DAWN.COM

Today's Paper | May 04, 2024

Published 04 Jun, 2014 09:28pm

Misbah wants PCB to groom future captains

LAHORE: Pakistan skipper Misbah-ul Haq Wednesday said he was not worried about his future but stressed that several talented young players were capable of taking over from him and should be groomed for the captaincy.

Misbah, who turned 40 last month, is retained as captain until next year's World Cup but Pakistan have not picked his replacement yet.

Twenty20 captain Mohammad Hafeez, 33, was the likely candidate to take over but he stepped down after Pakistan's disastrous World Twenty20 in Bangladesh in April where they failed to reach the semi-finals for the first time in five editions of the tournament.

Former captain Shahid Afridi, 34, has shown interest in one-day captaincy while Saeed Ajmal reportedly turned down the Twenty20 captaincy. Ahmed Shehzad, 22, is seen as “too young” to handle the responsibility.

“There are lots of players who could be given the captaincy, Azhar Ali is doing captaincy, Umar Akmal is doing captaincy (at domestic level),” said Misbah when asked of the potential candidates to take over from him.

“I think when they get some experience and automatically when the time comes on them you can give them this responsibility, this is important that board or team management give confidence to whichever player they want to be groomed (as captain),” said Misbah.

“All the youngsters do understand the game and are doing the hard work and performing and they have cricketing sense and that's what you need in the future (for a captain),” he said.

The veteran batsman had led Pakistan in Tests since 2010 and a year later was drafted as one-day captain after Afridi fell out with the management.

Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) defied calls to replace Misbah, who led Pakistan to seven one-day series wins and was the world's top scorer in one-day cricket last year, with 1,373 runs.

Misbah said he was not worried about his position as his priority was to keep performing.

“I have always said that captaincy is not in your hand, it's in the hands of the cricket board. For me the important thing is to stay fit and give my best performance.”

Misbah praised incoming head coach Waqar Younis, who will start his second stint next month.

“Waqar has a lot of loyalty with the Pakistan team. When he was the coach he has very outstanding contributions,” said Misbah of Waqar, who was head coach from March 2010 to August 2011.

Waqar guided Pakistan to World Cup 2011 semi-final.

Pakistan tour Sri Lanka for two Tests and three one-day in August – AFP


Misbah welcomes fitness-based central contracts


The PCB’s plan to introduce fitness-based central contracts for the cricketers received a thumbs-up from captain Misbah, who believes the team will reap its benefit in the 2015 World Cup in Australia and New Zealand.

The PCB is set to introduce the new contracts from this year with a penalty-and-point system to up the fitness level of a side not really known for their athleticism on the field.

“It is a constructive step because the better the fitness of the players, the more they will be able to endure pressure and perform consistently well,” he said.

Misbah said the players benefited from the camp and the board was moving in the right direction by laying stress on fitness levels.

“In modern day cricket, fitness is a key element for success because teams are playing virtually non-stop international cricket and players also take part in these T20 leagues now,” he said.

Misbah said with better fitness levels, Pakistani players would improve their fielding standards which would be instrumental in matches leading up to the World Cup 2015 – Reuters

Read Comments

Pakistan's 'historic' lunar mission to be launched on Friday aboard China lunar probe Next Story