Watch-out Wasim Akram's demon hovering to strike, says expert
Ian Pont, a former English cricketer and a respected voice when it
comes to the mechanics of fast bowling, has termed Mohammad Amir "one of
the finest left arm prospects" as the left-arm pacer starts his long
road to redemption after the 2010 spot-fixing ban.

Mohammad Amir |
"Amir has a strong, repeatable action that helps him be consistent in
release of the ball. He is bio-mechanically efficient in other words,
which is something that technical coaches purr over," Pont wrote in his
blog for pakpassion.net.
"We are all seeking bowlers who can achieve this as it means a
lowering of potential injuries as well as an increase in accuracy and
speed. Amir's pace (around 140 kph/87 mph) is plenty to cause problems
and he could be even faster."
Pont, who played mainly for Essex and was best known for his powerful
throw, said Amir was lucky in having such a great wrist position while
delivering the ball.
"Now, still just 23, he has his best years in front of him. But what
makes him such a great bowler is the fact that he has a great strong
wrist position - meaning he can shape and swing a cricket ball at pace,"
he said.
"Clearly parallels will be drawn with Wasim Akram and the fact that
Wasim will have mentored Amir at some point is inevitable," Pont added.
Pont, who played a key role in an anti-corruption sting operation to
catch match-fixers, believed young Amir, in future, could match the
genius of legendary Wasim Akram.
"Amir has the potential to be just every bit as good as Wasim. And
that's because he has a far better action than Wasim had.
His technique as a fast swing bowler is superior. The only thing it
seems that can stop Amir is himself," he said.
Amir was eligible to return to international cricket on September 2
after serving a five-year ban for bowling no-balls (in a spot fixing
case) along with fellow pacer Mohammad Asif during a Test match in
England in 2010.
But the Pakistan Cricket Board has ruled out an early return of the
duo along with Salman Butt, the third player convicted in the
spot-fixing scandal.
Amir was cleared to play domestic matches in January this year after
the International Cricket Council amended its code of conduct which
allowed banned players to feature in home matches six months prior to
end of their punishment. |