quality spin, was undone quickly by Qadir. At 89 for 5, West Indies were exposed.

Then Richards arrived and did what Richards always did when his side seemed in danger: he changed the emotional weather. His 49 came in only 43 balls, with eight boundaries, and for a brief while it felt as though he might tear Pakistan’s control apart. Dujon joined the mood, stepping down the track and lofting Qadir for six.

But this was one of those innings where Pakistan’s great twin forces — Imran and Qadir — worked in complementary rhythm. Imran had Dujon edging behind. Qadir claimed Richards for 49. The lower order was soon wrapped up, and both finished with four wickets. By tea, West Indies were all out for 174.

It was a remarkable position. West Indies, restored by the return of their two giants, had still been blown away. At that moment Pakistan were not merely competing — they were threatening to dominate the series.

And then the match lurched.

Marshall’s Answer and Pakistan’s Collapse

Cricket in that era, especially against West Indies, punished any early triumph with a fresh threat. Pakistan’s delight was cut down brutally between tea and stumps.

Marshall ran in. Ramiz Raja was caught in slips. Mudassar followed. Shoaib Mohammad fended Ambrose to first slip. Ijaz Faqih, sent as a nightwatchman, could not survive Benjamin. Then came the huge blow: Miandad, Pakistan’s form batsman and calmest presence, was bowled by Benjamin. By the close, Pakistan were 55 for 5. Their apparent control had dissolved into a familiar Caribbean nightmare.

This was the central rhythm of the match: no position remained stable for long. Each side would, at different times, hold a winning hand. Each would then lose it.

The next morning deepened Pakistan’s crisis. Ijaz Ahmed could not handle Benjamin’s hostility. Imran fell to Marshall. At 68 for 7, the game seemed to have swung decisively back to West Indies.

Then came a partnership that changed the texture of the innings and, eventually, the entire match.

Salim Malik and Salim Yousuf: The Innings Beneath the Headlines

Miandad’s fourth-innings hundred rightly dominates memory, but Pakistan’s lower-order recovery in the first innings was every bit as essential. Salim Malik and Salim Yousuf added 94 for the eighth wicket, then a Pakistan record against West Indies. Malik’s 66 was an innings of poise and nerve, shaped not through flourish but through cool judgment. Yousuf, dropped on 3 by Dujon, made West Indies pay.

This stand did more than reduce the deficit. It preserved Pakistan’s strategic footing in the Test. Without it, the match might have become a one-sided West Indian recovery. Instead, Pakistan dragged themselves into a slender lead and ensured that West Indies would have to bat again under pressure.

There was a revealing contrast here. West Indies had the greater spectacle — pace, aggression, visible menace. Pakistan, increasingly, had resilience. Their lower order was not decorative; it was functional, sometimes stubborn, occasionally transformative. That batting depth would matter enormously later, when Abdul Qadir’s position at No. 11 would prove deceptive rather than desperate.

Pakistan eventually reached 194. The lead was not large, but it was enough to keep the match alive in their favour.

Imran’s Stranglehold and Richards’ Intervention

West Indies began their second innings under pressure, and Imran sensed it. Haynes again failed. Greenidge and Richardson tried to move cautiously. Logie was cleaned up. At 66 for 3, Richards walked in with the lead still meagre.

What followed was the innings that rescued West Indies from the brink. Richards’ century was not merely another exhibition of dominance; it was an act of restoration. He had returned to the side and now had to restore not only the innings but also the authority of his team. He did so in the only way he knew, by seizing the game.

There was, inevitably, drama. On 25, Richards was struck on the pad by Imran and survived an enormous appeal. Yousuf, convinced, did not hide his anger. Richards reacted by waving his bat threateningly. It was a revealing moment. The tension was no longer abstract. Both sides now believed they could win, and therefore every decision, every appeal, every word carried more heat. Imran had to intervene. So did umpire Clyde Cumberbatch. The confrontation subsided, but the tone of the match had been set.

From there, Richards took charge. Hooper, subdued but useful, added 94 with him. Dujon then supplied the perfect partnership. Richards, battling cramps and nausea, reached his 22nd Test hundred off 134 balls. It was an innings of commanding urgency, exactly what great sides produce when they must reclaim a game from uncertainty. When he was dismissed for 123, West Indies had rebuilt their authority.

Yet even then Pakistan stayed in the contest. Qadir reached 200 Test wickets by dismissing Marshall. Imran and Qadir again shouldered almost the entire bowling burden, 92.4 of the 124.4 overs between them. This detail is critical. Pakistan were not only playing against West Indies; they were also playing against the limitations of their own attack. Imran and Qadir had to do nearly everything.

