Imran Khan: The Cricketer, The Celebrity, The Politician. Christopher Sandford

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tour to bowl in a Gillette Cup tie against Sussex that ran long, thanks to rain. That would have made his schedule over the course of one six-day period: Saturday, Monday and Tuesday, captaining Oxford at Lord’s; Wednesday and Thursday, playing the knockout game at Hove; early Friday, reporting for international duty with Pakistan at Birmingham. On most of those days, Imran also had to give interviews, attend functions and generally roam around the country by British Rail. It was a full workload, even by his standards. The people who knew him best also knew how utterly unsparing of himself he was apt to be — how ‘he gave 200 per cent, whatever the competition’, as Wasim Raja put it. ‘No matter what anyone said, we felt he had a chance, because we knew Imran would work harder than anyone else.’ But even they didn’t know how hard he would work.

      Back in Oxford, Imran made a friend out of a fellow third-year student on his Politics and Economics course. Now a 55-year-old television pundit and author of various self-help books, he had heard that the ‘famous Khan’ could be a bit standoffish. He adds that when he met Imran for the first time he’d been expecting someone ‘as warm as a December night on an ice floe’, but in the event ‘he turned out to be almost absurdly polite, in that rather courtly way some Asians have. Between the accent and the blazer, he was almost like a Terry-Thomas stereotype. Better-looking, though.’ After banking his admittedly meagre appearance money from Pakistan and Worcestershire, Imran was able to rent a small flat close to Oxford town centre. There were framed hunting prints on the wall, a wolfskin rug and reportedly rather more in the way of furniture than the average student digs of the era. On several mornings in the autumn of 1974, a plump young woman with the word ‘IMRAN’ daubed on her forehead kept up a forlorn vigil outside the main gate at Keble (where, these days, her quarry rarely appeared), displaying a ‘Fatal Attraction’ form of obsession, erotomania, of which Imran would come to see more over the next 20 years. The trappings of fame were starting to come fast.

      The future Somerset and England bowler Vic Marks went up to Oxford in that same term. Thirty-five years on, he remains one of the game’s more astute critics. I asked him if at that stage in his university career Imran had ever appeared the least bit shy around his English teammates. ‘No,’ Marks replied. ‘More aloof.’ He added that Imran had been ‘hard on those he didn’t know and didn’t rate, declining to bowl them or encourage them … He knew he was better than the rest, [but] if he rated you he would try to help and advise.’ Still, at least one other colleague in the Oxford side remained bemused by Imran’s insecurity. ‘The guy generally had bags of self-confidence, sure, but oddly enough not when it came to his bowling. I thought he was a natural. Thousands of fans thought he was a natural. Just about every batsman he ever played against thought he was a natural. Imran remained unconvinced.’

      Perhaps Imran’s qualms had something to do with the distinctly mixed signals he was still getting from his two principal teams. At Worcester, he notes, ‘I [was] bullied into bowling medium pace line-and-length stuff which didn’t suit my temperament.’ The key message from Pakistan was very different. Imran was astonished and overjoyed when Intikhab had thrown him the ball early on in the Test series with England and told him to do what came naturally — but, whatever happened, ‘Make them jump around.’ (He did.) Indeed, Imran occasionally seemed to be in two minds about his bowling even when he was his own captain. He rarely appeared for Oxford in the 1975 season, thanks to a commendable and possibly justified concern about passing his finals. In one of the games he did play prior to the varsity match, against Derbyshire at Burton-on-Trent, Imran surprised both the Derby batsmen and his own team by persisting in his attempts to bowl a leg break, an effect that was uneasily like that of a champion shot-putter who’d strayed inadvertently on to a badminton court. It was a curious strategic decision, or so the Oxford men thought. As it turned out, it was a repeat experiment and nothing more. After Imran’s leg spin had gone for eight in two balls he turned around, muttered something to the non-striking batsman, and measured out his full international run. A few overs later, he had taken three of the first four Derbyshire wickets to fall.

