For once, and it really is just this once, the stats are too good to pass up. India had slammed a big 245 in Sharjah, and it was 245 runs that it piled on again in Dhaka. The margin of victory in ‘86 was the closest for any Indo-Pak battle royale. Last Sunday’s was the second-closest.
That still doesn’t cover the cleanest comparison: the visual of Shahid Afridi clobbering R Ashwin with two sixes off the last over, Pakistan’s Miandad Moment 2.0.
Said Misbah of Afridi, “He won us a game that almost went out of our control.” It’s usually Afridi that goes out of control, and well before the game. This Asia Cup’s Pakistan versus India match wasn’t one of them.
Having gone rogue against Afghanistan, Afridi repented, “If I have 15 to 25 overs to bat, the captain tells me to play singles and doubles. I become double-minded. It’s not in my nature.” Boom Boom’s nature, then, is to play Whack-A-Mole in short bursts. And he did just that in Dhaka, proving again and again that Shahid Afridi remains the most electrifying man in cricket. When he feels like it.
R Ashwin, meanwhile, may have to fend off Friend Requests from Chetan Sharma, who turned 48 in January. Twenty-five years to the day Miandad belted his ball for a six, Mr Sharma still makes it sound like war trauma, “Yes it haunts me even now and will haunt me for the rest of my life … I try to forget that last ball, but people don’t let me.”
And the same people brought up the same Javed Miandad all of Sunday. No doubt, this was Lala’s victory, and Misbah’s (and yes, Hafeez’s too), but it was also testament to the right-hand smash-mouth from Karachi, and what Rahul Bhattacharya called, “the single most famous stroke in Pakistan’s history, perhaps even India’s history”.
It took greatness — in the form of Abdul Hafeez Kardar — to spot greatness, dubbing the then-unknown Javed “the find of the decade”. Miandad was barely 18. What followed is well known.
The debut century. The double century. The West Indies in ‘84. World Cup glory in ’92. The sadistic, career-long thrashing of New Zealand. And a whopping 8,832 Test runs on the way (Inzi came within a hair’s distance, at 8,829).
But none of that made him Miandad. Talent made him famous. Anger made him special.
Because Javed Miandad — a 5’8” discipline case with the voice of a ballet teacher — put steel in our spines. Like a general concussed senseless, he charged armies much larger, swore at bowlers much bigger, and cared nothing for teams, well, much whiter. “He was one of the first blokes from the subcontinent who wouldn’t take a backward step when Australian players were aggressive,” mused Greg Chappell.
When it came to sledging — i.e., cowing the opposition — it was the Australians that set the rules. Then Miandad happened.
His Urdu was no bar. Rodney Hogg didn’t understand a word, but knew it was “really unpleasant stuff”. Fielding against Ian Chappell, Asif Iqbal remembered Miandad “kept up a barrage of talk in Urdu with the name Ian Chappell figuring prominently. And although none of it was abusive, Ian, unable to understand any of it, probably thought it was. He gradually reached the end of his tether and ended up holing out to deep midwicket.”
Even when Miandad responded to Kiran More’s sledging with brutal mimicry (three massive monkey jumps), neither was penalised. “One of the big problems with the whole incident was that no one spoke in English,” recalled an umpire.
But it took the hubris of Dennis Lillee — in his hometown of Perth — to perhaps, best capture the man. He batted Lillee for a single, but collided with the fast-bowler running. Eventually, Dennis went for a wanton kick to Miandad’s pads; Miandad raged with bat-turned-baton, as if to knock Lillee’s head right off.
As his memoirs show, Miandad was an athlete of rare self-awareness: “I don’t think Dennis or any Australians had expected to see a Pakistani player like me who simply refused to back down … We were after all only from Pakistan and he felt he could take liberties with us.” The advent of Javed Miandad changed all that.