Dujon, however, ensured that Richards’ work was not wasted. He batted through, added 90 with the last two wickets, and completed a century of immense value. West Indies reached 391. Pakistan would need 372 to win.

At the time, it was 70 more than Pakistan had ever made in the fourth innings of a Test. It was not a target that invited optimism. It invited caution, and perhaps quiet resignation.

Pakistan chose otherwise.

The Chase Begins: Then Stalls

Ramiz Raja began brightly, attacking enough to loosen the psychological grip of the chase. Mudassar resisted in his dour, familiar way. Pakistan reached 60 at a reasonable pace, and the early fear of collapse seemed to recede.

Then came another violent turn in the game.

Mudassar fell after an 85-minute vigil for 13. Shoaib scratched for 26 minutes and made only 2 before Benjamin bowled him. Ramiz, his fluency choked by the wickets around him, pushed tentatively at Marshall and edged to slip. Pakistan were 67 for 3.

Miandad and Salim Malik then did what circumstances demanded: they shut the game down. Runs became secondary to occupation. Their partnership added only 40 in almost a full session. By stumps Pakistan were 107 for 3, still 265 away. It was a score that seemed to point far more towards survival than victory. But it also meant that Pakistan were still in the match.

And then came the rest day.

Few things intensify a Test more than a rest day before the final push. It allows doubts to ferment. Both teams knew the series could turn on the next day. Pakistan sensed that if Miandad stayed, possibilities would open. West Indies knew they had to break him early or spend the day chasing shadows.

Miandad’s Masterpiece: Not Brilliance, but Command

The final day began with attrition. Malik and Miandad defended, absorbed, slowed the game. Walsh eventually trapped Malik leg-before after a painstaking 30 in more than three hours. Imran promoted himself to No. 6 ahead of Ijaz Ahmed, a decision open to debate. He stayed 44 minutes, made only 1, and edged Benjamin. Pakistan were 169 for 5.

At that point, a draw looked the best they might salvage.

Then the match turned again.

Miandad moved into a different register. He was not suddenly flamboyant; he was suddenly complete. Every ball seemed measured against both time and target. He found in the 19-year-old Ijaz Ahmed an unexpectedly mature ally. Their stand of 113 for the sixth wicket changed the atmosphere entirely. For the first time, a Pakistani win was imaginable rather than fanciful.

This is what made Miandad’s hundred so special. It was not a counterattacking epic, nor a reckless chase. It was a fourth-innings construction built from timing, control, and nerve. He read the match perfectly: when to stall, when to turn over strike, when to allow the target back into the frame. His 102 came from 240 balls, with seven fours and a five, but the numbers do not quite capture its craftsmanship. It was an innings of flawless management.

Yet even masterpieces can be undermined by timing. Just before the mandatory final 20 overs, Richards brought himself on. His off-spin, innocuous on the surface, produced a breakthrough of great significance. Ijaz Ahmed advanced, missed, and Dujon completed the stumping. Pakistan were 282 for 6.

Still, with Miandad at the crease, 84 were needed from the final 20 overs. Difficult, yes. Impossible, no.

Then Ambrose, in the final over before that last phase began, struck the decisive blow. Miandad flirted at one moving away, and Richards held the catch at slip. Pakistan’s greatest chance of victory went with him.

The Last Act: From Chase to Survival

Even after Miandad’s dismissal, Pakistan were not entirely done. Wasim Akram came in ahead of Ijaz Faqih, suggesting that they still entertained ambitions of winning. Yet his innings was a strange one: only 2 from 18 balls in 39 minutes. It neither accelerated the chase nor decisively secured the draw. When Marshall dismissed him at 311, West Indies became favourites again.

From then on, the equation simplified. Pakistan could no longer realistically win; West Indies could no longer afford not to push for victory. Saleem Yousuf and Ijaz Faqih responded with a kind of dead-bat stoicism, draining life out of the final overs. The fast bowlers kept charging in, sometimes overstepping, always straining. But Pakistan held.

Then Richards made one final move. With the pitch helping spin, he took the ball himself.

The eighteenth over passed. Then the nineteenth. The last over arrived heavy with theatre.

The first ball struck Yousuf on the pad. This time the appeal was upheld. Yousuf, who had spent 108 minutes in one of the great rearguard efforts of the series, was gone for 35. Abdul Qadir walked out as the last man, with five balls to survive.

And there lay one of the subtler truths of Pakistan’s side: their No. 11 was no rabbit. Qadir had Test fifties, first-class hundreds, real batting ability. West Indies still had a chance, but it was not as straightforward as a tailender’s execution.

