Context Within the Selected Squad
Any merit discussion must also consider how a player compares to others in the squad. When the batting averages of several selected players are examined, Shamyl’s numbers appear competitive and in some cases stronger.
| Player | First-Class Avg | List-A Avg |
|---|---|---|
| Shamyl Hussain | 45.88 | 46.33 |
| Sahibzada Farhan | 44.82 | 41.80 |
| Maaz Sadaqat | 38.18 | 38.88 |
| Abdul Samad | 13.00 | 35.42 |
| Ghazi Ghouri | 41.26 | 20.00 |
Senior players such as Mohammad Rizwan, Salman Ali Agha, and Hussain Talat understandably remain separate comparisons due to their significantly larger sample sizes and international experience.
Yet among the younger and emerging batters, Shamyl’s averages are undeniably among the strongest.
The Misplaced Narrative of Nepotism
The idea that a cricketer’s selection is automatically illegitimate because of his parent’s profession represents a dangerous precedent. If familial association alone were enough to invalidate a player’s credentials, then performance metrics would become irrelevant.
Criticism of journalists, analysts, or public figures is a normal part of democratic discourse. However, projecting those disagreements onto their children—particularly when those children have built careers in entirely different professions—crosses into intellectual dishonesty.
The more constructive approach is straightforward: evaluate the player through the scoreboard.
Runs, averages, strike rates, match situations, and consistency across seasons form the only legitimate basis of cricketing judgment.
































































