For months, Indian cricket fans have watched with growing frustration as one of the nation’s most lethal fast bowlers sits on the sidelines—not due to injury this time, but seemingly by choice. Despite bowling **206.1 overs** across India’s premier domestic tournaments in the 2025–26 season, **Mohammed Shami** remains conspicuously absent from national squads. And the man at the center of this controversy? Chief selector **Ajit Agarkar**, who keeps repeating the same line: Shami needs to “play some cricket.” But when exactly does “some” become “enough”? If 145.2 overs in the Ranji Trophy, 26.5 in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, and 34.2 (and counting) in the ongoing Vijay Hazare Trophy don’t qualify, then the definition of “some cricket” needs a serious overhaul.
Mohammed Shami didn’t just dip his toes back into competitive cricket—he dived in headfirst. Representing Bengal in the 2025–26 domestic season, he has been a workhorse:
That’s a total of **206.1 competitive overs** in just under three months. For context, many frontline international pacers rarely bowl more than 100 overs in a single domestic season. Shami isn’t just “playing”—he’s dominating.
When pressed repeatedly by journalists, Ajit Agarkar—India’s chairman of selectors—has maintained a consistent, almost robotic response: Shami “needs to play some cricket” before being considered . This line, initially understandable post-injury, now feels increasingly hollow. The selection panel, which includes veterans like Salil Ankola and Subroto Banerjee, appears to be applying a double standard. Other returning players with far less match time have been fast-tracked into squads, while Shami, with his proven international pedigree and stellar domestic form, is left waiting.
This raises a critical question: is this really about cricket, or is there something else at play? [INTERNAL_LINK:bcci-selection-controversies]
Let’s not forget who we’re talking about. Mohammed Shami is not just another pacer. He is India’s **leading wicket-taker in the 2023 ODI World Cup** (24 wickets) and a key architect of India’s pace revolution in Test cricket overseas . His ability to swing the new ball, reverse the old one, and execute yorkers under pressure is unmatched in the current Indian setup.
With the 2027 ODI World Cup on the horizon and a packed Test calendar, India cannot afford to keep its most experienced and skillful fast bowler in the cold. His presence would add balance, mentorship, and match-winning firepower to any XI.
Agarkar and the BCCI have hinted at “fitness concerns,” yet there’s no public data to support this. Shami has bowled long spells without visible discomfort. His economy rates and wicket-taking ability suggest peak physical condition. In fact, the National Cricket Academy (NCA) cleared him for competitive cricket months ago .
If fitness were truly the issue, wouldn’t the BCCI release a medical bulletin—just as they did for Jasprit Bumrah or KL Rahul in the past? The silence speaks volumes.
Cricket pundits are increasingly vocal. Former India opener Virender Sehwag recently tweeted, “If Shami bowls 200+ overs and still isn’t ‘match-fit,’ then maybe our definition of fitness needs fixing” . Even international voices like Michael Vaughan have questioned the logic behind his exclusion .
On social media, the hashtag **#RecallShami** has trended multiple times, with fans pointing out the irony: a bowler being told to “play more” while he’s already outperforming his peers in the domestic circuit.
The upcoming home series against Australia and England will be the ultimate litmus test. If Shami continues his scintillating form in the Vijay Hazare Trophy—and there’s no reason to believe he won’t—the pressure on Agarkar’s panel will become unbearable. The selectors must decide: are they building a team for the future, or clinging to an arbitrary criteria that defies logic?
The phrase “play some cricket” has run its course. Mohammed Shami has done far more than that—he’s answered every single doubt with his actions. To continue the **Ajit Agarkar ignore Mohammed Shami** narrative isn’t just unfair; it’s detrimental to Indian cricket. In a sport where experience, skill, and resilience are priceless, sidelining a bowler of Shami’s caliber is a luxury Team India simply cannot afford. The time for excuses is over. The time for recall is now.
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