Richards varied his pace, tossed it up, probed for panic. Qadir offered none. He played out all five deliveries with admirable poise. And with that, the match ended in stalemate — but not in anti-climax.

It ended with both teams exhausted, both having seen victory, both denied it.

Why This Draw Mattered

A scorecard would record it simply as a draw. That would be misleading.

For West Indies, it was an escape as much as a recovery. They had once looked in danger of slipping 2–0 behind in a home series, something that would have bordered on the unthinkable. Richards’ century and Dujon’s support dragged them back into authority, and their bowlers, especially Benjamin and Marshall, nearly forced a win. But they did not quite finish it.

For Pakistan, it was both a missed opportunity and a statement of maturity. They had seen a genuine chance of chasing 372. Miandad had taken them deep enough for victory to come into view. Yet when that chance vanished, they still had the clarity to preserve the draw. That dual capacity, to dream ambitiously and then defend stubbornly — is what distinguished this Pakistan side from many others before it.

The Test also exposed some of Pakistan’s structural limits. Imran and Qadir bowled far too much. Faqih, on a slower surface offering turn, was underused. Imran’s promotion ahead of Ijaz Ahmed yielded little. Akram’s strangely muted innings after Miandad’s dismissal did not fit the apparent strategy. These are legitimate analytical questions, and they matter because the margin between Pakistan winning and merely drawing was narrow.

Yet for all that, the larger truth remains: Pakistan left Trinidad still ahead in the series. West Indies, even with Richards and Marshall restored, had not managed to level it.

That fact changed everything going into Barbados.

An Epic Moves to its Final Stage

This match did not settle the series. It deepened it.

The first Test had announced Pakistan as the challengers.

The second proved they were equals.

Now everything moved to Bridgetown, with the series still tilted in Pakistan’s favour and the psychological stakes higher than ever. West Indies had fought back, but not enough. Pakistan had survived, but knew they had let history briefly slip through their hands.

And that is what made the final Test so irresistible.

By the time Abdul Qadir walked off after dead-batting those last five deliveries from Vivian Richards, the series had already become one of the finest of its era: a contest between two sides who refused to accept their assigned roles, and between two captains who understood that pressure was not merely something to endure, but something to weaponise.

At Queen’s Park Oval, nobody won the match.

But both teams left carrying the burden of knowing they could have.

Thank You

Faisal Caesar

Wednesday, September 6, 2023

Abdul Qadir: The Enigmatic Magician of Spin



In the pantheon of cricketing legends, Abdul Qadir occupies a unique space—an artist whose craft transcended mere sport. To watch Qadir bowl was to witness a confluence of guile, artistry, and unpredictability. He was not merely a leg-spinner; he was a conjurer, spinning webs that ensnared even the most seasoned batsmen. His legacy, much like his bowling, is a study in contrasts—fierce yet playful, calculated yet instinctive, and above all, unforgettable.

Qadir was an anomaly in a cricketing world that often categorizes spinners as calm and methodical. His approach to the crease was a theatrical prelude to the drama that would unfold. Bounding down the track with an angular run-up that threatened to break into a dance, he exuded a charisma that was as captivating as it was deceptive. The ball, leaving his hand in a beguiling loop, seemed to possess a will of its own—spinning in, darting out, and often defying logic.

The Artistry of Deception

What set Qadir apart was his ability to blur the line between genius and unpredictability. His googly, a masterpiece of concealment, and his flipper, a weapon of precision, were instruments of destruction that left batsmen in a state of perpetual uncertainty. He wielded his craft with an almost mischievous delight, as if challenging the batsman to decipher his intentions. Yet, there were moments when even Qadir appeared unsure of the ball’s trajectory—a rare vulnerability that endeared him to fans and amplified his aura of unpredictability.

Qadir’s impact was not merely technical but psychological. Facing him was as much a mental battle as it was a test of skill. Batsmen, often confident against other spinners, found themselves reduced to hesitant novices against Qadir. His ability to exploit angles, vary his pace, and target the most uncomfortable spots on the pitch made him a nightmare for even the most accomplished players.

The Strategist’s Weapon

For Imran Khan, Qadir was more than a bowler; he was a strategic asset. Whether breaking stubborn partnerships or stifling the scoring rate, Qadir delivered when it mattered most. His persistence was relentless, his stump-to-stump accuracy unyielding, and his ability to outthink batsmen unparalleled. On pitches that favored spin, his brilliance reached its zenith, transforming batting into an ordeal of survival.

Qadir’s flamboyance extended beyond his bowling. His antics in the field, his candid interactions with the crowd, and even his occasional exasperation of his captain added a layer of entertainment to his persona. Yet, beneath the theatrics lay a fierce competitor, one who thrived on challenges and reveled in the joy of the game.

