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April 6, 2015 Staffordshire's summer of Afridi He might not play ODIs again, but an English league won't forget the time they had cricket's most surreal superstar in their midst SCOTT OLIVER 11 11 Share on Facebook Share on Twitter If ever there was going to be a "Shahid Afridi Rule", you'd imagine it would be in honour of some misdemeanour or other: Thou Shall Not Pirouette on a Length; Thou Shall Not Bite the Ball; that sort of thing. But no, the player perhaps least associated with the establishment of norms in the entire history of cricket managed, during a half-season as substitute pro in the North Staffordshire and South Cheshire League, to lend his name, colloquially at least, to an entirely mundane piece of legislation that nonetheless fundamentally changed the FEATURES Shahid Afridi: prodigious prodigal pro © PA Photos converted by Web2PDFConvert.com

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April 6, 2015Staffordshire's summer of Afridi

He might not play ODIs again, but an English league won't forget the time they had cricket's most surrealsuperstar in their midst

SCOTT OLIVER

1111 Share on Facebook Share on Twitter

If ever there was going to be a "Shahid Afridi Rule", you'd imagine it would be in honour of some misdemeanour or other: Thou Shall NotPirouette on a Length; Thou Shall Not Bite the Ball; that sort of thing. But no, the player perhaps least associated with the establishment ofnorms in the entire history of cricket managed, during a half-season as substitute pro in the North Staffordshire and South CheshireLeague, to lend his name, colloquially at least, to an entirely mundane piece of legislation that nonetheless fundamentally changed the

FEATURES

Shahid Afridi: prodigious prodigal pro © PA Photos

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way its clubs operated.

In June 2003, already a seven-year veteran of international cricket and still only 23, Afridi turned up for a two-week stint at Little Stoke,deputising for Justin Kemp, who was at Worcestershire deputising for Andrew Hall, who was with South Africa. He began with a boom-boom, smearing 112 from 70 balls in a straightforward seven-wicket victory.

The following week, the Independent sent a reporter along to the fireworks display:

"The motto on Little Stoke's crest, Non progredi est regredi ('Not to advance is to go back'), seemed made for Afridi. Chauffeuredby a local balti magnate, he arrived at Longton in a red cricket shirt bearing the badge of the Non-Descript Club which contains anoverflowing pint of ale. The previous day he had played for them in a benefit match at Finchley, and legend already claimed he hadplaced his sixes between parked cars."

After three tentative prods at Longton's South African pro, a single took Afridi down to face Staffordshire opening bowler David Edwards:"He hit my first ball on the pavilion roof, defended the second, hit the third over the pavilion, and fourth ball I bowled a back-of-the-handslower ball. He tried to belt it and it lobbed up to point." Thirteen from seven balls in 132 all out: quintessential Afridi, you might say, aplayer loved and derided in equal measure by Pakistanis, for whom he's either a Pathan daredevil or idiot - with or without the savant.

Afridi went wicketless in a seven-wicket defeat, while Little Stoke's chairman mused that a longer innings might have seen an alreadysizeable crowd swollen even further, as word spread among the Potteries' many Pakistani taxi drivers. Such a comprehensive victorywas certainly a feather in Longton's cap, although it would doubtless have been something of an unwelcome surprise for them to seeAfridi striding across the outfield the following week - two cricket bags, each being carried by a flunky - when they arrived for their gameat Leek, "the Queen of the Moorlands". With regular pro Albie Morkel nursing an injury and Kemp back at Little Stoke, Leek had beenquick to swoop.

This time, Longton declared at a respectable 226 for 7, their skipper Richard Harvey top-scoring with 83. Afridi snared the top three andbriefly threatened to blow them away with his fizzing topspinners, vicious drift, and 80mph bouncers (by the time we played Leek I waswaiting for this ball and, to the eternal tedium of future team-mates, pulled him for a six into the car park). At 30-odd for 2 in reply, Afridijoined ex-Derbyshire man Tim Tweats. Edwards was again bowling, and again tried an early slower ball: "He defended it and said 'notthis time.'"

