Ajmal ban rouses Pakistan to action on 'chucking'
KARACHI: The ban slapped on star spinner Saeed Ajmal has left
Pakistan's cricket chiefs frantically trying to take action on "chuckers",
including dusting off expensive biomechanical testing kit that had laid
unused for years.
Ajmal, who turns 37 next month, was suspended from international
cricket on Tuesday after biomechanical analysis found his bowling
action, reported during the Galle Test against Sri Lanka last month, to
be illegal.
He must now undergo remedial work on his action, and Pakistan Cricket
Board (PCB) chairman Shaharyar Khan acknowledged chucking was rife in
the domestic game. "I was informed 25 suspected bowlers had been playing
in our domestic cricket and now the number has increased up to 35 --
that means every team has at least two suspected bowlers," said Khan.
Former captain and ex-PCB director of National Cricket Academy (NCA)
Aamir Sohail said there were warning signs for Ajmal, who has bowled
more balls than any other international bowler in the last three years.
"I had warned in February this year that Ajmal will be suspended because
his action was deteriorating with age, but no one heeded. I had
recommended his action be checked every year," he said.
Former opening batsman Sohail, who played 47 Tests and 156 ODIs for
Pakistan, said there had been a total lack of interest in dealing with
bowlers with suspect actions. "We are ourselves to blame," Sohail said.
"We have a biomechanic lab in NCA which I activated and gave a list of
bowlers to test there, but the lab remained ineffective for years."
The NCA has equipment to test bowlers to check they are not
straightening their arm more than the permitted 15 degrees in delivering
the ball. But the $440,000 kit, which includes 18 cameras supporting
apparatus and computer software, has gathered dust since it was bought
in 2009 as successive PCB chiefs dismissed the need for it.
Cleared of chucking due to a congenital defect of his elbow in 2009,
Ajmal came under suspicion again this year when England paceman Stuart
Broad and former captain Michael Vaughan queried his action while the
Pakistani was taking wickets at will in county cricket.
In June the International Cricket Council's cricket committee
recommended a stricter approach on illegal actions. That snared Sri
Lanka's Sachitra Senanayake and New Zealand's Kane Williamson -- both
suspended in July -- and then attention turned to Ajmal.
His ban is a huge blow for Pakistan as he has led the team's attack
almost single-handedly across all three formats and was seen as key to
their chances in next year's World Cup in Australia and New Zealand.
Head coach Waqar Younis faces a daunting task in finding a
replacement for one of the world's best bowlers. The ban comes at a
particularly difficult moment, with Pakistan facing a tough series
against Australia in the United Arab Emirates next month.
"Of course, it's a blow," Waqar said. "The timing is unfortunate but
life goes on and we have to find a replacement as quickly as possible or
hope Ajmal gets back after getting cleared."
Possible replacements include the under-performing Abdur Rehman and
ageing Zulfiqar Babar -- both left-arm spinners -- who have spent the
last few years in Ajmal's shadow.
The team management has also summoned off-spinners from the domestic
circuit, with prolific wicket-takers Atif Maqbool and Adnan Rasool seen
as front-runners. But even these players have had questions over their
bowling actions at domestic level -- indeed Rasool modelled his on
Ajmal's.
Mohammad Akram, head coach at NCA, said the process of eliminating
bowlers with suspect actions would take time. The fact Ajmal has been
the team's pre-eminent bowler for some time makes matters even more
difficult.
"Youngsters used to model their actions on Wasim [Akram] and Waqar in
1990s, but now they model their actions on Ajmal," said Akram. "We have
to take steps to help youngsters get clean actions." For Pakistan
cricket's future, actions are now far more important than words.
Hammer blow
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