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This is an archive article published on July 14, 2003

Miandad recounts ‘war’ with India

Javed Miandad, the irrepressible Pakistan cricketer, says he suffered a rare embarrassment and learnt a lesson on patriotism during the 1986...

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Javed Miandad, the irrepressible Pakistan cricketer, says he suffered a rare embarrassment and learnt a lesson on patriotism during the 1986-87 tour of India when Mohinder Amarnath gave him an on-the-pitch tongue lashing for making deriding remarks against India.

Miandad, the self confessed inventor of sledging, “reached his boiling” point when Amarnath got the better off him at the Jaipur Test, which was witnessed among others by Pakistan’s late military dictator Gen. Zia-ul-Haq.

“The two teams were on the edge with each other and the atmosphere was tense. At one point, I was fielding close in and was airing my feeling to the batsman, who happened to be Mohinder Amarnath,” writes Miandad in his autobiography Cutting Edge.

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Miandad, the tormentor became tormented when Amarnath survived a close appeal. “When Mohinder survived what I thought was yet another very legitimate appeal, I reached boiling point. I used an expletive to describe India and Mohinder heard it. Calmly, he walked up to me and said, ’look Javed call me anything you want but don’t say a word against my country’.

“That affected me deeply. I have always regarded my own country as being above everything except Allah. I was embarrassed that I hadn’t respected Mohinder’s right to feel the same way about his country. I immediately apologised to him,” writes Miandad in the 321-page book.

True to his “Pakistani spirit”, Miandad has devoted a special chapter to Pakistan-India encounters and titled it ’Wars With India’.

Miandad says his brush with Amarnath taught him the real stakes in India-Pakistan encounters. “It was far beyond anything personal. It was about one’s country and what one could do for it.”

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The references to Amarnath is perhaps one of the rare tributes Miandad pays to anybody else other than himself in his autobiography which could have been as well named “I, me and myself”.

Miandad genuinely believes that sledging played a key role in his success. “Intimidatory verbal exchanges suit my personality. They help me concentrate and elevate my game. Players who tried to threaten and bully me probably didn’t realise they were doing me a favour,” he says and claims his Indians victims included, “the great” Sunil Gavaskar, spinner Dilip Doshi and needless to say fast bowler Chetan Sharma, whose last ball full-toss enabled him to hit a six to win a historic match against India at Sharjah in 1986.

Conspicuously absent from the narrative however, is how a livid Miandad went jumping all around the pitch, enraged by behind the stumps commentary from Indian wicket-keeper, Kiran More.

Describing an incident involving Gavaskar in detail, Miandad says “so you have become a really big player, Sunny, I said from my position in the slips. When he ignored me, I told him it didn’t matter how big he had become because he was going to be out the first ball and I was going to take his catch. Unbelievably, Gavaskar edged the first ball of the innings from Imran (Khan) to me in the slips. The look on his face was one of utter disbelief. As for me I went crazy with joy and started gloating and jumping around like a mad man,” says Miandad and justifies his action by saying that cricket was no different from war. “To me, cricket is war. Just like a soldier defending the borders of his country, I was always focussed on the battle in front of me.”

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Mindad also narrates how he ruffled the Indian spinner Dilip Doshi at the Bangalore Test in 1983-84 series by making snide remarks against him to protest against the bowler’s persistent leg-stump bowling.

“After a while of the leg theory, I said aloud within earshot of several Indian players including Dilip, I know only two creatures that can hold on to a leg like this — one is a dog and other is Dilip.”

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