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All that time off, Haris acknowledges, may not have been such a bad thing. “I was injured the last few months but if you believe in yourself, then the layoff can be a blessing in disguise,” he said at a press conference ahead of Pakistan’s third T20I against England in Cardiff. “Because you have time to recover and reassess your gameplans. I felt good coming back to cricket. When you play for your country, it makes you very proud.”
His comeback at Edgbastan was solid, if short of spectacular. He was the pick of the fast bowlers, taking two wickets for 34 in his allocated spell. It included an ill-advised Powerplay over – by far Rauf’s weakest phase – that conceded 17. For the rest of his spell he maintained consistent pace and accuracy, and went at less than a run a ball while picking up two wickets.,
It wouldn’t ultimately be enough as Pakistan fell comfortably short in the end. “When you lose a game it hurts, but as a team, we are confident,” he said. “We feel we can beat any opposition on any day. We’ve done it in the past, too. When you make mistakes you learn and try not to repeat those mistakes. We’re looking to play better in the next few games and make a comeback.
“The camp is relaxed. We’re enjoying ourselves. We’re trying to follow our gameplans and execute them well. The results haven’t often been in our favour recently but if you stick to your plans they can sometimes follow.”
Rauf admits winning the next two games would give Pakistan much-needed confidence, but insists these games are about more than just that. “Before the World Cup, if you win a series it gives you confidence, but even if you lose you understand where you made mistakes and you learn from them,” he said. “This series is difficult, but we’ll try to win it. The focus is of course on the World Cup, which we aim to win to make our country proud.”
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