Presenting Mujeeb Ur Rahman, the allrounder in the making
Batting is Afghanistan’s weaker suit, and Mujeeb’s power lower down the order is providing them with a bit extra
Deivarayan Muthu17-Oct-2023An Afghanistan batter demanded the attention of reporters and photographers at Chepauk’s outdoor nets on Tuesday, when he dashed out of the crease and flat-batted a local net bowler – a left-arm fingerspinner – with ferocious power.No, we’re not talking about Rahmanullah Gurbaz.Let’s talk about Mujeeb Ur Rahman, the batter.For about half an hour on Tuesday evening, Mujeeb lined up almost every bowler at Afghanistan’s training session. Even Hamid Hasan, the former Afghanistan quick and current bowling coach of the side, wasn’t spared.Related
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Mujeeb has now added so much power to his batting that he can muscle the likes of Mark Wood and Sam Curran. On Sunday, Mujeeb hit 28 off 16 balls – his strike rate of 175 was the among Afghanistan’s batters in their memorable triumph in Delhi. Earlier in August against a Pakistan attack comprising Shaheen Shah Afridi and Shadab Khan in Colombo, he had shellacked a 26-ball half-century, the second fastest by an Afghanistan batter in ODI cricket. It was the fastest for Afghanistan before Mohammad Nabi broke that record in the recent Asia Cup.Mujeeb had started his ODI career as a No. 11 and his T20 career as a No.10. He has since levelled up so much as a batter that his captain Hashmatullah Shahidi believes that he can become an allrounder in the future.Mujeeb doesn’t blindly swing for the hills. For instance, during that blistering fifty against Pakistan at the Premadasa, he picked wrong’uns from Shadab and put them away. And more recently, when Curran dug back-of-the-hand slowies into the Delhi pitch, Mujeeb held his shape for long enough and dispatched them to the boundary.”It gives us a lot of advantage: Mujeeb he worked very hard [on his batting] and whenever he goes to his homeland, he is only doing batting you know in the nets,” Shahidi said on the eve of Afghanistan’s World Cup game against New Zealand. “Here, in the team environment also, he is keen to bat in the net sessions and he [has] improved on his power-hitting. And I can say he will be nearly an allrounder to us, but he has to be careful not to [get out] hit-wicket again because he did it twice in last couple of games .”Afghanistan’s batting is their weaker suit, but Mujeeb’s improved power has helped mask some of that weakness. Afghanistan will need every bit of that batting depth against a New Zealand side that has Mitchell Santner slotted in at No. 8.1:27
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