Kevin Pietersen names a Pakistani as best bowler he has faced

Former England batsman says Asif was better than McGrath, Warne and Muralitharan


Sports Desk January 23, 2017
Pietersen said Asif could hurt your form badly. PHOTO COURTESY: BCCI

Former England batsman Kevin Pietersen revealed the name of the best bowler he has faced in his international career and the pick was quite surprising.

The 36-year-old, who is known for throwing bowlers off their strides with his aggressive batting, named Pakistan right-arm pacer Mohammad Asif as the best he has ever faced.

Amir needs to fix minor glitch to become best again: Mohammad Asif


The tall right-hand batsman said Asif’s uncanny ability to extract seam off the pitch placed him “a country mile” ahead of Australian legends Shane Warne and Glenn McGrath, and Sri Lankan spin legend Muttiah Muralitharan.

"The best bowler I faced was Mohammad Asif, the bowler from Pakistan who got done for [spot]-fixing," Pietersen told Howie Games podcast. "[It was] probably not a bad thing because he tormented a lot of batters.”

Asif relieved, Butt confident after ICC’s clarification


And why did Pietersen term him as a ‘tormentor’?

"Just his ability to make a batsman feel like the ball was accelerating off the wicket in different directions."


The 104-Test veteran for England said that Asif would get into a batsman’s mind and destroy whatever form he was in.

Mohammad Asif opens up about fall from grace


"If I was in good form, he made sure I wasn’t in good form a couple of weeks later after playing him. If I wasn’t in good form, I knew I wasn’t in good form after playing him for a couple of weeks during a series,” he explained.

Asif, when picked for the fourth Test against England in 2006, dismissed Pietersen on the very first ball that he ever bowled to him. He made him edge one to the then wicketkeeper Kamran Akmal. Asif later accounted for Pietersen on four more occasions.

Turned down by Pakistan, Mohammad Asif seeks glory in Norway


The 34-year-old paceman, before being convicted for spot-fixing in 2010, bagged 106 wickets for Pakistan in 23 Tests. He also played 38 ODIs for Pakistan and accounted for 46 batsmen.

COMMENTS (3)

Xnain | 7 years ago | Reply Very true of him,though i believe he was very generous in giving Asif a superiority over The great McGrath.I do believe that Asif and Amir's duo was the swansong of Pakistan's illustrious fast bowling linage. After Asif falling prey to lack of celebrity education (I believe he should have been groomed to be a public figure than being the same chars-addicted boy that he has been in his childhood), the fast bowling of Pakistan just fell apart.
Faz | 7 years ago | Reply Don't we always miss what we don't have? Mohammad Amir is back and then what?
VIEW MORE COMMENTS
Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