It is a little surreal that a country that has little or no history of
encouraging pace bowlers now captures the imaginations of cricket fans
the world over with exciting pace bowling. It is a country where pace
bowlers inhabit teams in the domestic competitions apparently only to
make up the number because their role is limited to taking the shine off
the new ball for the slow bowlers to take charge, most pace bowlers
have to beg for a team in domestic cricket. It is a country where the
word bowling was not too long ago synonymous with left-arm spin.
Against this backdrop, Bangladesh's selectors have shown great faith
in their quicker bowlers as they have included five pacers in the squad
for the ICC World Twenty20 and Asia Cup T20 competitions. The Bangladesh
team management have shown courage to play with a four-pronged pace
attack in the ongoing Asia Cup. Taskin Ahmed, Al-Amin Hossain,
Mustafizur Rahman and captain Mashrafe Bin Mortaza have received
accolades from laymen and cricket pundits alike. There may not be an
express fast bowler -- Taskin tops out at around 145 kph -- but the
attack has the versatility and variation to trouble the best.
A leading pacer in the country in the 1990s, Golam Nowsher Prince
follows Bangladesh cricket from thousands of miles away and is immensely
proud of the rise of pace bowling in his country. “I can assure you,
any avid lover of the game would love to watch the exciting pace bowling
of this Bangladesh team. Without any doubt we have a better pace attack
than any Asian attack so why not utilise that advantage. I have always
dreamt of such pace bowling throughout my career, but one thing I can
tell you is that I was not as good as them,” said an excited left-arm
pace bowler. “They look like they read the game better than any other
fast bowler in our sub-continent. Especially Mustafizur, he looks so
mature,” he continued.
Was it an easy decision to change the age-old concept? Maybe it was
Bangladesh head coach Chandika Hathurusingha who started the process of
change when he preferred pace-friendly wickets in the home series
against India in June 2014.
It was then new skipper Mashrafe Bin Mortaza who argued that only a
good pace attack can bring more success and respect from the opponents,
and that an attacking brand of cricket required at least three
specialist pace bowlers in the team.
What Bangladesh did in the World Cup in Australia-New Zealand under
the leadership of Mashrafe is now history. The success owed a huge debt
to their pace-bowling prowess on conducive wickets. Memories of that
World Cup cannot be related without mention of Rubel Hossain, who
claimed four wickets to shoot England out of the tournament. Later on,
the mysterious cutters and slower balls from Mustafizur compelled world
cricket to pay serious attention to pace of the Bangladeshi variety.
“Bangladesh has never seen such a good pace attack before. I want to
give credit to our coach [Chandika Hathurusingha] and captain [Mashrafe
Bin Mortaza] for their proactiveness in bringing a change in the
planning. The promise Mashrafee's arrival on the scene held for pace
bowling is now being fulfilled through his captaincy,” said chief
selector Faruque Ahmed.
“In my opinion it all began when we started to think that we have to consider opponents and conditions before picking the team. You cannot succeed with typical thinking,” he continued.
A new era has begun but will we be able to make it a tradition? “A big opportunity has come our way as young bowlers now love to see pace bowlers as role models. We all know how Imran Khan and Wasim Akram has a big impact on Pakistani pace bowling. You cannot expect that you will always get gifted bowlers; only the system can aid you in the long run,” he opined.
So it is up to the powers that be to ensure that the current pace wealth is not a comet but a constant star.
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