Can we pause for a moment and try and take stock of Mohammad Nabi’s ridiculous career?

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Mohammad Nabi didn’t play for Afghanistan against Scotland in April 2019. Nothing too unusual there. Nabi had been at the IPL, playing for Sunrisers Hyderabad, and they’d qualified for the closing stages.

Except it is unusual. It’s highly unusual. It was Afghanistan’s 112th one-day international (ODI) and Mohammed Nabi played in all of the first 111. Every single one.

The IPL went well

Nabi took eight wickets in eight games at the IPL and the knock-out match was the first he’d played that Sunrisers Hyderabad didn’t win. He was fasting for Ramadan that day.

We can’t function or interact with other human beings in a remotely civil manner if we haven’t eaten. Nabi made 20 off 13 balls and then opened the bowling, conceding 28 off four.

Throughout the tournament, he conceded just 6.65 runs an over. Only Ravindra Jadeja and his Afghanistan team-mate Rashid Khan took more wickets with a lower economy rate.

The man’s a star.

One to Nelson

Nabi made 58 in Afghanistan’s first one-day international, an 89-run win over Scotland in April 2009. He made 40 and took 1-47 in the 111th, a five-wicket defeat to Ireland.

Just to reiterate, he played every single game for them in between.

Nabi and Afghanistan have travelled some distance from one to Nelson, but the story begins before that.

The documentary Out of the Ashes opens with Afghanistan’s ICC World Cricket League Division Five win back in 2008, where they scuffled past the likes of Jersey and Botswana.

Nabi played in all seven of Afghanistan’s matches in that competition. He scored 108 runs and took 10 wickets, the second-most for Afghanistan in each – which is a very Nabi way of going about things. Our man doesn’t quite make the headlines, but at some point you look back and realise the weight of what he’s done over the years could probably sink a continent.

But this wasn’t the start. Nabi was playing for Afghanistan before that. His first match was in 2003, against Rahim Yar Khan Cricket Association, in one of Pakistan’s domestic competitions. He top-scored with 61.

The man has grown as the Afghanistan cricket team has grown. He learnt the game as a refugee in Peshawar during the civil war and returned to Afghanistan and bought cricket gear from Pakistan and India so that he could carry on playing. Since then it’s been on and on, and up and up, to full one-day international status, the IPL, Test cricket and now the World Cup. At some point in the middle of all this, Nabi’s father was kidnapped and held for two months by a bunch of goons who were looking for a ransom.

It’s just insane.

Mohammed Nabi might just be the most remarkable cricketer playing today.

Mohammad Nabi.

First published in May 2019.

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9 comments

  1. I feel like this is one of those remarkable tribute posts that needs to end with just the name of the player repeated for emphasis, to really underline how significant their contribution has been, as is sometimes the style with this website.

    Mohammed Nabi.

    1. You’re right.

      There’s additional editing too because we’d ended each of our England World Cup player profiles in that style and now feel that it’s unjustified.

  2. He also played half a season for Barnes in the Middlesex league in 2007. And was amaze-balls. He literally hit the ball into another postcode against Shepherds Bush (a ground that’s on the border of a postcode – but it’s still a mighty blow).

    One of our (Barnes’) players said that he’d like to become his agent… how we laughed. So the player didn’t become his agent. I’d just like to say sorry now.

  3. That is great. We presume you mean W3 to W4 or N2 or something, as full postcodes only stretch a few doors anyway.

      1. In response to Sam: focusing on the cultural anxiety that surrounds bias within language, especially within the media, Agnew chose a rant rather than measured debate. Also, his repeated use of the word to describe Liew was obviously extreme. One needs a certain gravitas to be called a c***.

    1. I think DC must mean W3 to W12, as the latter is the Shepherd’s Bush postcode but the club is on the eastern fringe of W3.

      Noddyland (Daisy’s house) is on the western fringe of W3. WE describe that place as our country residence and the Flat in Notting Hill gate (W2) as the city quarters.

      That makes Shepherd’s Bush the suburbs I suppose. Quite right. Inner London suburb too. Well street. Daisy and I went there to the theatre on Saturday:

      http://ianlouisharris.com/2019/05/11/class-by-iseult-golden-david-horan-bush-theatre-11-may-2019/

      Still hanging around Barnes, DC? A very pleasant area if I might say so.

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