Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Akhtar still a long way from what we want from him: Younis

Published Wed, Jun 16 10 01:27 PM

Dambulla, Jun 16 (PTI) Comeback man Shoaib Akhtar failed to impress Waqar Younis despite a three-wicket haul against Sri Lanka in the Asia Cup lung-opener with the Pakistan coach demanding more consistency from the temperamental pacer. Coming back after spending a considerable time battling injuries, a doping scandal and disciplinary issues, the 34-year-old Akhtar returned figures of 3/41 in Pakistan''s 16-run loss to Sri Lanka last night. Younis said it was a reasonable performance but he expected more from the tearaway pacer. "I think Akhtar is not really the Akhtar that we want him to be. He is still a long way from what we expect him to be," Younis said. "He''s still got a long way to go. He has picked up three wickets which is good for us but I think he''s not there where we want to see him," he added. Younis blamed poor bowling for the defeat. "They (Sri Lanka) were 160 for seven but we let them off the hook and gave away too many runs. That is what hurt us eventually," Younis said at the post-match press conference. The coach lavished praise on Shahid Afridi for cracking a blistering 76-ball 109 but said there is still scope for improvement. "Afridi batted without fear by moving down the track and dealt with (Muttiah) Muralitharan the way he should be. That is the way he bats. I have seen him do this in the past. I would like to see him continue to bat in the same fashion," he said. Despite the nervy performance by Shahzaib Hasan and Umar Amin, Younis said Pakistan would continue to play the youngsters. "We are in the rebuilding process. So we will continue to blood young players. We know that they (Shahzaib and Amin) suffered from nerves in their first game. It is tough out there, but that is how you play international cricket," he said. Though Pakistan lost the game, the coach believed that they still have a chance to qualify for the June 24 final. "We are not out of the tournament. We have two back-to-back games against India and Bangladesh. As we haven''t played India in a long while, we are looking forward to that game," he said. Meanwhile, Lasith Malinga who claimed his maiden fiver in ODIs, said Sri Lanka were confident of winning even when Afridi was going berserk in the middle. "We were confident as we knew we need to get Afridi to win the game. Once he got out, the rest were easy pickings," said Malinga. "It is always difficult to chase under lights here and somehow we have got used to it. But it is a huge challenge for the visiting teams," said Malinga, who claimed five wickets for 34 runs.


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