Shahid Afridi has acted decisively twice in this series. In the third Test at Bangalore, his bat first set up the game for Pakistan in the second innings and he followed it up with key wickets on the final afternoon. Now he has flattened India in the fifth one-day international at Green Park, Kanpur. He is the man who has made sure Pakistan would return home undefeated.
When a storm blows, it is difficult to stay on your feet. So it happened with Indian bowlers. It's not the first time they have bowled to Afridi nor is it a rare occasion when he has chased them around the park like a terrier. So what did they learn from the past hidings? Nothing.
Afridi's aerial routes are predictable. He prefers midwicket-square leg area, there is this mighty blow over mid-off and he also crashes past the cover region. To have third man and fine leg against him is such a flawed field. If India had learnt anything from the past, these two fielders would have been up in the circle.
In their places, two men would patrol the midwicket and long-off fence. If he still clears you, bad luck. At least you would be satisfied you had a game plan against him.
It is a batsman's mindset that he eyes the free areas in the field. Who knows with third man and fine leg up in the circle, a gambler in Afridi might have taken a chance in those regions. It would have called for delicate shots which, let's be fair, is not exactly the way Afridi approaches his batting.
Another way to bowl to Afridi -- so brilliantly, if briefly, illustrated by Zaheer Khan -- is to mix up the pace of your deliveries. A short-pitched ball is also a better option against him. On Friday, if the Indian bowlers did so, at least I didn't see it. I wonder if all those analysts and men with laptops in the dressing room are up to it. Or it is just that players forget their lessons the moment they step on to the field.
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From a cricketing point of view, Virender Sehwag, Mahendra Singh Dhoni and Yuvraj Singh are similar in the way they approach their batting. Their shots carry enormous power but their footwork is limited. It serves them well when the wicket is flat. It shows them up when the ball is darting around in the air and off the pitch.
If your technique is good, as is the case with Dravid, you would come good in most conditions. Otherwise, a lot of equations have to fall in your favour for you to succeed. In our times, we used to call such batsmen as 'three-to-five' metre players. If you can stop them from coming forward or going back, you would have them in a bind. And that's essentially because their footwork is absent.
Despite Afridi's heroics, Pakistan still made heavy weather of the target. The way Shoaib Malik and Yousuf Youhana departed, heaving high up in the air on the off-side, you cringed with discomfort in your chair.
They must learn to value their runs. If they want to know how difficult it is to score in international cricket, they just have to walk up and ask Ganguly!
Nobody gives you spare runs. This was the moment when they could have completely swamped India. Instead, they showed unnecessary nerves. It doesn't matter which field you are in your life, it's important that you love your work, your craft. You must value it.
I might be old-fashioned but this is the way I view this beautiful game. It is not enough that you have won. It is also important for you to know how you should have won. For therein lies the seeds of your improvement. It is good for you, your team, country and the people who are watching it.
People ask me how the present Australian team can be beaten. My answer is simple: you have to bat, bowl and field better than them. That's what a sporting contest is: you have to be better than the other team.
India at the moment is rapidly conceding the ground to Pakistan. The ground is slipping fast underneath their feet. In these final hours of the tour, they are in danger of being submerged by the tide which Afridi and his ilks have unleashed.