His T20 freelance work him took him to the CPL (19 wickets at a strike rate of 19.6 and economy of 7.54), BPL (16 wickets at 12.2 and 7.71), PSL (35 at 17 and 6.84), and England’s Vitality Blast (16 at 17.2 and 7.27). In the National T20, for Lahore Whites, he had 16 wickets from 18 matches. In the first-class Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, he turned up for WAPDA (Water And Power Development Authority), with modest returns (311 runs and 19 wickets in eight games). In those 109 matches across 20 months, he finished with 142 wickets and used the time and the varied experiences to learn more about his bowling and his body. He took 51 wickets across formats in the 2018-19 season.The two years he spent trying to clawing his way back into contention, notice and attention were to give more proof of the soundness of one of his key beliefs. “A player can get motivated by anything,” he says, adding a rider: “if you want to.” He was sure about which side of the “if” he was on.Going back to the careworn grounds and the tired worker bees of domestic cricket was difficult, but Wahab says, “What happens when you go to those places and play again, it reminds you that you should not be , you should be .” We know what the here and there mean. “I wanted to be at the World Cup, that’s why I put everything, whatever I have got, into this comeback.”It wasn’t the other stuff, the unglamorous side of cricket, that bothered him. He still sleeps on the floor, to protect his back, and says he can travel on any form of transport. Because his parents “always kept us ready for everything.”So I never mind where I am, if I am living in a five-star or one-star hotel, it doesn’t affect me. What should affect me,” he says, “is what I am there for and what I have to produce in performance.”It is a comeback that was never meant to be. Or was it?In April 2018 he was publicly criticised for his shoddy work ethic during training by coach Mickey Arthur, which the coach said was against the “high-performance culture” that was being created. Wahab was reminded that he had not won a game for Pakistan in yonks.Wahab was overlooked for Pakistan’s tour of England last year. Coach Mickey Arthur said that he hadn’t “won us a game in two years”•AFPWhen he did not make it to the original list of 23 World Cup probables in April this year, that was when the dreams began, he says. Where he saw himself having conversations with Arthur or the captain, Sarfaraz Ahmed, about his selection. He also dreamt of receiving a phone call from chief selector Inzamam-ul-Haq telling him he had been chosen.”I was so much into it – why I am not in the Pakistan team, why am I not in the World Cup team? It was all over my mind at that time.” He uses the word “” – attachment, obsession – to describe wanting to be back.When he was about to go on holiday in May, Pakistan bowling coach Azhar Mahmood asked him to stay put. That dream about Inzamam calling to say he had been picked? That’s exactly what happened. For real, when he was watching a Pakistani TV serial with his wife.During the World Cup, Arthur has declared Wahab transformed. When Wahab is asked about whether he agrees with that assessment of his two-year turnaround in character and personality, his face breaks into a grin and his eyes slide over to the Pakistani media manager sitting next to him. Raza Rashid is talking into the phone but Wahab is too seasoned an interview-giver to fall for that one.”As a coach he has own benchmarks. You always pick those who you think make you win games and tournaments. At that moment I was below par in ODIs,” he says, “but not in Tests and T20.”But whatever he thought as a coach, I wasn’t fitting into the coach’s Pakistan team.” He said that reaching the Arthur benchmark provided motivation. “That I have to do good to reach those benchmarks and I have to let everybody know, no, I am the best.”

His drive to return to the fold might seem obsessive, especially since he has plenty of value in T20 franchise leagues, but Wahab knows where he stands on the club-versus-country debate. “You play cricket anywhere in the world and you play for your country – those are extremely different things. If I’d never played for Pakistan, nobody would have known me.” On the other hand, a poor season or two with a franchise and you’re gone. “If you play for your country, there is always room, because the [franchise] owners know, if you’re playing for your country, you are good enough to play for them.”At this World Cup, Wahab has been once again in the forefront as one of Pakistan’s most effective death-overs bowlers and, he says, beaming, a forever-aspiring allrounder. (“No. 3 for Derby in T20.”)Like in previous World Cups, Pakistan have spent ten days in this one tackling must-win games and now find the numbers are stacked against them. It’s an old familiar habit. “We would love to play relaxed and without pressure but things do happen when you don’t expect them to,” Wahab says.It’s Pakistan v Bangladesh on Friday, where the qualification calculations are massively stacked against Pakistan, even for Wahab and his fire-starter brethren. This bittersweet World Cup, already, incredibly, his third, will surely be Wahab’s last. But wherever he goes, whatever he does, eyes will be on him, because Wahab Riaz will always be watchable.

About the Author

+300
+500
+1200
+1500
+750
$
JOIN NOW
Buddy Bonus
Sports Free Bets
Bonus