Outlook – July 28, 2019

(Axel Boer) #1

29 July 2019 OutlOOk 89


Yet another product of the seemingly unending
Pakistani assembly line of fast bowlers, the
six­foot­six left an unforgettable impression
with his left­arm pace, swing, and toe­bruising
yorkers. Wayward at first, the teenager from
the Khyber Agency ended up as the ninth top
wicket­taker of the tournament, though he
played only five matches. His career­best
performance (6/35 against Bangladesh at
Lord’s) was also the best of this World
Cup as well as the best for Pakistan
in ODIs. At 19, he also became the
youngest to take a five­wicket
haul in a World Cup. This
younger brother of ex­Paki­
stan pacer Riaz will
sweep batters,
literally, off their
feet if nurtured
properly.

Starc seems to have simply,
amazingly, extended his form of
the 2015 World Cup, where he
captured a ‘Man of the Tour na­
ment’­worthy 22 wickets at a
disturbingly destructive 10.18.
In a WC where speedsters
used knuckle­balls and
cross­seamed slowers as
their stock­in­trade on
slowing, unresponsive
pitches, Starc made a

feint of slowing down—mostly, his
searing in­swingers rattled the best.
As strike bowler, he returned two
five­wicket hauls and two four­wicket
bursts and was instrumental, along
with Warner (647 runs), Finch (507)
and Cummins (14 wickets), in taking
Australia into the semi­finals. Starc
has been the Aussie stalker­in­chief
over eight years; his inexplicable loss
of form against England we judge as
an aberration.

Mitchell Starc, 29
austraLia
Left-arm fast, left-handed bat
World Cup show
Matches 10 | Wkts 27 | Avg 18.59 | Economy 5.43 | Best 5/26

India’s vice­captain
headed to the World Cup
on the back of two
half­centuries against
Australia at home
and finished as the
top run aggrega­
tor of the tourna­
ment. Although

he failed to score when it
mattered most, in the
semi­final against New
Zealand, he had struck
five centuries earlier,
three of those on the trot,
and came within touching
distance of breaking the
record of most runs in a

single World Cup. It
meant that his fellow
Mumbaikar Sachin
Tendulkar’s record of 673,
scored in the 2003 World
Cup, still stands. Though
luck favoured him with
dropped chances early in
his innings, Rohit capital­

ised spectacularly. The
nearly unbearable light­
ness of touch with which
he glided towards those
knocks left an indelible
impress. Some, including
Wasim Jaffer, now want
the ‘hitman’ to replace
Kohli as ODI captain.

Jofra Archer,
24
enGLanD
Right-arm fast,
right-handed bat
World Cup show
Matches 11 | Wkts 20 |
Avg 23.05 |
Economy 4.57 |
Best 3/27

The smooth, gently lop­
ing approach to the wic­
ket belies a fierce burst
of pace that harries the
soundest of opening def­
ences. Respect for Jofra
Archer is accorded as
ine vitably as his follow­
on. The esteem in which
England hold this Bar­
badian import became
evident from the fact

that English residency
rules were amended to
pick him for the WC. He
had played three ODIs
and one T20 till then. But
the gangly, loose­limbed
speedster (a new
‘Whispering Death’? Ah,
give us time) didn’t dis­
appoint—he finished as
the third­highest wick­
et­taker with 20 scalps.

Morgan chose him for
the needle­on­the­edge
super over. Archer didn’t
let England down. Play­
ing in the West Indies
under­19 team in 2013,
Archer was laid low with
a back injury. His assault
on the summit of his
trade happened thou­
sands of kilometres
away in England.

Shaheen Shah Afridi, 19
pakistan
Left-arm fast, left-handed bat
World Cup show
Matches 5 | Wkts 16 | Avg: 14.62 | Economy 4.96 | Best 6/35

Photographs: getty images, aP

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