A Legacy Beyond the Ball

Abdul Qadir’s contribution to cricket transcends statistics and records. He was a symbol of an era when cricket was as much about character as it was about skill. His heroics with the bat, such as the unforgettable six off Courtney Walsh in the 1987 World Cup, showcased his versatility and unflappable temperament. In moments of crisis, he embodied the spirit of resilience and creativity that defined Pakistan cricket.

Qadir’s legacy is a reminder of cricket’s rich tapestry, woven with the exploits of players who brought joy and drama to the game. Like Derek Randall’s exuberance in the field, Javed Miandad’s theatrics with the bat, or Dennis Lillee’s fiery aggression with the ball, Qadir’s presence enriched the sport. His passing marks the end of an era, but his memory endures—a testament to the magic he brought to the game and the indelible mark he left on its history.

In Abdul Qadir, cricket found not just a bowler but an artist, a strategist, and an entertainer. His life and career remain a celebration of the game’s infinite possibilities and its power to inspire awe, even in its most unpredictable moments.

Thank You 
Faisal Caesar 

Monday, October 16, 2017

A Nail-Biting Thriller: Pakistan vs. West Indies, 1987 World Cup

The 1987 Cricket World Cup bore witness to some unforgettable encounters, but the clash between Pakistan and West Indies in Lahore stands out as a gripping spectacle of cricketing drama and sportsmanship. Both teams entered the game with contrasting fortunes: Pakistan eager to consolidate their position, and West Indies desperate to revive their campaign after an early loss to England. What unfolded was a tale of resilience, nerves, and an unforgettable gesture of integrity.

A Promising Start for West Indies

The West Indies began on a confident note. Desmond Haynes and debutant Phil Simmons provided a solid foundation, with Simmons crafting a brisk half-century. At 91 for 1, the Caribbean side seemed poised for a commanding total. However, the introduction of Saleem Jaffar changed the equation. With three quick wickets, Jaffar disrupted the middle order, leaving the West Indies reeling.

Enter Viv Richards. The maestro’s 52-ball 51 brought much-needed acceleration. His commanding presence steadied the innings until Imran Khan, Pakistan’s talismanic captain, returned to the attack. Imran’s spell (4 for 37) dismantled the tail, and West Indies were bowled out for a modest 216 in 49.3 overs. Jaffar (3 for 30) and Wasim Akram (2 for 45) provided stellar support.

The Chase: A Story of Resolve

Pakistan’s reply began shakily. At 110 for 5, the home side’s hopes seemed to be slipping away. It was at this juncture that wicketkeeper-batsman Saleem Yousuf joined Imran Khan. Yousuf, often overshadowed by his more illustrious teammates, showcased his ability with a counterattacking display. His audacious stroke play rattled the West Indies bowlers and exploited fielding lapses, as the visitors spilled multiple chances under pressure.

Imran played the anchor role, rotating the strike to allow Yousuf to flourish. Together, they revived Pakistan’s innings, but Courtney Walsh’s disciplined bowling ended their partnership. Imran departed with 15 runs still required. Yousuf, battling valiantly, fell shortly after, leaving the tail to secure the final runs.

The Final Over: A Test of Nerves

With 14 runs needed off the last over, Walsh, who had endured heartbreak against England days earlier, was entrusted with the ball. Abdul Qadir and Saleem Jaffar were Pakistan’s last hopes at the crease.

The drama unfolded ball by ball. A single from Qadir followed by another scrambled run from Jaffar left 12 required off four deliveries. Then, in a moment of brilliance, Qadir danced down the pitch and lofted Walsh over long-off for a six. The Gaddafi Stadium erupted, and the equation shifted to four runs off two balls.

Qadir’s clever placement for two runs brought Pakistan within striking distance. But as Walsh prepared to deliver the final ball, a moment of extraordinary sportsmanship stunned everyone. Noticing Jaffar backing up too far, Walsh stopped mid-run and opted not to dislodge the bails. Instead, he issued a warning, earning admiration and applause from both players and spectators.

With two needed off the last ball, Walsh delivered a straight yorker. Qadir squeezed it past a drawn-in third man, and the batsmen ran two to seal a famous win for Pakistan.

The Aftermath: A Lesson in Integrity

The victory bolstered Pakistan’s semi-final hopes and left the West Indies’ campaign in jeopardy. However, it was Walsh’s act of sportsmanship that transcended the game. Despite the heartbreak, his decision to warn rather than appeal against Jaffar for backing up became a defining moment of cricketing ethics.

