Younis has always battled odds and emerged a winner

Published June 27, 2015
Younis loves to be a part of the game of cricket any way he could, whether on the field or off it. —AFP/File
Younis loves to be a part of the game of cricket any way he could, whether on the field or off it. —AFP/File

When Younis reached his century in the first Test at Dubai against Australia last year to rescue Pakistan after it had been tottering at 7-2, many people expressed surprise as to how he had managed to bounce back in such a manner after being dropped from the national ODI squad barely a few weeks ago which was followed by a rare outburst from him at the National Stadium.

But I was not surprised in the least at the fact that he had decided to play the Test series after all and that he got to his century in such difficult circumstances.

I have known the affable player since the time he came to our club when he was barely 16-years-old and I saw how he loved to be a part of the game of cricket any way he could, whether on the field or off it. He had a lot of passion for cricket with brimming patriotism. All he ever wanted to do was to play for Pakistan.

It was the early 1990s and an ethnic war was raging in Karachi. This was as much against the drug mafia as against the communities. What suffered among other things were sports.

Malir was among the worst-hit areas but cricket never stopped. While playing for Malir Gymkhana alongside Waheed Mirza (the first wicket record-holder alongwith Mansoor Akhtar), Tariq Alam, Saeed Azad, Saeed Anwar, Zafar Iqbal, Asim Kamal, Farhan Adil, I came across this new face, the Mardan-born Mohammad Younis Khan.

All club cricket was played on cement wickets in those days and there was no grass on the ground, only stone and mud. I realised that this new boy in the club is an excellent fielder and a good, hard working batsman.

He lived in Pakistan Steel Mills colony with his father and brother who worked at the Steel Mills. Younis would practise there at the night under street lights and some time in the tennis court too.

Though we included him in the squad, Younis at times missed the matches because he either didn’t have money to travel or there was curfew in his part of the city.

Despite that, it took Younis less than a year to become the main player of Malir Gymkhana along with Asim Kamal and Farhan Adil. They were also good players, perhaps as good as Younis, but they were not as strong mentally and that is why both gave up very early to the circumstances prevalent at the time, which had some officials bent upon ending their careers.

I have always had a good relationship with Peshawar division players like Arshad Khan, Wajahatullah Wasti, Fazle Akbar and Kabir Khan. Arshad played with me at Allied Bank when they had a team and Kabir and I had toured with the Pakistan team together.

I talked to them about this lad Younis and he soon started playing for Peshawar Division and moved back to Mardan.

In the next two matches that he played, Younis scored a fine century against Karachi and a brilliant double hundred against the Sargodha Division. Suddenly, the teams and the departments were taking note. Both HBL and NBP offered him to join them and at my suggestion he signed up for HBL because I felt Kabir Khan there would help him grow as a player.

Younis scored another double hundred the same season and went on to score over 1200 runs at a prolific rate. He was soon to be part of the Pakistan team and, although sent lower down, he scored 46 against Sri Lanka in a One-day International and then a fabulous century on Test debut against the same team at Rawalpindi a few days later.

In no time, he rose to vice captain’s post and would often lead the side to picking up some quick wickets when Inzamam was off the field. He was named captain when Inzamam was unavailable and his greatest success was to lead Pakistan to victory in the 2009 World Twenty20.

That victory came against all odds when Pakistan was nowhere among the favourites. To give him credit, Younis got the best out of the players besides ending up as one of the most successful batsmen in the tournament. And it was under him that Saeed Ajmal and Mohammad Amir were introduced.

It is ironic, though, that despite the massive achievement, the PCB allowed the players to carry out a mutiny against him because he was very strict on physical fitness and training. Senior and emerging players, some five or six of them, got together and quietly made sure Younis did not meet with much success in the matches that followed.

They deliberately performed below their best when he dropped any of them for faring poorly. Younis soon resigned from the job out of protest, saying that the whole rigmarole is hurting the team and he has no qualms about playing just as a player to ensure Pakistan won.

It was because of this spirit with which he always plays the game that his omission hurt him so much. But his return with such a grand onslaught and high scores against Australia and New Zealand last year came as no surprise to me.

In fact, I was only expecting it. This was the quintessential tough guy in Younis who had risen to the occasion yet again. He may be less talented than some other top class players to have represented the game, but is far ahead when it comes to being a mentally strong and disciplined player who believes in working hard.

In his now 15-year career for Pakistan, Younis has experienced many ups and downs, and on personal front as well. He lost his two brothers to heart attacks, one in Germany and one in Ukraine, and was left stunned when his sister died in Mardan. His father also died around the same time. Mid last year he lost his nephew while he was in Sri Lanka which forced him to quit the tour and make an early return home.

I doubt if anyone, struck by so many tragic deaths in the family within a span of six years, can carry on with both life and cricket with such a big heart.

He has, indeed, battled his way through the odds to his hundredth Test. It is a big honour for any cricketer but none more deserving than Younis Khan who has probably worked the hardest to reach this milestone.

The writer is a former Pakistan captain and wicket-keeper

Published in Dawn, June 27th, 2015

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