• Misbah-ul-Haq and Younis Khan are not just Pakistan’s huge pillars of batting; they are icons who have given Pakistan its unique identity in this decade. Of course, they are professional batsmen first and foremost, and their contributions in terms of runs have been expectedly bulky. Younis possesses the better stats among the two; his quality marked out by his longer Test career — it will be 118 Tests to Misbah’s 75 at the end of the series against West Indies.
  • But if Pakistan has bloomed in Tests in the past, Misbah and Younis have been instrumental in that rise. Misbah and Younis are batting architects of the formidable fortress Pakistan has built in its adopted home in the United Arab Emirates. The two form the highest-scoring pair of all time for their country — with 3205 runs at an average of almost 70. Twenty-two of the 52 partnerships they have had together have yielded at least 50 runs. The conversion rate is good too — with 15 hundred-run partnerships and seven fifty-run partnerships.
  • They are eminent authorities of Test match batting. How effective have they been? The team has won series after series encountering minor speed-breakers on the way. Under Misbah, Pakistan won five of its first seven series, before reverses in Sri Lanka and South Africa in the 2012-13 season.
  • Barring the five Test losses in a row leading up to the series against West Indies — with series losses in New Zealand and Australia — Pakistan has had an almost unbeatable aura. The recent rot in Oceania was stemmed promptly by the resilience of the familiar men — Misbah and Younis — both of whom pitched in with meaningful contributions with the bat for a handy first-innings lead that paved the way for a seven-wicket victory in Kingston recently.
  • The team was undefeated in 2015. It would have ensured a defeat-free 2014 as well had it perhaps not been for the presence of another solid pair in Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara for Sri Lanka. As it turned out, Sri Lanka was hurt by Jayawardene’s retirement, and Pakistan promptly turned the tables next year.
  • Besides resolute batting, Misbah and Younis have another aspect in common as cricketers — fitness. By far the oldest members of their side last year — Misbah was 41 and Younis was 38 — they were classified as the fittest members, after an official fitness Test was conducted under the aegis of the Pakistan Cricket Board. Younis, the seemingly perennial slip-fielder, has taken 133 catches in his career — the 14th best. He takes 0.612 catches per innings, a statistic better than five of those above him in the list.
  • However, besides the obvious cricketing expertise, the two have given a psychological boost to their side’s other members with capable leadership and mentoring. The fuss-free attitude of the current side that has given it stability and success has been developed, at least in part, by the shepherding act of the duo. Much credit has to go to them for taking their team to the No. 1 spot in the rankings last year, fighting the odds of the Indian Premier League exclusion and the complete evaporation of international cricket in their country.
  • Pakistan looked messy when it was plagued by the spot-fixing scandal of 2010. That it emerged out of it in such a positive fashion was largely courtesy of the presence of these two men at the centre of its rebuilding efforts. — Abhishek Mukherjee