Mohammad Younus Khan is a Pakistani
cricketer and former captain of the Pakistan national cricket team.
Younus' name is often spelled Younis
Khan, but he has been quoted as saying, "My name is Younus Khan. I
tell people that everywhere, but they don’t listen." He is only the third
Pakistani player to score 300 or more runs in an innings.
Like Imran Khan,
he is most remembered his leadership letting Pakistan
win 2009 ICC World Twenty20.
On 10 March 2010,
Younus, along with another player, Mohammad Yousuf were axed by the Pakistan Cricket Board from playing for
Pakistan in any format for an indefinite period, following an inquiry report
which suggested that both players were involved in breaches of discipline by
inciting divisions within the team. The ban was overturned three months later.
Presently Younus is a key member in the ODI and Test match side, by February
2012 Younus reached his 20th test match century against England.
One of Pakistan's
modern batting greats, Younis Khan is the kind of man who responds best in
adversity. A Test average of over 50, a triple-hundred, a famous double-hundred
against India in India, and a brilliant rearguard partnership to clinch
Pakistan's 3-0 Test whitewash over England, leave no doubt about his quality
and class. He is also one of the most successful fielders for Pakistan, and can
bowl respectable slow-medium. As a captain, Younis has enjoyed success in
leading Pakistan to the world Twenty20 title in 2009. Much of his persona
evokes the idea of the quintessential Pathan warrior - committed, inspired,
capable, and bearing the burden of conflict with fortitude and poise. Born in
Mardan, a prominent city in Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, Younis
moved at an early age to Karachi, where he caught the eye of Rashid Latif and
Saeed Anwar at Malir Gymkhana, one of the city's renowned sports clubs. The
relationship with Latif blossomed into a nurturing mentorship, guiding Younis
towards entry onto the world stage. After two impressive domestic seasons, he got
a Test call-up, and marked it with a century on debut.
Style and aesthetics are
not his strongest points. His technique relies on a good deal of bottom hand,
which deprives it of the fluidity and grace that is typical of Asia's best
batsmen. Yet when Younis gets going, he produces results in the face of steep
odds. Indeed, the steeper the odds, the more Younis seem to thrive. His
match-winning 267 and 84 not out in Bangalore came after a string of low scores
prompted a sarcastic comment from the team manager that leaked into the media.
His greatest captaincy feat - the world Twenty20 championship in England - was
achieved weeks after Pakistan cricket had been devastated by the terror attacks
in Lahore. And though his triple-century came at home on a flat track, the
innings began under pressure when Younis, eschewing the nightwatchman, stepped
out himself in the dying moments of the second day with Pakistan staring at a
huge Sri Lankan total. Unsurprisingly for a rearguard specialist, Younis has
emerged a master of the fourth innings. Among players with 1000 or more
fourth-innings Test runs, his average is among the highest. Along with these
accomplishments, Younis's career has also seen turmoil. Inability to control
infighting within the team and display tact with the PCB led to him losing the
captaincy in late 2009, and he effected a moody refusal when circumstances
changed and it was offered again. His nature is to be inward-looking and
intensely focused, quietly fighting his way through. While this makes for a
reclusive personality that shuns the media and runs afoul of officialdom, it
has also been the source of Younis's batting strength and his extraordinary
resilience as a cricketer.
0 comments:
Post a Comment