Hasan Raza
was the
architect of Karachi's 18th Quaid-e-Azam title
KARACHI: As the curtains drew on Pakistan's domestic
season with the Pentangular Cup, astoundingly
nearly eleven months after a not-so-grand opening
in June 2006, huge sighs of relief were clearly
audible even from the domestic-double winners
Habib Bank Limited (HBL). Given the number of
stars that don their jerseys, HBL's presence on
the podium was not surprising. Thus the mismatches
of the Pentangular Cup finally bid adieu to the
aching bodies of players, of whom a substantial
number will head for the lucrative, and cooler,
shores of club cricket in the UK.
The season said hello to new rising stars, in
particular Under-19 alumni including Fawad Alam,
Anwar Ali and Sarfraz Ahmed, reacquainted us with
one old horse, Ijaz Ahmed, after a six-year absence
and had the now-customary Shoaib Akhtar controversy:
fined for not wearing the requisite sponsor logo.
On the field, Karachi Urban lifted the Quaid-e-Azam
trophy, Pakistan's elite first-class tournament,
the first triumph from the once-dominant coastal
city in the last five years. Once upon a time
Karachi teams almost owned the trophy, having
won it no less than six times in the 90s.
The 18th such triumph of a Karachi side was constructed
largely on the back of that staunchest of Karachiites,
Hasan Raza, who in his 10th first-class season
at the age of 25 led the side with over 500 runs
in seven matches. His season-best 161 in the final
against defending champions Sialkot, taking Karachi
from 261 for 8 to 403, sealed the deal. Off-spinner
Tahir Khan and seamer Rajesh Ramesh took 59 wickets
between them to provide valuable support.
And Karachi's revival almost stretched to the
shorter format as well, a Shahid Afridi-led Karachi
Dolphins blasting their way to the Twenty20 final
only to lose to reigning champions Sialkot. Given
that they were up against a side including internationals
Imran Nazir, Shoaib Malik, Rana Naved-ul-Hasan,
Abdur Rehman and Mohammad Asif, it wasn't so surprising.
As consolation for the Dolphins, the 21-year old
flair of Alam did announce itself to the world,
even temporarily tormenting bigger names in the
final with a five-wicket haul and a fifty.
Departments then entered the stage to flex their
muscles and they don't come much bigger than HBL,
already the winners of eight Patrons Trophy titles.
With an array of international executors at their
disposal, they duly lifted the Patron's Trophy
without breaking a sweat. Literally. An unbeaten
streak of seven games, courtesy heroics from Shahid
Afridi, Taufeeq Umar and Azhar Mahmood in particular,
placed them air miles ahead of the rest of the
pack.
The ABN AMRO Cup was grabbed, without a second
thought, by the Peshawar Panthers who thrashed
a severely depleted Sialkot Stallions. But the
biggest impression was created outside, with Alam
again shining, finishing as the second highest
scorer and third highest wicket-taker in the tournament.
His time came soon after though, as he thrust
his departmental employers, National Bank to their
maiden Patron's Cup ODI triumph against HBL. And
onto the last, and surely the least of the lot,
the Pentangular Cup, aimlessly combining the best
departments and the best provinces (Sind, Punjab
and a combined NWFP-Baluchistan squad). The timing,
the need, the organising, and even the attitude
of players all were questioned in searing temperatures
amid zero interest from the public. HBL demolished
one and all with one great final effort, Imran
Farhat, Raza again and left-arm spinner Rehman
coming together in a pleasant banking fury to
lead them through.
Crowd presence and excitement surrounding the
tournaments remained poor and even the floodlit
Twenty20, the premier domestic attraction in the
last two years, didn't pull in as many as hoped.
Coaches and players complained about the overly-packed
season and the quality of pitches. They complained
too about the inferior quality of balls, while
players questioned the lack of financial rewards
for turning out for a domestic season. No surprise
then so many ditched the unpredictable pitches
of Karachi to put their feet up before hectic
club commitments out West.
New kid on the block
Roll out the red carpet for Alam who not only
swept away the awards ceremony for the Twenty20
with more prizes than he had room for on his ride,
but also experienced bowlers throughout the season.
All-round promise with bat and ball, his dedication
and commitment bore fruit finally with a call-up
to national camp and a likely breakthrough to
the senior squad. Get his senior jersey stitched
up, guys.
Best comeback
That of Ijaz Ahmed, after six years of inactivity
for Sialkot. He even managed a 68 in the Quaid
final against Karachi. But barring that cameo,
his sojourn remained highly ineffective.
Quantity vs Quality?
Raza ended up playing 30 domestic matches through
the season, including ODIs and Twenty20 matches.
He's lucky he wasn't called up for Pakistan's
various international commitments through the
season: Imran Farhat, who was, ended up playing
36 matches all told. Is there really a need for
so many ODI tournaments, two big first-class tournaments,
a Twenty20 and a Pentangular, plus various inter-district,
grade-level games? —Agency