One is actually the democracy here, you know, people are, people assume that this election means that there is democracy in Pakistan. There is no democracy.
I believed in myself. I never imagined myself as just an ordinary player.
I have always believed that one should not be scared of losing, I think that really is the key.
At the moment we have a ruling class that has one law and the people the other.
If your house is burning, wouldn't you try and put out the fire?
What I perceive, is above all justice, where everyone has the same law.
But I don't need to use politics as a way of making money.
During my 21 years of playing cricket, I have never been approached by anyone or offered a bribe.
And when the pressure was on us, the team handled it very well. One has to learn to play well under pressure.
In fact the experience at Oxford has really helped me later in life.
I feel an independent accountability commission should audit all government services.
So for us any gain we had in election, one vote that we got, was a win.
I did not lose this election, or had a bad result compared with what we might have got because of Islam.
Just give it everything you've got and bowl as fast as possible.
What most people didn't realize in the Western countries is that here its not a question of having supporters, its a question of getting these votes to the polling stations.
The future of Indo-Pak cricket will depend on how the peace process goes.
People didn't wasn't the People's party to come in to power again, so they saw NS a viable alternative not us, because everyone knew we were not ready.
In Pakistan politics is hereditary.