News Sports Cricket Know the Pakistan cricket captains, from westernized to fundamentalist

Know the Pakistan cricket captains, from westernized to fundamentalist

New Delhi: Cricket is perhaps the only sport where a captain not only has to have good, consistent cricketing abilities but should also have a penchant for the kind of leadership found in a military


He held on to his small-town moorings even though he was a willing participant in many of the team's raunchy off-field activities in the 1990s.

Instead of adjusting his demeanor to suit the ways of this culture, Inzamam decided to change the culture itself.
Cleverly, he decided to use religion as a tool, in spite of the fact that till he joined the large Islamic evangelist outfit, the Tableeghi Jamat (TJ), in early 2003, Inzamam had not been a very religious man.

But he became one in 2003, persuaded by his former colleagues, Saeed Anwar, Saqlain Mushtaq and Mushtaq Ahmed, who had joined the outfit in 2001-2002.

The TJ as a movement, though apolitical, is highly exhibitionistic and ritualistic. It were these two aspects of the movement that Inzamam used as a way to instill discipline in the team and to also keep at bay dissent from the players.