Discover this podcast and so much more

Podcasts are free to enjoy without a subscription. We also offer ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more for just $11.99/month.

Episode 1 - Shoaib Akhtar vs India, Kolkata 1999

Episode 1 - Shoaib Akhtar vs India, Kolkata 1999

FromBatta Fast


Episode 1 - Shoaib Akhtar vs India, Kolkata 1999

FromBatta Fast

ratings:
Length:
63 minutes
Released:
May 18, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

The first episode of our podcast kicks off a series where we discuss our favourite fast bowling spells by Pakistani players.We begin with the birth of a legend - Shoaib Akhtar's two wickets in two balls, including Sachin on a golden duck, began one of the most exciting, intriguing and dramatic careers in cricket history.We go from Bappi Lahiri to Salman Khan in trying to explain what and who Shaiby was.0 – 2:20 – Intro to the podcast2:45 – 3:40 – The spell as the Pakistani Dream: bowling two Indians, one of whom is Sachin in front of a full house off two consecutive balls3:40 – 5:55 – Silence in the Biggest Stadium in the World & some more on the dreamlike nature of Shoaib impact7:32 – 10:15 Maradona 1986 vs England comparison13:00 – 14:30 - The Two Deliveries as works of art  20:20 – 22:17 - The Sallu Bhai comparisons25:25 – 27:55 - The Faisalabad Story28:25 – 33:40 - Gun Master Interlude – Bappi Da! Including the Jimmy Jimmy tangent 38:00 – 39:39 - Why Dravid was the greater wicket (and Shaibi bowling genius)41:45 – 43:53 Shaibi Origin Story and being an outlier as a worldly star43:59 – 45:10 Shaibi Saves a Child and Hello Nicole Kidman  45:11 – 47:00 The Groundedness of being Shoaib all the way through  47:10 – 49:20  On a White Horse in the Margalla Hills, with a Quran49:20 – 50:50  Navigating a way through match-fixing era52:55 – 53:33 The Mathew Hayden send-off 53:45 – 59:05 The Sachin Ball and the Art of Bunking School59:20 – end Loving Sachin Ball contd
Released:
May 18, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (44)

"What do they know of cricket, who only cricket know?" Ahmer Naqvi and Osman Samiuddin look at cricket from beyond the runs and wickets to the larger sociocultural context of the sport.