Crafty Azmatullah Omarzai on his way to be Afghanistan's own Hardik Pandya

Effective with new ball and handy down the order with the bat, he has already shone on the biggest stage for his team

Deivarayan Muthu22-Oct-2023An allrounder who can bat in the top seven and bowl crucial overs is on the wish list of every captain in white-ball cricket. But such multi-dimensional cricketers are quite rare these days. India’s Hardik Pandya is the gold standard for that breed in white-ball cricket, and his recent injury has only amplified his value to the team. The only way to replace Hardik is by picking a player of each discipline, which isn’t possible in an XI.Afghanistan, though, don’t have to worry too much about the balance of their side as they have a fit and firing Azmatullah Omarzai at their disposal. Omarzai is only 23, and has played only 17 ODIs so far, but has already shown potential to become Afghanistan’s Hardik in the future. He can operate with the new ball, club big sixes lower down the order, and even slide up the order and accumulate more steadily, like he did against India in Delhi. Afghanistan’s team management has seen enough of those skills to invest in him and relegate the more experienced Gulbadin Naib to the reserves.Omarzai had started his career primarily as a batter, with bowling only being his secondary skill. In his first T20 in 2018, in the Afghanistan Premier League (APL), he didn’t even bowl a single over. In the Under-19 World Cup in New Zealand in the same year, he bowled only 16.4 overs in four games. Five years on, it’s no longer his secondary skill. He has impressed Sachin Tendulkar so much that his wrist position reminds Tendulkar of Bhuvneshwar Kumar.