Ex-Pakistani Captain Reacts to Wasim Akram’s Claim “Treated Me Like A Servant”

In his autobiography Sultan: A Memoir, Pakistan’s greatest pace bowler Wasim Akram criticized Saleem Malik’s behavior while the two were teammates.

In his autobiography Sultan: A Memoir, Pakistan’s greatest pace bowler Wasim Akram criticized Saleem Malik’s behavior while the two were teammates. The senior teammate Malik, according to Akram, who made his international debut in 1984, forced him to give massages and clean his clothes and boots.

“He would exploit the fact that I was his junior. He was unfavorable, egotistical, and treated me like a slave. He insisted I give him a massage, cleaned his boots and clothes, and “Read a portion of the autobiography. When Ramiz, Tahir, Mohsin, and Shoaib Mohammad, some of the team’s younger members, invited me to nightclubs, “I was pissed off.”

Malik has now answered the accusations. “He did not pick up when I tried to call him. I’ll question him about the motivation behind his writing “According to a quote from the former batter provided to Cricket Pakistan.

He responded to Akram’s claim that Malik had asked him to wash his clothes by saying that Akram only needed to use the washing machine. It’s not like he washed it by hand, Malik remarked.

“I wouldn’t have given him the chance to bowl if I had a narrow mind. I’ll ask him why he made such negative comments about me.”In his autobiography, Akram previously discussed his cocaine addiction. In a recent interview with the Grade Cricketers’ Podcast, Akram disclosed that he was forced to spend two and a half months in a rehab facility in Pakistan.

“You want to try it?, someone at a party in England asked. Yes, I acknowledged that I was retired. Then a line turned into a gram. I returned to Pakistan. Although it wasn’t known what it was, it was accessible. I realized that in order for me to function, which also meant that I needed to socialize, I needed it.It continued to get worse. Young children were mine. I was seriously hurting my deceased wife. We’d argue with each other. I need assistance, she said.”

“She said you could go to a rehab facility. I agreed to go there for a month, but against my will, they kept me there for two and a half months. Apparently, Pakistan is the only country where that is legal. That did me no good. I experienced a rebellion when I left. I stayed in that awful place against my will, it’s my money “He went on to add.

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