What you and I are saying is not all that different really. At the end, we are both saying that his opinion of other cricketers is not much to look at. He backs players to the hilt who are invariably Pakistani, which is all well because he cares deeply for Pakistani cricket. But he allows that to cloud his judgment of other cricketers. He also seems over eager to undermine and criticize Indian cricketers and cricket in general. Of course, he is not as inarticulate as Afridi so there can always be an argument made along the lines of "oh what he really means is ...". But from a pattern of his comments, and sometimes also facial expressions and body language, I sense a mean spiritedness that doesn't really suite a cricketer of his stature. Perceptions as I said, can't very objectively argue for it.
Respectfully disagree. Imran lauded Gavaskar to bo end. He was guilty of rating cricketers from his time though.
Read this excerpt from an article by Sanjar Manjrekar on Imran and you will have a new appreciation for his big heart when it came to cricket knowledge.
'The 1989 tour came and went. Imran didn't speak a word to me on the field through the four Tests. Once the series was over, though, Imran was lavish in his praise for me on every public platform. I realized now that to Imran the Sharjah incident might have been so trivial he possibly didn't even remember it. As with all great ambassadors of the game, it was good cricket that mattered to him. To get such admiration from my idol was the biggest prize for my performance in Pakistan.
Our next interaction came after I had a lukewarm tour of New Zealand. The moment he saw me he asked me, 'Why did you play Richard Hadlee off the back foot?' He told me I played Wasim and Waqar well because I was looking to move forward all the time. While it was sound technical advice, I was just floored that my hero liked my batting enough to follow that tour and be disappointed with my failures. This was a Pakistani following the progress of an Indian and wanting him to do well.
I was not the only one. This was the time Maninder Singh had developed the yips and had lost his run-up, his action, his zip. A prodigious talent with a beautiful action, Maninder was a shadow of himself now. After speaking to me, Imran headed straight to Maninder and asked him, 'Manni, what have you done to your bowling? Why did you change your action? There is no run-up now, nothing.'
Maninder tried to reason with him by saying he had lost his accuracy and had to shorten his run-up to regain the control, but Imran was having none of it. 'If I lose my accuracy I can't shorten my run-up,' Imran said. 'I will lose all my pace. This is not done. Go back to the original run-up and keep bowling at one stump, a thousand balls a day, and you will find your accuracy.'
Imran was not born to be a great. He had to work hard and put himself through tremendous grind to achieve greatness. Plus, he was a generous man to boot. These are the people who have a lot of cricket wisdom to share and pass on rather than the ridiculously talented cricketers.'
Sanjay Manjrekar looks back at his encounters with Imran Khan and the side he led, and the Sharjah matches of the '90s
www.espncricinfo.com