Agree with that. His knocks in SA recently were also an indication that he can work around his weaknesses. Managed to hang in against the pacers while looking completely out of his depth, and hammered Botha to play a big part in winning the 3rd ODI. In the 5th, he just blasted everyone but it was a lost cause as he didn't have anyone for company.I wonder if Irfan Pathan is, in fact, a better overall batsman than Yusuf Pathan in terms of skill. Certainly at the international level considering a big chunk of competent pace bowling that batsmen have to face. (The closest one got to doing a side-by-side comparison is when India won a T20I against SL on the back of a partnership between these two - they rotated brilliantly, Irfan took the strike against pace and Yusuf murdered spinners).
But when the conditions and bowlers are to his strengths (covers a lot of domestic cricket in India) - Yusuf is a master of the situation fairly consistently, even more than Yuvraj. So when he cashes in, he cashes in and even a couple of overs to his liking are plenty to change the game either 20 or 50 overs. Plus, he is cool under pressure. In that sense he is not over-rated. But only sides with a strong top 6 and a couple of tail enders who can bat - can afford the luxury of having him.
pretty obvious you didn't watch the match. That was a pretty low-scoring match on a difficult track with bowlers on both sides bowling well. Prasad took 6 wickets for one run in that spell ( including that of Afridi ) IIRC . Wickets fell in a heap once Afridi got out.Scoring a century...& that too against the DEADLY Indian bowlers of the 90s...WOW,thats amazing...
The only thing Tendulkar has in common with the Nazis.Its just a matter of time before Tendulkar comes up in a thread.
Its just a matter of time before Tendulkar comes up in a thread.
Neither of them have a particularly good technique although if you consider the way cricket is developing, thats neither here nor there these days.Does anyone on this board actually rate Pollard and Pathan, I know the commentators try to sell them, but is anyone really fooled by it.
Yusuf is the greatest 'hack' ever imo
He isn't incredible overrated anywhere maybe except in some fan sites where each time he steps out people expect him to get 40 ball hundreds.Afridi bowled well in the WC and credit is due but I find him incredibly overrated and has actually been poor with the ball for the last year running up to the WC averaging 46.
Does anyone on this board actually rate Pollard and Pathan, I know the commentators try to sell them, but is anyone really fooled by it.
haha...what? Afridi averages about 30 in the 2nd half of his career that about 170 games where he has a similar record to Daniel Vettori one of the best limited overs spinner in the modern game.The issue with Afridi is for the first half of his career he considered himself like many of us a batsman who could fill in some overs.One does not even have to see the numbers just by share game watching you can deduce who is a better bowler.The number of games argument is silly do you believe that Sreesanth will become as good as Dale Steyn just by playing more games.Only batting?
Are we talking about currently or overall? If it's the latter then you'd have to say Afridi for the sheer number of matches he has played as compared to the other two (325 vs 54 vs 41). If it's about who I'd rather have bat for me at this point in time, then Yusuf > Afridi > Pollard.
If we're comparing them as bowlers then it's obviously Afridi > Yusuf = Pollard. Having said that, I do think Afridi does get ever so slightly overrated sometimes when it comes to his exploits as an ODI bowler. He's a good bowler without doubt but best ODI spinner? No, not by some distance IMO. He's not even the best Pakistani spinner. Heck, if we're talking very recent form then even Yuvraj Singh should be in contention. The thing is, it doesn't seem to be really very hard to have figures of 1/45 or 1/50 every other ODI, even if you're only a marginally above average part-timer. Even Mohammad Hafeez manages to do it time and again.
I daresay if Yusuf manages to play anywhere near the number of games Afridi has, he'll end up with similar numbers with both bat and ball (maybe even better those numbers - and to be quite frank, that isn't very hard). The thing with Yusuf is, he knows his limitations very well. He's a fairly limited player and a slogger, yes, but he's ready to grit it out unlike Afridi. And like I said, he'll give you 1/50 or something like that on a fairly regular basis with the ball (if he bowls ten overs that is).
Pollard's is the worst of the three by a reasonable distance and that's mostly got to do with his mindset. Maybe I'm seeing what I want to see, but the Pollard that appeared in Mumbai colours seemed to be much more committed and focused than the one that is currently playing for West Indies.