      If his cricket career was somewhat erratic in the summer of 1975, his love life was a constant. Imran generally brought a ‘special’ girl with him to his matches, or even to watch him practise in the Parks nets. One female undergraduate recalls having feigned an interest in the game, ‘which I actually thought coma-inducing’, just to be near him. Imran made it immediately clear to his companion that he was a man of no small ambition, displaying ‘brass’ which impressed her. She wasn’t the only college girl who noticed the emerging star; a 21-year-old fellow politics student named Benazir Bhutto, the daughter of the former Pakistan president and serving prime minister, was ‘much taken’ by Imran’s obvious talent. The elegantly shod Bhutto did not go unnoticed herself. Then in her second year of residence at Lady Margaret Hall, she was intensely outspoken both about Pakistan’s place in the world and the role of women in society. Several of Bhutto’s already quite vocal critics pointed to her Dior wardrobe and liberated lifestyle as a political symbol of conspicuous consumption, or worse, on her part. A mutual acquaintance who falls into this category told me that Bhutto had been ‘visibly impressed’ by, or ‘infatuated’ with, Imran, and that she may have been among the first to dub him affectionately the ‘Lion of Lahore’. In any event it seems fairly clear that, for at least a month or two, the couple were close. There was a lot of ‘giggling’ and ‘blushing’ whenever they appeared together in public. It also seems fair to say that their relationship was ‘sexual’ in the sense that it could only have existed between a man and a woman. The reason some allowed themselves to suppose it went further was because, to quote one Oxford friend, ‘Imran slept with everyone’ — a gross calumny, but one takes the point — rather than because of any hard evidence of an affair. On balance, I rather doubt that Pakistan’s future prime minister and future cricket captain were ever anything more than good friends, and only for a term or two at that. Even in the morally libertine days of the mid-1970s, Imran’s Oxford love life soon attained legendary status. It was the beginning of a personal myth of sexuality that led some to credit him with literally scores of spurious ‘conquests’ in addition to the real, still quite impressive, total.

      Cricket’s first ever World Cup, staged in England, and in which Pakistan started among the favourites, probably wasn’t the best of times for Imran to be concentrating on his finals. Although not originally selected, he was called up to play for his country in their opening fixture against Australia at Headingley, on 7 June. In Imran’s account, he sat the first two of his five exams on the 6th, a Friday, took the evening train to Leeds and arrived at his team’s hotel at four o’clock the following morning, the day of the match.* Australia won by 73 runs, the Pakistanis, like so many others, having been done for pace by Lillee and Thomson. After an epic road-rail return journey some friends finally dropped Imran off in the centre of Oxford where, after going down with flu, he sat his final three papers just as his teammates were losing to the West Indies by one wicket, with two balls to spare, at Edgbaston. That concluded the Pakistanis’ World Cup. Under the circumstances, Imran did well to get a 2.1 for Politics, if only a Third in Economics. ‘I could have exceeded that,’ he remarks. Two days later he was back playing for his country in a meaningless victory over Sri Lanka. The West Indies went on to win the cup. In stark contrast to the protracted seven-week ordeal of the 2007 tournament, the entire competition was completed in 14 days, Pakistan’s campaign in just seven. Majid Khan, again back in charge of the team following an injury to Asif, had won himself a considerable reputation as a specialist in English conditions, as well as being something of a thinker. His own run-a-ball innings of 65 against Australia was a classic of its kind. But Majid’s tenure proved an only limited success, in part because up to half his men would be bickering with the other half at any given time. And even his fondest admirers have never maintained that he was a particularly charismatic or inspiring leader. Pakistan, then, returned home in June 1975 in some disarray. The board sacked Majid, and replaced him with Mushtaq.

      Imran left Oxford with a flourish, driving up in his new World Cup blazer, accompanied by his latest blonde, to play in his third varsity match at Lord’s. Several other admirers, both male and female, were seen to be waiting at the gate for a glimpse of their idol,

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