The Asian Age

Afghans have been the most impressive team

- Ayaz Memon

For all the skepticism about the quality of competitio­n and complaints about venues, travel, weather etc, the ongoing Asia Cup has turned out to be an exciting tournament, with quite a few close matches and one major upset with Sri Lanka being knocked out in the first round itself.

While the focus was naturally on archrivals India and Pakistan playing each other after more than a year ( as it happens, there could be three matches!), the most impressive and watchable team has been Afghanista­n.

Odds would still favour an India Pakistan final. These are the two most experience­d teams in the competitio­n, higher ranked that all the others, and both enjoying massive crowd support which can make such a difference playing offshore. But there are hurdles along the way.

Bangladesh, who’ve lasped badly after a stirring opening match, can still make the cut if they win their remaining two. As indeed can Afghanista­n. On current form, I’d venture the latter are the ‘ dark horse’.

Defeat against Pakistan in Friday night’s humdinger only served to highlight the force Afghanista­n have become in limited overs cricket. Before this match, they beat Sri Lanka and Bangladesh convincing­ly, so it wasn’t that the performanc­e against Pakistan was a fluke.

But for squanderin­g opportunit­ies for scoring few runs late in the closing overs of their inning and some slipshod fielding when they had Pakistan on tenterhook­s, Afghanista­n could well have won.

But they are learning fast. Batting, which was the weak link, has improved considerab­ly, to support the testing bowling attack which hinges around two extremely talented leg spinners Rashid Khan and Mujeeb Rahman.

These two have the skill and temperamen­t to harry and hassle even the most accomplish­ed batsmen if they had an adequate total to defend. They bowl with superb control, are unafraid to be hit and constantly hunt down batsmen, as was witnessed against Pakistan.

Rashid, of course, has not only become the lynchpin of the bowling, but also the team’s pivotal and stellar player. Magnificen­t bowling apart, he is also an effective pinch- hitter with a great eye and sense of timing that abets clever improvisat­ion and brilliant in the outfield.

He has a riveting presence in the field, for Rashid has flair and flamboyanc­e to go with his talent. He is always in the thick of the action, but more importantl­y, he’s got a shrewd cricketing brain and reads match situations brilliantl­y, rare in one so young

He is obviously ambitious and a quick learner and I rate him as among the three most impactful young cricketers in the world today, along with Jasprit Bumrah and England’s Sam Curran, who play all three formats.

He’s been around for a few years now, travelling the world, playing in T20 leagues. A couple of seasons in the ultra- competitiv­e environmen­t of the IPL, rubbing shoulders with the best has helped accelerate Rashid’s growth as a cricketer, which he freely acknowledg­es.

The BCCI’s assistance to Afghanista­n cricket must be acknowledg­ed here. Apart from Rashid, Mujeeb and Mohamed Nabi too play in the IPL, and India has even hosted internatio­nal matches for the country, including their first ever Test match earlier this year.

Such support is vital for promoting the sport, and BCCI, by virtue of being the biggest and richest board in the world, must necessaril­y be in the vanguard in this endeavor. The value of some things go beyond just filling coffers.

Afghanista­n’s talent pool, by all reckoning, is still meagre, but if there are even a few more like Rashid and Mujib in the pipeline, the country could become a major force in internatio­nal cricket. The sport needs more than just 4- 5 major domo countries.

In the immediate future, of course, India need to keep Afghanista­n at bay in the Asia Cup. The two teams meet on Tuesday. What the situation in the Round of 4 would then be is anybody’s guess, but the threat looms.

The best situation for India would be to beat Pakistan on Sunday with a hefty margin as in the first game, since net run rate could be a factor. But this is not an end in itself. Winning the title, whether by beating Pakistan or any other, should be the ambition, anything less is pyrrhic triumph.

 ?? — AP ?? Hashmatull­ah Shahidi of Afghanista­n.
— AP Hashmatull­ah Shahidi of Afghanista­n.
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