How
Haseeb Hameed, the boy of the old world, found his place in the new |
Haseeb Hameed's golden summer has fulfilled his
destiny as a cricketer for our times, whatever his future holds, writes Ben
Gardner (Wisden Cricket Monthly). |
The promise, the fall and then the rise. That’s
the story of Haseeb Hameed, several times over. “One thing I’ve prided myself
on from a young age is that my best years were after my worst years,” he said
back in 2020, just as he was beginning to remake himself at Trent Bridge, and
just as the world was returning to normal, but still reeling from what had
just happened. Now he has had, unequivocally, his best year: a new personal
record for runs in a County Championship season, captaining Nottinghamshire
to their first title in 15 years. Hameed is one of just six captains to lift
the trophy in the club’s history. He has dismantled the Surrey dynasty and in
doing so confirmed himself as one of the domestic game’s pivotal modern
figures, a cricketer for our times and to provide hope for the future.
And yet as all this was going on, the world and
the game was changing. The joy of watching Hameed in those early days was to
wonder if everything might be easy forever, that if you worked hard and
followed the rules, you’d be alright. It couldn’t last. He brought up his
first first-class hundred on the day of the Brexit referendum. That Test
debut came just as it was becoming clear that Donald Trump had won the 2016
US Presidential election. Here came the chaos age. The social contract was
broken, and so too was the batter’s deal, the one that posited that the game
was about control, that all you really needed was a sure defence and an even
temperament. Wickets worsened. Seam overtook swing. The ball
could move either way or go straight through you, with no way to tell which
it would do. There is a sadness that the world as we knew it was gone, and,
for a while, Hameed struggled to move with the times.
|
On arrival at Notts, head coach Peter Moores took
the opposite approach. “Young players, the ones that are destined for great
things, bounce back,” he said. “We believe that's what's going to happen with
Haseeb.” In truth, both Notts and Hameed needed rebuilding. Notts had just
been relegated for the second time in four seasons, with their only Division
One survival in that time coming when level on points with Lancs. Moores, who
has described his partnership with Hameed as “like finding a soulmate”, has
resurrected both.
|
There have still been bad days mixed among the
good. 2021 brought two hundreds in a game against Worcestershire, a century
against the touring Indians, and then an England recall. In hindsight, and
even at the time, it felt too soon, accelerated by the struggles of Joe
Root’s side, the paucity of other options, and an overeagerness to capitalise
on a special talent finding its way again. Hameed was bowled by the first
ball of his comeback, and while he made two fifties in his next two Tests,
these gave way to 80 runs combined in four games in Australia, the Covid
bubbles taking their toll as Australia’s all-time greats swarmed. This time,
however, international disappointment didn’t disrupt his domestic bliss at
Notts. “One thing I've always been able to count on, thankfully, is finding a
way to get back up from rock bottom,” he told ESPNcricinfo.
Hameed insists the England story isn’t yet done,
and why should it be? A decade in, he is still only 28, not that old but
certainly wise. He is now established as the county game’s premier player. As
he well knows, Ashes tours often bring upheaval. He should be best placed to
benefit. But whatever the future holds, Hameed will always have this season
and this title. Those great things for which he was destined have been
achieved. |
A superb season, up there with Sobers 1968, Rice 1981, Hadlee 1984, Stephenson and Randall both 1988, for me.
ReplyDelete82 NOT OUT
ReplyDeleteQuestion
If Peter Moores had not signed a new two year Notts contract recently would Haseed have besn unsettled enough to seek pastures new ? Both were evidently out of contract at this seasons end .
That's the $64 000 question. Where might PM have gone and would HH have followed him?
DeleteIt's all academic now.
82 NOT OUT
ReplyDeleteWell we have kept them both . PM said in an interview that the Notts Captain was his soulmate .
So if one went , the other could well have followed .
Good job the DOC got his big cheque book out and got them to sign across the dotted line .