Like the rest of him, his captaincy was colourful. His relationship with Imran Khan too — tormented to the end — was readymade sportswriter fodder: the patrician and the prizefighter, Keble and Karachi, hatred in Hyderabad (Javed was declared at 280). A whole chapter of Miandad’s book is titled Imran and I… and there aren’t that many chapters.
But then, sometimes, he made things personal anyway. As the wonderful Mukul Kesavan wrote in Men In White, his book on the game, “The moment he swashbuckled his way to the crease and took guard, the pitch became an akhara and the match became a scrap. When India played Pakistan and Miandad hit a four, I took it personally. When he hit the six in Sharjah off the last ball of the match (when a four would have done), it was as if he had personally stuck two fingers up every Indian nose.”
Before a sleepy Inzamam nearly walloped Sreesanth, there was Miandad. Before Afridi was blowing violent kisses at Kallis, there was Miandad. Before Umar Akmal was rubbing on jade lipstick like a metro alpha-warrior, there was — well, let’s leave that to Umar Akmal blazing his own trail.
It was never in contention that Javed Miandad was a batsman of extraordinary gifts. But as we cheered on the great, green glory of Pakistani cricket on Sunday, there was en masse recognition of one man’s legacy.
Because without the romance of Sharjah, victory in Dhaka would be nowhere near as sweet.
Published in The Express Tribune, March 4th, 2014.
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COMMENTS (37)
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See the history
http://stats.espncricinfo.com/ci/engine/team/7.html?class=2;opposition=6;result=1;result=2;result=3;result=5;spanmin1=11+Feb+1960;spanval1=span;template=results;type=team
Replaying victories on Ten and Star sports does not change it.
Interesting read although not events are not in chronological order. But did I read it correctly : Miandad was 18 when he hit the famous six ?
@Moiz:
Yuvraj has been unceremoniously dumped many times. So has Sehwag, who after scoring 2 Triple hundreds and scoring all over the world, one would think would have cemented his place in the side(Look at Afridi, after having an average of 23, one would think he would have dropped long back. But, no, in Pakistan Afridi's consistency is never a matter).
Tendulkar, Dravid, Laxman were never treated like that. Yes, Dravid and Laxman were not picked for ODIs due to their age and their style of batting. But, they were treasured.
Yuvraj, Ashwin,etc., will never get such treatment.
But, India is changing. One never know what the future holds.
and the Miandad Legacy goes on and on on on on........on on on.......on on onnnnnnn
@powvow: (Compared to our 11 players who look sissies on the field..)
Cricket itself is a "sissy" game unlike football, rugby, polo or hockey & may be therefore in-your-face aggression as compensation becomes necessary for a few crude, weak or insecure men. Kiwis, Lankans & Proteas are as good as any in cricket but rather rarely one sees demo of hyperactive hormones in conduct of their "macho" players! In the era of big money,TV-replays & sensitive mikes it will become fashionable to be decent. Times of men like Miandad & few others are over. That's why this tribute is a eulogy.
@Bruteness - "India doesn’t like brashness. Yes, it is appealing. But, a Mahatma is picked over any despot at any point in time. Ahimsa over violence."
Well my dear brother... this is not a quality to yearn for in sports... The Mahatma's shadow looms on all aspects of our nation and this excess emphasis on Ahimsa has been our undoing.
Being an Indian, I will definitely want to see some brashness in our team. Honestly Pakistanis play to win (be it Miandad, Waqar, Akram)... Compared to our 11 players who look sissies on the field..
@BruteForce: I'm surprised you say that brashness isn't a quality the Indian cricket team appreciates. The way Yuvraj, Kohli, Ashwin and co. celebrate the fall of wickets is hardly an example of gentility.
@Sadist it seems Pakistan always plays against Indian B team because you don't have a team ...it was thrashed silly in New Zealand and now it is in a morgue.
There is nothing Glory as such in Sundays Match. Had it been Dhony in place was a different story. pakistan won against Indian B team.
Nice write up, actually it is Miandad who acted like champions and made Pakistan champion.
