Afridi's probably one player whose average wouldn't be affected by batting 6 or 7. He couldn't exactly play more irresponsibly if he tried.
IIRR his opening average is about 4-5 runs higher than his at-five\six\seven one. There was a - fairly brief - time, around about 2000-2002-ish, where he actually played with some vague sense of actually wanting to score runs, before reverting to type.
The point i was making is, though, the players he's being compared with are players who score just as few if not less runs than Afridi does. So saying "ah but Bashar would be more likely to score 13 off 20 than Afridi" doesn't hold water at all, because in general, Afridi's scored more runs.
Not sure about that. I'm certainly not comparing him with Bangladeshis. No-one else, who is in the side (a ODI-standard side) principally or exclusively for batting, and has played 100 or more ODIs, has such a terrible batting record. Except Ricardo Powell.
These are those who've played 100 ODIs since 1990 whose batting is their principal reason for selection (wicketkeepers excluded - there's plenty of them - Rashid Latif, Mongia, Kaluwitharana, Healy, Moin Khan, Jacobs, Parore, McCullum, Boucher) and whose career batting-average is under 30:
Guy Whittall (20.28)
Ricardo Powell (23.32)
Shahid Afridi (23.78)
Craig McMillan (27.70)
Jimmy Adams (27.98)
Phil Simmons (28.24)
Tillikaratne Dilshan (28.35)
Asanka Gurasinha (28.82)
Wavell Hinds (28.96)
And Hinds and McMillan were both huge disappointments. Dilshan could still turn it around. Gurasinha and Adams simply weren't ODI players. Simmons is an interesting one. But Powell and Afridi stand-out in the crowd. Powell, however, was clearly far worse as he had no second bowstring.