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Interview: Moin Khan 'Malik should captain in ODIs, Yousuf in Tests' November 27, 2007 "Main bhi koi teesmaarkhan nahi tha (I was not such an extraordinary player)," says Moin Khan as he sits down for a chat. He was, though, a passionate cricketer and still holds strong views on Pakistan cricket. Currently in India as the coach of Hyderabad Heroes, a team in the Indian Cricket League (ICL), Moin held forth to Cricinfo on the Pakistan captaincy, foreign and local coaches, Mohammad Yousuf, and of course, Kamran Akmal.
The obvious question first. Should Kamran Akmal be dropped? If you leave anyone alone, there comes a time when he starts to relax and think there is no one beyond him. It is natural. The selectors should have thought about that, even when Akmal was doing well. They should have kept an understudy and Akmal would have known he couldn't afford to slip. Now it's good, they have Akmal and Sarfraz [Ahmed]. Now both will be extra hungry, and that is crucial.
What is the problem with Akmal, do you think? Even his batting has slipped. He has been shoved up and down, all over the order. When you are batting well or keeping well, and your team is winning, you might just get away, but when your one department is affecting the team's chances of winning, then it becomes difficult.
Isn't there the danger of pushing Sarfraz too early into the big league? India has an example in Parthiv Patel. Sarfraz has come through the domestic process. He played the Under-19s in 2005, and he was captain of the World Cup-winning team later ... played a year of first-class. I am confident he will do well. He is quite similar to Akmal, in the sense that he is very confident and aggressive in batting. He plays for my team, Pakistan International Airlines (PIA). I have seen him keep very well and also bat well, especially under pressure. Domestic cricket teaches you lots of things - it tests your physical and mental fitness. See, Akmal is 25, Sarfraz is 20. There is a five-year gap. It would be nice for him to come into the fold now. When one goes, the other will fill in.
Several former Pakistan cricketers have criticised Shoaib Malik's captaincy. How do you rate him?
The problem lies with the board. They should have groomed a captain. When I used to play for a regional team, we used to get a message from the cricket board - 'Moin ko captaincy karao (let Moin captain). We are looking at him as a captain in the future.' That's what this board should have done. They should have communicated that to the local associations. The board should have planned better. They are the ones who are supposed to show vision.
But isn't that harsh on the board? They were grooming Younis Khan and he went on to reject it. You were there for three or four years as vice-captain. If you don't want to be the captain, then tell the board you don't want it. He wasted three years during which the board could have groomed someone else. By the time Inzi retired, you would have got a new captain. There must be some problem with the administrators and him and the players. That's why he didn't take it up I guess. But Pakistan cricket suffered in the end. So Malik is the captain by default. Do you think someone else could have been given the job? Say, Mohammad Yousuf? I would have had Yousuf as the Test captain. Like how India has gone with Kumble and Dhoni. It would have been perfect. The problem with Yousuf for ODIs is his fitness, I think. It's difficult to field him in the circle, as he is not so agile. You can't stand at fine leg and work as a captain. The PCB has probably gone for a player who can fit in all the three forms of the game, and I guess they thought Malik was the best choice. I would have Malik for the ODIs and Yousuf for Tests.
Do you think Yousuf will be bitter about not getting the captaincy? You have played with him. What do you feel?
Experts reckon that there is a distinct lack of aggression in this current Pakistan side. The team looks completely different from previous Pakistan teams.
If there is a match-winner then everybody supports him and gets inspired by his performance. We used to depend on those match-winners - we knew they could turn the game around anytime. So we used to work hard, support them, constantly keep encouraging. Also, we knew we had to compete with them [the match-winners] and do our job well. Jab shaam ko milna hai ek doosre ko toh chehra toh dikhana hai yaar. (We needed to be able to show our faces to them in the evening.) We needed to have performed as well. This is a very healthy thing. There are no match-winners now and I guess the other players are lacking that confidence. They are probably focused on their own performances.
What do you think can be done? My performance was bad, at times. Main koi bada tees maar khan nahi tha, but even then I used to try and lift the performances of others. If even one player can lift his game and that helps in turning around the game, you have done your job.
What about the coach? How do you rate Geoff Lawson?
Would you have rather had some other coach - a Pakistani? It also depends on the coach. If he sees the players are shy, then he should go to them and try to sort it out. That's where he is accountable. Bob Woolmer was a very polite person - good, never used to get tense, and a good communicator. He was an Englishman and so his accent was understandable. Lawson is an Aussie and his accent is very difficult. Even some of us, the experienced players, when we meet an Australian, it's pretty difficult to understand!
You know what they say: a foreign coach comes without baggage and so on. The players seem to prefer foreign coaches too.
If my conscience is clear, and you are my coach, I should trust and respect you. Why do players not want a local coach? He'll make them practise more, that's why.
They may also feel a local coach might play politics? Who do you have in mind to coach the team? There is Miandad, of course. Then there are Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis. They won't miss the sorts of things that will not be clear to a foreign coach, about what's going on.
Wasn't Waqar the bowling coach briefly?
Let's say you were given the job. What would you do to, say, solve the problem of who should open? When you drop someone, there is a reason for dropping him. Tell him the problem, the areas you want him to work on, and send him to domestic cricket. Tell him to play for two seasons, and take him back only if he performs. Take the in-form domestic players instead of taking the players who keep repeating the same mistakes. The players should be monitored in domestic cricket - how is their attitude, have they changed their game? First-class cricket is very important. You can develop patience, learn how to build a innings. ODIs and Twenty20 have spoiled the technique of these boys. They should be sent to first-class cricket.
Will you take up the job if it is offered to you? Sriram Veera is an editorial assistant at Cricinfo © Cricinfo
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