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As the partnership developed, Longton's main spinner got a couple to grip, prompting Harvey to try his own seldom-used left-arm twirlers,a brave or perhaps foolish move on a club ground to one of the world's most celebrated six-hitters. "It seemed Afridi had been waiting forthis moment to unleash the carnage," Harvey recalls. "He hit five consecutive sixes off the first five balls of my second over. Frommemory, a couple didn't clear the boundary by much - in fact, in my defence, one of them was caught at long-off, but he was a yard thewrong side of the line!"

With sweaty palms, Harvey decided to go over the wicket for the final delivery and fire in a leg-side yorker: "Easier said than done whenyou're at best a part-timer. Anyway, that was the plan. The reality was a knee-high full-toss that should have been dispatched into Leektown centre, but he must have taken his eye off it at the critical time and thankfully toe-ended it down to deep midwicket for one!" WithHarvey still counting his blessings, Edwards duly bagged his famous scalp for the second game running, "caught at long-on, six anywhereapart from Leek, although the game was gone. He was nice to me in the bar after, too, saying well bowled and signing an autograph."

Although Longton would eventually win the title, playing back-to-back matches against a game-wrecking megastar was clearly unfair andbrought on a bout of head-scratching among the NSSCL's bigwigs. Eventually they would rule that a sub-pro could only play for one clubper season, subsequently making the search for adequate deputies in an ever-diminishing pool as difficult as bowling a maiden to Afridi,particularly with stringent post-9/11 UK Border Authority controls.

Main man, cameo or no-show: you'd never know which Afridi would turn up to bat © PA Photos

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"The Afridi Rule" certainly caused my club, Moddershall, much angst. In 2008, Imran Tahir was signed by Hampshire in July, thoughhelpful fixtures and his dedication saw him available for all but two of the remaining nine games. The following year Rangana Herath wasspirited away mid-season to play against Pakistan after Muttiah Muralitharan suffered a shoulder injury. So for 2010 we decided weneeded someone with zero chance of higher honours, and in October signed a Pakistani left-arm pacer with just two first-classappearances to his name. He was seven feet tall, from Gaggu Mandi, and the prospect of him bowling on league decks dilated oursadism glands. Unfortunately - and perhaps unsurprisingly at that altitude - he was unable to remain under the radar for long. First it wasPCB training camps, by the summer the ODI squad touring England. Meanwhile, we waited half a season for Asad Ali's visa to clear,scraping the fast-evaporating talent pool for subs (one week we got a tubby 38-year-old offie who played in silver trainers and a NYYankees baseball cap - worn backwards).

Anyway, a couple of weeks after the Longton double-header, Afridi turned out against his former team-mates at Little Stoke, either side ofwhich he was outperformed by a pair of Lahore-born legspinning Imrans: outbatted by Tahir (then with his previous club), who also hadAfridi caught at long-off for a single, and outbowled by Farhat. After that he reeled off three whirlwind half-centuries, on one occasionstumped for 58 while charge-slog-sweeping an opening bowler.

Meanwhile, Audley offspinner Andrew Johnson followed Harvey's suggestion to station all nine on the boundary - a boundary that Leekhad even brought in by ten yards, just in case - on the basis that it was absolutely no deterrent whatsoever: "The first ball gripped and hesand-wedged it over long-on for four, who may have sneaked in a bit. I then caught him at long-on for 50-odd and I don't think he stuckaround to see the next wicket fall. He was probably home for You've Been Framed."

It was decidedly odd seeing that familiarly busy, bandy-legged walk to the crease, the gait of a rodeo rider, of someone who indeed sawhis job as the brief surfing of some energetic explosion; odd, too, seeing that bouncing, balletic run-up, curtain fringe flapping away like anoil-covered seagull that cannot quite achieve take-off. In fact, playing a club match against the world's most singular and surreal cricketerwas so utterly absurd that by the time we got round to playing Leek in what turned out to be his last match for the Moorlanders, Ispontaneously intercepted Afridi en route to the crease to ask, in the voice of "Michael Jackson" from cult UK comedy show Bo Selecta!,

An Afridi six gets lodged in the roof at New Road, 2001 © PA Photos

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ON APRIL 6, 2015, 8:33 GMT

what on earth are all these clubs doing splashing cash like nobody's business? and why are all these international players going there? this is

staffordshire and cheshire. you'd think they'd end up at clubs in surrey or sussex or yorkshire or something.

