The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Can Raza do it once again?

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runs off 36 balls) during Friday’s six-wicket victory, which gave Zimbabwe a 2-1 advantage in the series.

Just like many of his teammates, Raza is coming off a long break from internatio­nal cricket.

“I went for the Indian Premier League for five weeks, came back, trained briefly before proceeding to Saudi Arabia for my religious duties,” Raza said.

“Religious duties are something I cannot afford to miss.

“I then joined the team in South Africa, after which we came here — Namibia.”

The off-spinner now has back-to-back manof-the-match awards.

But awards are likely to be the last thing on his mind when he walks onto the park today.

“There is nothing much to take away from Wednesday’s innings; we just had to win as a team,” he said.

“Our backs were against the wall. “And sometimes, when your back is against the wall, you have to come out punching and fighting.

“The pressure is always there but it was not just pressure on me (that day), but every time that one dons the national colours, there is a lot of expectatio­n and stress to do well and win the game.

“In a way, one needs to accept that this is the life of a profession­al athlete, and embrace it.”

He reckons the huge defeat in the opening match was “just a bad day in the office”.

“We didn’t have a good start to the tour, but it was our first time getting together in months.

“Without some of our guys, we had to find some right combinatio­ns and the appropriat­e style of play under the conditions presented to us in Namibia.

“We wanted to win from the start; it was our expectatio­n, but, unfortunat­ely, we lost.”

With the Chevrons now looking to be in control of the series, they are set to revert to the original game plan and go into the final matches better equipped.

Expectatio­ns are that they will clinch the series. “That is what our people back at home and the entire cricket family expect from us,” he added.

“It is not a matter of just getting game time. Countless souls look up to us and a win is always crucial for us . . . I am driven by a strong passion to win every game for my country and for the fans.”

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