@BruteForce: Yeh....and comments above are proving the claim....truth is we can not digest the loss and hiding behind so many excuses. come on guys...as long as we keep traeting the game as war...we will keep biting the dust.
Really funny looking at the ulcer infested bleeding comments from Indians. This is a nation of cry babies. First they destroy local Pakistani cricket through their RAW agents and then after getting violently thrashed in the absence of their spot fixing ex captain Mr Dhoni they throw tantrums on our media.
Well done Asad! Pleasure reading!
A good article. Nothing can beat what Miandad did in Sharjah in particular and for our cricket in general.
India is quite unlike Pakistan. it respects modesty, a gentle tongue and a humble demeanor of a Sachin Tendulkar or a Rahul Dravid or a Gavaskar.. Take your pick.
India doesn't like brashness. Yes, it is appealing. But, a Mahatma is picked over any despot at any point in time. Ahimsa over violence.
But, its not the case with Pakistan. It yearns for showmanship, is attracted to unpredictable behavior. Entire countries are born in very short periods of time without any ideology or a lot of confusing, contrasting narratives strewn about.
That is the kind of country Pakistan is. Javed Miandad is Pakistan VS a gentle little guy - Sachin Tendulkar.
Even though Shahid Afridi has an awe inducing average of 23, he is the darling of the nation.
http://pinkkaage.wordpress.com/2013/12/25/pakistans-crush-on-shahid-afridi/
Looks over talent, attitude over consistency. That is what you derive from all this.
A delightful piece of writing. Author's finest so far. No uncouth ever got a better tribute than this.
@ria: The biggest of the three, with the fatest financial belly, is finding it hard to digest Pakistan's victory. Kohli did not utter a single word of credit for the winning team in post-match comments. You guys need to show magnonimity that befits the financial stature that u are gaining in the world of sports and economy.
Miandad was an incredibly talented player, more so than any Pakistan batsman as of yet. @Ris and @Khaksar swallowed any bitter pills as of late? Respect a player for what he is not your imagined national identity and competitiveness
The fact that as Afridi hit that double-six the first thought to come to mind was 'Miandad' means that the man has left an indelible mark on us.
Just one match huh?
Revel in these facts then keep mum:
Pakistan versus. India
Tests 59 ; Pakistan won 12, India 9 ODI 126 ; Pakistan won 72, India 50
@Khaksar: so Javed Miandad is a self made hero? "You can spit in the sky and it will fall in your eye " .I think the last win hit a spot,didn't it
Beautiful essay dear writer, a tribute to a great player but like everything else all good things must come to an end and same applies to Lalal (Afridi) his days of greatness are behind him. Two sixes that we celebrate were shots of desperation, there was Afridi irrational exuberance but no cricket timing or true Afridi power as measured by the distance the ball traveled (60 odd meters), simply said we got lucky. Time to say thank you and look for new talent.
@Umar:
I completely agree, but how much did we learn from the symbol that he provided? Do you see spine in any of our national life?
@ Author What is the purpose of this article? Not sure what you are trying to say here. Miandad did good things for Pakistan so as many others.
@ria not just one win, take a look at head to head with Pakistan. It is something like 71-51, as they say you have a losing record again Pakistan. It is not something that will change any time soon or perhaps ever or perhaps in your life time so NO not just a win. enjoy your ranking.
As usual, Pakistanis grossly mistaking their villains to their heroes and heroes to villains.
The story of Pakistan's undoing.
What a beautiful piece of writing. The colorfulness of the language perfectly matched the occassion and the topic!
Such a delectable piece. There was a constant grim on my face throughout the reading.
Yes, Miandad gave us a spine! What a fighter!
Revel on your self-made heroes and sleep while the world buzzes by. Ignorance is bliss. Enjoy!!
just one match win and getting so crazy....check this out and keep mum ...:) http://www.espncricinfo.com/rankings/content/current/page/211271.html