ON APRIL 6, 2015, 8:11 GMT

Scott Oliver tweets

here© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.

and apropos of nothing: "Shah-HEED, where the llam-AZE at, shamone?" Cool as ever, he replied: "What is 'llamaze'?" They werellamas.

Having taken 25 balls to make his first 20, he had a wild yahoo at our West Indian pro, Adam Sanford. The ball nipped back and missedthe leg bail by a fag paper. (There was a weird feeling of ambivalence: part of you wants him to get 40- or 50-odd, with a couple ofmammoth blows, but not to go too crazy.) He smeared, swooshed and swiped his way to 105 not out from 56 balls, sealing the game andhis century with his 11th Cape Canaveral-launched maximum. "I see them mind games backfired," quipped a home supporter. A grizzledveteran in our ranks thought the innings "disrespectful", but it was entirely consistent with how he would play in just about any situation, forany team. Foot to the floor. Be damned, speed cameras.

His overall numbers might surprise aficionados and detractors alike, accustomed as they are to his prodigious prodigality with the batand his streetwise tightness with the ball. In 11 games he smote 565 runs at 63, yet had an unspectacular combined bowling analysis of135-27-433-17, with a best of 4 for 67 against us. Despite Afridi's efforts, that was only their second victory with him in the ranks, and withLeek still not mathematically safe from relegation they flew Morkel in for the final game at a cost of £1000. It was extravagant in 2003;even more so after the "Afridi Rule" was established.

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Super piece. Good writer meets good subject meets great context!

MARTINMOHA ON APRIL 6, 2015, 7:41 GMT

A Great Entertainer and nice human being AFRIDI a real hero for millions of cricket lovers all around the world.Infact was most Devastating

batsman of all cricketing era but Unfortunately he had immense and impulsive desire to write the fate of every cricket ball out of the ground, if

he had his cool than he would have break many world records, After Indian dominance in cricket in this decade and not given chance to play in

IPL his talent and capabilities largely wasted.

DUNGER.BOB ON APRIL 6, 2015, 7:27 GMT

What a great piece. This a story about putting a shark in the gold-fish pond. Fascinating in a macabre sort of way. I think Afridi was the proto-

type T20 player. He was so forward thinking that he didn't even care that T20 didn't really even exist when he started playing it. So much so

that he had to make do with playing his T20 in test matches. .. People will probably put him down with a barrage of stats but that means

nothing to me. The very first time I saw him was in a ODI series in Australia in '96 and I vividly recall saying to the wife after about 2 games -

"who's afraid of Afridi? .. I am' .

SAJJADPARREY ON APRIL 6, 2015, 6:31 GMT

We might not see him on the international stage again....Why?... He is still the captain of T20 Team...

ON APRIL 6, 2015, 6:07 GMT

well elaborated and equally remarkably written sir

ON APRIL 6, 2015, 6:00 GMT

Beautiful piece of writing. Hits the important parts Afridi's personality yet again. Afridi started playing that way before it was a norm like these

days. He has the ability to give his fans ecstasy and heartbreaks every time he came out to bat. Hope he breaks a couple of records in his

remaining T20 career.

ARUN_GALLY_CRICKET ON APRIL 6, 2015, 5:48 GMT

A Great Talent , who could have achieved more than he did. He just lived in hype dream. A sad end in deed.

KIWIROCKER- ON APRIL 6, 2015, 5:21 GMT

Scott: Just a correction, Afridi has not retired from International cricket and instead from ODI format. He is still Pakistan's T20 captain. Nicely

written piece with some good humour. One of the best innings, I ever saw from Afridi was his 40 odd ball century against India as an opener in

Kanpur. This was no ordinary Indian bowling and had likes of nice seam bowlers Balaji, and spinners Kumble and Harbhajan......My other

memory would be Afridi's five sixes in an over against Harbhajan. Poor Harbhajan looked never so clueless!

ON APRIL 6, 2015, 5:10 GMT

Amazing written.. afidi love

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