|
| Player: | Mohammad Yousuf |
Prolific Pakistan batsman Mohammad Yousuf has found spiritual strength
from his faith, which helped him achieve commendable batting feats
against the West Indies, former great Imran Khan said Saturday.
"Yousuf's feat is commendable and all Pakistan is proud of his world
record achievements," said Khan of Yousuf, who scored 665 runs in three
Tests to help Pakistan beat the West Indies 2-0.
The 32-year-old right-handed batsman hit a century in each innings to
guide Pakistan to a 199-run victory against Brian Lara's team in the
third and final Test, which finished in Karachi on Friday.
Yousuf accumulated 1,788 runs in 11 Tests - the new world record for
most runs in a calendar year - beating the previous record of 1,710
runs held by the West Indies great Viv Richards set in 1976.
``It is not just the amount of runs and records, it's the elegance and
the class of his batting which stands him out and helped him achieve
those records," said Khan, now a member of Pakistan's parliament.
Khan, who joined politics in the mid-1990s by forming his own party,
said Yousuf's faith had given him strength.
"Those who talk about a balance in religion and cricket should realize
that the composure, the focus, the discipline and the calm way he
negotiated crisis show that his faith has given him spiritual
strength," said Khan. "His faith has suddenly raised his game to
different level and I think he is batting at the peak of his career,"
said Khan, who played 82 Tests for Pakistan and led the country to its
only World Cup victory in 1992 in Australia.
"Alongside Inzamam-ul-Haq and Younis Khan, Yousuf's form will be
crucial, and these three hold the key for Pakistan's batting
performance in the World Cup next year," he added.
Yousuf, formerly known as Yousuf Youhana, converted to Islam from
Christianity last year - a move widely covered in the world's media.
Since then the Lahore-born batsman has been on top scoring form,
averaging nearly 92 runs per innings in the 14 Tests since his
conversion, up from an average of 48 in 59 Tests before, and has
attributed his achievements to Allah's will.
"It is my firm belief that whatever you get, runs or any other thing,
it comes because of Allah's will," Yousuf said on Friday.
He also equaled legendary Australian great Don Bradman's record of
scoring six centuries in successive Tests - although it took him only
five matches compared with Bradman's six.
Yousuf's nine hundreds in a calendar year is also a new world record
which was previously held jointly by Richards and Sri Lankan batsman
Aravinda de Silva.
Copyright © 2003-2008 CricketArchive