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World T20 missed but Pakistan has a tailor-made team to win 50-over World Cup in India

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Over the last month, the Pakistan YouTube, a zany little rabbit-hole, could suck you in for hours. Eyebrows would stretch up hearing Urdu slang-expletives directed at Babar Azam’s team. It was a noisy platform where amateurs and ex-players unite in a war against their team, conducting a virtual public hanging at the altar of digital democracy. Those rabid YouTubers have a cuss-word moniker for most. Rizwan is leg-side lapadu, for his preference to drag balls to the on side. Asif Ali was Asif Tulla and in Aquib Javed’s words “didn’t they teach him how to stop a straight ball?’. Iftikhar Ahmed is Chachu – his official age (32) had even Waqar Younis exclaim in surprise. Alhumdulillah, couldn’t be more proud of my pack. You all fought like true warriors. Thank you everyone for all the support. Pakistan Zindabad🇵🇰 pic.twitter.com/IawHR5U7q8 — Babar Azam (@babarazam258) November 13, 2022 Everyone has a less-than-flattering internet name – but not Haris Rauf, not Naseem Shah, not Shaheen Afridi. Not even Shadab Khan. Even the highly combustible YouTubers know where to draw the line. No one messes with Pakistan’s bowlers. And it is the combined strength of the bowling department that makes one look ahead, speculate about their potential and potency in the 50-overs contest. If the wondrous line-up of fast bowlers can trigger earthquakes in opposition camps in 2-over spells, what will they do in longer spells, with the threat of the return spell looming large? In the T20 final, with just 138 to defend and England already reaching 40/2, not many teams would have given a scare. And it’s this that makes Pakistan the firm favourites for the 50-over ODI World Cup next year in India. There was a moment in the World T20 final that captured the hidden strength of the Pakistan pace attack. Naseem, in his second spell, was unplayable. He would trigger a sudden frenzy on the other pace jocks. As if made aware of their own strengths, the rest jump in on this possibility to create a spectacle where the world shakes their heads and the opposition seem willing to self combust. The mentally tough English all-rounder Ben Stokes, a bonafide last action hero, ensured it would stay a mirage and didn’t let the illusion cloud his mind. Not every team has a Stokes, though. Stokes does it again! Congratulations to England, #T20WorldCup Champions! Iconic moments like this will be available as officially licensed ICC digital collectibles with @0xFanCraze. Visit https://t.co/EaGDgPxPzl today to see if this could be a Crictos of the Game. pic.twitter.com/ph8NAbaLy9 — T20 World Cup (@T20WorldCup) November 13, 2022 Hailed by Andy Roberts, worked by Mudassar Nazar first and later by Waqar Younis, Naseem started to harass Buttler. Watching him and getting excited was Rauf, from the boundary edge, mind you, not at the comfort of mid-on. From there, his eyes would bulge and the fingers twist into indecipherable arcs like a mad man standing at the centre of traffic, looking directly at you inside an autorickshaw and casting a strange spell. Naseem picked up the vibe, would turn at the top of his mark, and run in to produce more venom. Then as he would walk back, a knowing look would be cast at the spellcaster far away, the two clasped in a fast bowling bubble with their own language. Then Rauf came on. For a fast bowler, there is an enchanting moment as he approaches the crease to load up. To get into a side-on position that he favours, he almost turns and hurriedly stutters on, as if he were squeezing through a small opening in a gully, and gets into a great position to hurl the ball with a fascinating wrist-snap. .@HarisRauf14 reflects on Pakistan's T20 World Cup journey, gelling as a team and the fans' support.#T20WorldCup pic.twitter.com/sdgfdPa27d — Pakistan Cricket (@TheRealPCB) November 13, 2022 That wrist crackle allows him to swing, seam, change lengths, bounce, and unleash his wizardry. With Shaheen Afridi, there is no surprise. A good batsman should be able to pick his lengths; it’s the killer late movement that does them in. Hence Buttler, with his wristy style, didn’t have much problems. But with Rauf, even good batsmen can’t relax even when settled. That awesomely demonic wrist-snap can get them anytime. Like Buttler found out. He saw Naseem harassing Buttler with his away-shapers and as soon as he came on next over, he knew there was no point in reprising the youngster’s unplayable balls; but he had to take the edge. So he produced a lovely straightener, reminiscent of Manoj Prabhakar’s delivery to nip out Zahid Fazal in the 1992 World Cup game, to take down Buttler. He then had Ben Stokes smile sheepishly after a few play and misses. So did Naseem. Pakistan’s batting, mostly the top order, is more suited for longer white ball contests. By next October, when 50-overs World Cup madness will hit India, they will be wiser.. Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan don’t have to hurry themselves. For some reason, despite obvious skill, they like to start sedately, as if they are sipping early morning chai in pathani suits. Perhaps, it’s the fear about their middle-order or maybe they were never the sorts who scrambled after buses that have just left the bus-stop. “Ek aur aayegi, kya hai (One more will roll in soon)” – must be their philosophy.

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