But it’s one thing to run through teams on helpful tracks or when there’s support from the other end, and another to do it on your own. Shiva Jayaraman from ESPNcricinfo’s stats team has come up with an ingenious way to separate one from the other, and Akhtar finds a place in this next table too. His strike rate, in innings where he took four or more wickets, was more than three times better than the collective strike rate of his bowling colleagues. It puts him second behind Ray Lindwall in the all-time list.

It’s an imperfect measure, of course, penalising bowlers who are part of better and deeper bowling attacks, but it says something that in the Tests where Akhtar burst through the opposition at the rate of a wicket every 23 balls, Pakistan’s other bowlers took one every 75 balls. When other bowlers struggled, he often found a way.At his peak the pace was often enough, but bowling that fast took a lot out of him, physically and mentally, as he revealed to Sidharth Monga in this fascinating interview five years ago. “I used to crawl to my bathroom every day of my career,” he said. “I used to limp out of my bed. I can’t remember a day I didn’t have pain in my knees for the last 18 years.”Akhtar knew he needed other tricks apart from pace, and he certainly had them: swing, seam – look at this ball to Chris Gayle, in Sharjah of all places – the use of angles, the ability to manipulate batsmen with his lengths. Watch him bowl Matthew Hayden from around the wicket here. The late swing is a joy in itself, but what you won’t see is the short balls he bowled before this ball, to push Hayden back and stop him from stepping out of his crease as he did time and again to fast bowlers.ALSO READ: ‘You have to be mad to be a fast bowler’ (2015)Then there was the Akhtar slower ball. No bowler has ever delivered this variation with a bigger drop-off in speed from their stock ball, and he bowled it with no discernible change in arm action. England, fresh off an Ashes victory they still haven’t stopped talking about, had no answer to it during their 2005-06 tour of Pakistan. Akhtar bowled many quicker spells through his career, but few approached this one in Lahore for the bafflement he caused. You want to watch this, but maybe not if you’re Michael Vaughan, Ian Bell, or Liam Plunkett.That Test match was Akhtar’s 39th. He only played seven more, the last of them on an India tour in 2007, where he outbowled most of his colleagues on largely unhelpful pitches. The skills hadn’t gone away but the body was uncooperative. He continued playing ODIs, sporadically, until the 2011 World Cup, and that was that.Forty-six Tests. Umar Gul, the perennially crocked Umar Gul, played 47.Even with all his injuries, Akhtar could have probably squeezed in a few more, what with all the bans and disciplinary troubles. But it’s a marvel, come to think of it, that he left himself enough room to squeeze in all those spells, and leave us with all those memories.Come to Think of it

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