Aussie Gilchrist possibly best wicket-keeper batsman ever
By Omar Kureishi
THE Australians are just as ruthless on the field as they are off it. The manner in which they ‘sacked’, Steve Waugh (as well as his brother Mark) from the one-day squad is an example. I first saw Steve Waugh play in 1987. This was in the World Cup semifinal at Lahore. He belted 16 runs in an over from Salim Jaffer, exactly the number of runs by which Pakistan lost. When the Australians were in Pakistan last, I asked Allan Border about that semifinal. He singled out Steve Waugh, he called him “the ice-man” as his Man-of-the-Match. Since then Steve Waugh has gone on to greater things and perhaps, after Bradman, has been Australia’s best captain. But he is 36 years old and the Australians feel that this is over the hill for the one-day game.
I do not entirely agree. Steve Waugh may not be the liveliest of fielders in a team of superb fielders but he is no slouch and in the World Cup 2003, Australia could have done with his leadership skills and his experience. Steve Waugh does not have the charisma of an Imran Khan nor does one see him as a Nasser Hussain, leading a cavalry charge. Steve Waugh goes about his job quietly. When the Australians take the field, it is plainly evident that the homework has been done but he is an observant captain. In the third Test match against South Africa in Durban, he started Brett Lee with only a slip and a gully. After bowling only one ball which was a wide, he changed the field, bringing in two more slips because that first ball had swung.
Steve Waugh is confident that he will continue to lead Australia in Test matches and there is a series against Zimbabwe coming up. Even if he is retained as captain for that series, I can’t help feeling it will be his last. The Waugh brothers have been an integral part of the Australian team for many years, Steve as the Rock of Gibraltar and Mark as an elegant batsman, poetry in motion, who, at one time was rated as the world’s best batsman. But, in the end, everyone has to pack his kit-bag and move on to doing other things.
The more lucky ones become television commentators and are able to pontificate about the game and if, you are a Geoff Boycott, you can read the riot act to batsmen who are plodding rather than playing exciting shots. This is not meant to be a cricket obituary of Steve Waugh for he has resolved to win back his place in the one-day squad, easier said than done and even if Ricky Ponting is a resounding flop, there is Adam Gilchrist waiting in the wings.
Suddenly wicketkeepers seem to be among the runs. There is Pakistan’s Rashid Latif, good enough one feels to get in the Pakistan team as a batsman, given his dependability and there is Andy Flower who keeps on making runs for Zimbabwe. But at the head of the class is Adam Gilchrist. I am trying to think hard but he is possibly the best wicketkeeper batsman ever. There is, of course, Imtiaz Ahmed but he was not as good a keeper as Gilchrist and there is Alan Knott who was not as good a batsman. Adam Gilchrist is an unique find for Australia and he is still young and will be there for years, chirping away behind the stumps and belting the bowlers all over the park. I rate him as the danger man in the World Cup 2003 and Australia’s opponents would do well to do some homework on how he can be stopped.
Moin Khan has been asked to join the training camp in Lahore and this has raised some eye-brow though I do not understand why it should. I don’t think there is any suggestion that he will replace Rashid Latif but in the event of an injury to Rashid, it makes sense to have a competent wicketkeeper as a standby. A case could be made for playing Moin Khan as a batsman, possibly to open the innings in the one-day games.
I would still opt for specialist openers. Saeed Anwar is still unfit but hopefully he will be available when New Zealand comes to Pakistan. Mudassar Nazar has expressed some surprise that there should have been so much criticism when Pakistan lost to Sri Lanka in the Asian Test Championship. Surely, he did not expect to receive bouquets. Obviously, Pakistan lost to a better team but that is not the only reason why Pakistan lost. Dropping Saqlain Mushtaq was a blunder and the team’s think-tank misread the Gadaffi Stadium wicket and the bowlers were all over the place and the shot selection of the batsmen were poor.
Cricket is a tough game and the media has every right to call it as it sees it. The team management must accept responsibility when the team loses just as it accepts praise when it wins. The Sri Lankans have named their squad for Sharjah and at the time of writing, Pakistan and New Zealand have not. New Zealand has been plagued with injuries and none more serious than the injury to Chris Cairns whose absence would seriously weaken their team both for Sharjah and the tough tour of Pakistan. And it will deprive Pakistan crickets fans the chance to see one of the most exciting players of the present times. Too much cricket means too many injuries. It’s almost axiomatic.

