BSP-20 Afridi casts doubt on age record in new autobiography

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Afridi casts doubt on age record in new autobiography

KARACHI, May 4, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – When Pakistan’s Shahid Afridi smashed a
37-ball century against Sri Lanka in 1996, he not only registered the
fastest-ever one-day ton, he also became the youngest player to score 100
runs in an international.

Or did he?

In a new autobiography, the fiery all-rounder says he was aged 19 when he
blasted onto the world stage with his record-breaking innings, and not 16 as
history suggests.

“For the record, I was just nineteen, and not sixteen like they claim,” he
writes in “Game Changer”, which went on sale this week.

“I was born in 1975. So, yes, the authorities stated my age incorrectly.”

Confusingly, if he was born in 1975, it would mean he was either 20 or 21
at the time.

Wisden, the sport’s recognised almanac, still lists Afridi as the youngest
player to score a one-day ton — aged 16 years and 217 days — but his
fastest-century record lasted until 2014 when it was eclipsed by New
Zealander Corey Anderson, and by South African AB de Villiers a year later.

Cricket experts and fans have long questioned the purported ages of various
Asian players — particularly in junior competitions — and Afridi’s
revelation will only fuel the controversy.

In the weeks leading up to his record-breaking Pakistan debut, Afridi had
been playing in an international under-19 tournament in the West Indies.

Pakistan cricket authorities claimed Hasan Raza was 14 years old when he
made his Test debut against Zimbabwe in 1996, but Wisden doesn’t recognise
that claim.

The age controversy is just one of many in Afridi’s book, in which he lays
into former team mates with no holds barred — calling Javed Miandad,
Pakistan’s most successful Test batsman, “a small man”.

“He hated the way I batted,” writes Afridi of the 1999 India tour, accusing
Miandad of not giving him batting practice before the Chennai Test in which
he scored a century to help Pakistan to a 12-run victory.

“Javed’s attitude towards me touched a new low. Before the post-match
ceremony, he pulled me aside and said ‘Listen, buddy, you’d better make sure
you thank me in the presentation’. I couldn’t believe it.

“That day I lost all my respect for Javed Miandad, supposedly one of the
greats of the game but in reality, a small man.”

Afridi described another team mate, Waqar Younis, as a mediocre captain and
terrible coach.

He said Imran Khan, a former captain and now prime minister of Pakistan,
had an “abrasive style leadership”.

“By the way, they say that Khan… runs his cabinet the same way,” he
added.

Afridi heaped praise on the late Bob Woolmer, however, the Englishman who
coached Pakistan during his best years.

“I can safely say that the only coach who gave me that kind of support was
Woolmer. My batting stats were better under him,” he writes. He described
former Indian opener Gautam Gambhir, with whom he clashed on-field in 2007,
as “a burn out who had attitude problems”.

“I remember that run-in with him in 2007 tour when he completed a single
while running straight into me. The umpires had to finish it off or I would
have,” he said.

“Clearly we had a frank bilateral discussion about each other’s female
relatives.”

BSS/AFP/ARS/1951 hrs