In an extraordinary transformation story bridging two cricket-crazed nations, Pakistani spinner Usman Tariq has emerged as an unexpected weapon ahead of Sunday’s high-voltage clash against India at the T20 World Cup. The 30-year-old’s journey from a sales job in Dubai to international cricket stardom began with an unlikely source of inspiration: the 2016 Bollywood biopic “M.S. Dhoni: The Untold Story.”
Tariq had shelved his cricket ambitions to pursue a conventional career in the UAE until watching the film about India’s World Cup-winning captain. The narrative of perseverance, rejection, and ultimate glory resonated so deeply that he abandoned his sales position to pursue cricket professionally. “I had left behind thinking of making a name in cricket,” Tariq revealed to AFP, “but one day I watched this film and it convinced me that I could also do the same.”
The double-jointed spinner’s unique bowling action has generated both fascination and controversy. With an exaggerated pause followed by a sling-shot release, his technique has been reported as illegal twice in recent years but was ultimately cleared by the International Cricket Council laboratory. Despite skepticism from players like England’s Tom Banton and Australia’s Cameron Green, who mimicked the action before the World Cup, the bowling has received validation from experts including India’s legendary spinner Ravichandran Ashwin.
“I believe that it is entirely legal,” Ashwin declared on social media, providing technical analysis supporting his assessment. Tariq attributes his unusual delivery to a rare physical characteristic: “I have two corners of my bowling arm elbow, which is rare. I have been cleared twice so I am confident that it’s legal.”
Since making his international debut just three months ago, Tariq has taken 11 wickets in four T20 internationals, including a hat-trick against Zimbabwe. His match-defining performance of 3-27 against USA in Colombo this week has positioned him as what Pakistan skipper Salman Agha describes as the team’s “X-factor and key weapon” against their arch-rivals.
The spinner’s rapid ascent through the ranks saw him take 20 wickets in last year’s Caribbean Premier League, eventually forcing his way into the national team selection—news he received while preparing for his wedding. “I thought it was a prank,” Tariq recalled. “But it was true so I think my wife brought luck for me.”
From the sales floors of Dubai to the world’s most celebrated cricket grounds, Tariq’s story continues to unfold, proving that sometimes life imitates art in the most extraordinary ways.
