The Pakistan veteran of three World Cups very nearly didn’t make it to his third

Sharda Ugra04-Jul-2019There has been a voodoo working for Pakistan the last two weeks of this World Cup. The phoenix reared its head two Sundays ago at Lord’s, when they defeated South Africa, bringing back infuriatingly sentimental yet uncannily similar memories of 1992.That their campaign was snuffed out not by their own hand, but by a combination of other teams’ results, will convince Wahab Riaz that whirling dervishes have been in control of his career in recent times.After two years of being spurned, he was a last-minute entrant into the World Cup team, weeks before the first match. The night before that must-win game against South Africa, he was running a fever and couldn’t sleep. ” body .” [My body was breaking.] He needed meds to put him on the field the next day. In the end overs, he cleaned out three wickets with reverse swing and sealed the game.The day before another virtual knockout, against Afghanistan, a hairline fracture in the little finger of his right hand didn’t stop him either. Two wickets in the death and in to bat when the match was counting down to an epic detonation in Leeds. Imad Wasim was operating on ice at one end. Pakistan needed 22 off 20 balls. Wahab smoked 14 off eight, including a six and a four off Rashid Khan. Pakistan remained on course.This is the oldest member of Pakistan’s pace-bowling attack, No. 2 in the team overall, behind Mohammad Hafeez. He has ten wickets in the event, the second most for Pakistan, along with the rookie Shaheen Shah Afridi. The morning after the South Africa match he is slightly the worse for wear but happy to chat about how he is really joyful. About even being here, in this place at this time, even if with a body that rebels against his well-being.He went two years outside the Pakistan set-up in the white-ball game, after walking off injured in a 2017 Champions group game against India, saying to his newly signed manager, Ameem ul Haq, “Bro, my cricket is finish.”Two years later he is eating breakfast in the team’s Swiss Cottage hotel during the 2019 World Cup, the centre of attention of fans hovering in the lobby. “The last two years I cannot describe to you how frustrated I was, and how much disappointed, after the Champions Trophy.” The joke he had made to Ameem had come to haunt them. “Will you sign me when I will be out of the team?” Wahab had asked.In February 2017, Wahab lost his father and he struggled to deal with the loss as well as take on his responsibilities as the new head of his family•AFPBetween the Champions Trophy and the start of the 2019 World Cup, Wahab played two out of Pakistan’s 13 Tests (separated by a year, against Sri Lanka and Australia) but none of their 38 ODIs or 29 T20Is. The spiral, he says, began earlier in 2017, after the death of his father in February.”It broke me,” he says, “because I loved my father dearly and he had never put any responsibility on my shoulders – not me or anyone in the house. After he died, I had to take responsibility and deal with everything.”On a cricket field, Wahab has often had the appearance and demeanour of the sagacious, weary older cousins to be found in large South Asian families. The kind who step in when the over-excitable whippets around them land themselves in a jam and find a way to get them out of trouble. Like death-overs wicket-takers who emphatically end games. After the death of his father, Wahab stepped away from cricket to do that in real life.ALSO READ: Wahab Riaz determined to prove Mickey Arthur wrong at the World CupWhen on tour in the West Indies, the time-zone difference didn’t stop the worried or tearful phone calls from home. He says it took him close to about eight months to cope with what was demanded of him as the oldest male and head of his extended family. By the time he got a grip on it all, it was too late. “I lost my place in the Pakistan team because I was not concentrating that much on cricket.”It was Ameem, he says, who pushed him to find his way back into the sport – by responding to the invite he had received from the Caribbean Premier League.”Whatever cricket I played, whether it was domestic cricket or league cricket, I [knew I] should focus on the thought that it would make me play for my country. Giving performances in all these leagues would get me back into the Pakistan team.”Wahab flung himself into cricket whenever and wherever. In the two years between the end of the Champions Trophy and his inclusion in the Pakistan World Cup team, he played 109 first-class and List A matches across continents for seven teams other than Pakistan and Pakistan A.