Saleem Jaffar later remarked, “The old cricketers had great character and played with integrity. Walsh’s gesture was a reminder of the spirit in which the game should be played.”

For Pakistan, the win exemplified their resilience under pressure. For the West Indies, it was a bittersweet chapter in a tournament that slipped away. Above all, this match remains etched in cricketing lore as a perfect blend of competition and camaraderie, where the game’s spirit shone as brightly as its skills.

Thank You

Faisal Caesar  

Friday, October 13, 2017

The Pakistan-England Thriller At Rawalpindi in 1987 Cricket World Cup : A Clash of Grit, Spin, and Strategy

Throughout the 1980s, England faced a rollercoaster of cricketing emotions. They challenged Australia head-on, traded blows with India, and suffered relentless hammerings from the West Indies' fearsome pace attack. Their encounters with Pakistan, however, carried a unique tension. The infamous Shakoor Rana incident symbolized their fraught relationship, and the mystique of Abdul Qadir, Pakistan’s spin wizard, added another layer of torment for the Englishmen.

Qadir’s mastery over England was legendary. His unorthodox leg-spin baffled even seasoned batters. Vic Marks summed it up best: “Good Lord, he’s bowled me a full-toss. Where shall I smash it? Hang on it’s a low full-toss. Not to worry. Maybe it’s a half-volley. Oh no, it’s a length ball and I’m groping hopelessly.” Qadir’s dominance against England was a critical factor whenever the two teams met, and this match at Rawalpindi was no exception.

A Muddy Start and a Defiant Pakistan

Pakistan, entering the 1987 World Cup as one of the favourites, had already faced a stiff challenge from Sri Lanka in their opening match. England, on the other hand, came off a thrilling victory against the West Indies at Gujranwala, courtesy of Allan Lamb’s heroics. The stakes were high as the two teams clashed in Rawalpindi for Pool A supremacy.

Rain on the scheduled day of play turned the outfield into what Wisden aptly described as a “mudfield.” When play resumed on the reserve day, Mike Gatting’s decision to field first seemed justified as England’s fielders struck early. Chris Broad’s sharp fielding ran out Rameez Raja, putting Pakistan on the back foot. But the seasoned duo of Saleem Malik and Javed Miandad steadied the ship, countering England’s disciplined bowling with grit and precision.

DeFreitas’s double breakthrough, dismissing Miandad and Malik in quick succession, threatened to derail Pakistan’s innings. However, Ijaz Ahmed and a food-poisoned Imran Khan anchored the middle order with a crucial 79-run partnership. Imran’s resilience, despite his illness, allowed Ijaz to accelerate, and Qadir’s late cameo alongside Saleem Yousuf propelled Pakistan to a respectable 239 for 7.

England’s Response and Qadir’s Magic

 Chasing 240, England’s openers began cautiously, adding 52 runs before Qadir’s artistry dismantled Graham Gooch’s defence. Broad’s dismissal by Tauseef Ahmed and Qadir’s removal of Tim Robinson further tightened Pakistan’s grip. Gatting’s brisk 43 from 47 balls kept England in the hunt, but his dismissal left the visitors needing 34 from 24 balls with Lamb and Derek Pringle at the crease.

 Qadir, entrusted with the ball during the critical phase, turned the game on its head. Lamb, England’s hero against the West Indies, fell leg-before to Qadir’s guile. A disastrous mix-up between Emburey and Pringle led to Emburey’s run out. Paul Downton’s edge off Qadir was brilliantly caught by Saleem Yousuf, marking a dramatic collapse as Qadir claimed three wickets in the span of one run.

England’s slim hopes were extinguished by further run-outs of Pringle and Foster, leaving Gladstone Small—a bowler with no batting pretensions—to face the music. Saleem Jaffar delivered the final blow, trapping Small leg-before to seal Pakistan’s 18-run victory.

A Triumph of Spin and Fielding

This match epitomized Pakistan’s reliance on spin and strategic fielding. Abdul Qadir’s spell, coupled with sharp fielding and tactical captaincy, turned a potentially close contest into a decisive victory. His ability to outfox England’s batters highlighted their longstanding vulnerability against high-quality spin.

For England, the loss underscored the perils of poor running between the wickets and the inability to counter spin effectively. Despite moments of brilliance from Gatting and Lamb, their middle and lower order crumbled under pressure, handing Pakistan a crucial win.

The Rawalpindi encounter remains a testament to the impact of spin and fielding in limited-overs cricket. Abdul Qadir’s wizardry and Pakistan’s strategic acumen prevailed, reaffirming their status as tournament favourites while exposing England’s frailties on the subcontinental stage.

Thank You 

Faisal Caesar