Cricinfo



Cricinfo Magazine

home Cricinfo 3D Audio Video Photos Fantasy Slogout Help and Feedback

 

Live Scorecards
Fixtures | Results
3D Animation
India v Australia
Bangladesh v N Zealand
Stanford 20/20 for 20
ICC Intercontinental Cup
ICC WCL Division 4
Indian Cricket League
Current and Future Tours
News
Photos | Wallpapers
Cricinfo Magazine
Match/series archive
Records
Statsguru
Players/Officials
Grounds
Women's Cricket
ICC
Rankings/Ratings
Wisden Almanack
Games
Fantasy Cricket
Slogout
Daily Newsletter
Toolbar
Widgets


2005 in review


The weird and wonderful world of Shoaib Akhtar

The agony, the ecstasy, the comedy

Last October, I wrote about Shoaib Akhtar. He had turned 30 in August and the previous 18 months had been rocky. In April 2004, after the India series, he appeared before a medical commission, accused (by his captain and others) of lying about an injury. A new coach came, and issues soon did too. He went to Australia, lit up half the Test series, ignored the other half, and came back hamstrung, at odds with the establishment, and in a huff.


Inside Cricinfo Magazine


Sonn slams 'overblown' ICC administration

Sree swings the zeitgeist

'Your thought process changes'

Muddy waters and mothers-in-law





Cricinfo Magazine cover - June 2006 © Getty Images
Click here to view an enlarged version of the cover

Click here to download the contents page

In the June 2006 issue: Tendulkar on living with injury, and his new avatar as a mentor; BC Pires on what Brian Lara's third coming as captain might mean; India's hottest prospects; Scyld Berry on why the ICC's new guidelines for pitches are wrong-headed; how Sreesanth has got Kerala interested in cricket; the weird and wonderful world of Shoaib Akhtar; Gideon Haigh on tour diaries; Percy Sonn profiled; plus interviews with Jack Russell and Ramesh Powar.

January 2006 issue
February 2006 issue
March 2006 issue
April 2006 issue
May 2006 issue


 
 
 
 
Top 5 player searches
Most read stories