<p>When Mohammad Amir bowls against England in the first Twenty20 international on Friday, he may cast his mind back 10 years to the spot-fixing scandal that cost him the chance to become one of Pakistan's greatest players.</p>.<p>Exactly a decade earlier, on August 28, 2010, Amir's exciting young career came to an abrupt halt when he was caught bowling no-balls to order at Lord's, set up by a British newspaper sting.</p>.<p>The 18-year-old, his new-ball partner Mohammad Asif and Pakistan captain Salman Butt were banned from cricket for five years and handed jail sentences.</p>.<p>Amir, by far the youngest of the three, received widespread sympathy and he was granted a return to international cricket in 2016. But he had lost vital time to develop, leaving many to wonder what his career might have become.</p>.<p>"It was such a pity losing those years," former Pakistan coach Mickey Arthur told AFP.</p>.<p>"He was on the cusp of being the next best thing and to lose those five years cost him severely... but saying that he is still a very special bowler.</p>.<p>"Amir is one of the best I have worked with," added Arthur, who is now with Sri Lanka and has also coached South Africa and Australia.</p>.<p>Pakistan cricket statistician Mazhar Arshad has estimated that without his ban, Amir would have taken 250 wickets in both Tests and ODIs.</p>.<p>Only four players -- Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis, Imran Khan and Danish Kaneria -- have taken 250 Test wickets for Pakistan. Amir, now retired from Tests, has 119 in the long format and 81 in ODIs.</p>.<p>"Amir missed 43 Tests, 137 ODIs and 57 T20 internationals in those five years," said Arshad.</p>.<p>"Projection-wise he would have reached 250 in both Tests and ODIs and, who knows maybe, won Pakistan the World Cup in 2011 (when Pakistan lost to India in the semi-finals)."</p>.<p>Playing international cricket is already a phenomenal achievement for Amir, who grew up in a humble village called Changa Bangyaal two hours' drive south of Pakistan's capital, Islamabad.</p>.<p>There he learned the game playing 'tape-ball' cricket, bowling a tennis ball wrapped in electric tape with a pile of bricks used as wickets.</p>.<p>But soon his talent was spotted at the Asif Bajwa academy in Rawalpindi and Amir was picked out by Wasim, Pakistan's legendary left-arm pacer.</p>.<p>Amir made huge strides, claiming 55 wickets in the 2008 first-class season, paving his way to selection for Pakistan's victorious Twenty20 World Cup campaign in England in 2009.</p>.<p>Former Pakistan skipper Ramiz Raja said Amir's talent was clear for all to see.</p>.<p>"When I first saw him I found him crafty and skilful," said Raja.</p>.<p>"He was a quick learner and very skilful and had he not lost those five years he would have been a star in all formats."</p>.<p>A five-wicket burst at the MCG in 2009 and a seven-wicket haul in a neutral-venue game at Leeds in 2010 -- both against Australia -- heralded Amir's arrival on the Test scene.</p>.<p>Amir's pace, swing and wicket-taking ability were drawing comparisons with Wasim, and his status was rising with 19 wickets in four Tests against England -- until it all came crashing down at Lord's.</p>.<p>"A cricketer's life is very short, especially a fast bowler's career and a five-year gap did a lot of damage to my body," Amir admitted in a YouTube interview last month.</p>.<p>"My body just sort of shut down. When I returned in 2016, I played regularly and that took a toll on my body and that's why I retired from Test cricket."</p>.<p>Amir attracted criticism with the decision to step away from Tests last year, aged just 28. Bowling coach Waqar Younis accused him of "ditching the team".</p>.<p>But Amir, who helped Pakistan win the 2017 Champions Trophy final against India with a burst of 3-16, said one more world title would help him end his compromised career on a high.</p>.<p>"Whatever format I play in, I wear the Pakistan star on my chest. If I get 500 wickets in ODIs and T20Is and win one more title then I would think I have done justice to my career."</p>
<p>When Mohammad Amir bowls against England in the first Twenty20 international on Friday, he may cast his mind back 10 years to the spot-fixing scandal that cost him the chance to become one of Pakistan's greatest players.</p>.<p>Exactly a decade earlier, on August 28, 2010, Amir's exciting young career came to an abrupt halt when he was caught bowling no-balls to order at Lord's, set up by a British newspaper sting.</p>.<p>The 18-year-old, his new-ball partner Mohammad Asif and Pakistan captain Salman Butt were banned from cricket for five years and handed jail sentences.</p>.<p>Amir, by far the youngest of the three, received widespread sympathy and he was granted a return to international cricket in 2016. But he had lost vital time to develop, leaving many to wonder what his career might have become.</p>.<p>"It was such a pity losing those years," former Pakistan coach Mickey Arthur told AFP.</p>.<p>"He was on the cusp of being the next best thing and to lose those five years cost him severely... but saying that he is still a very special bowler.</p>.<p>"Amir is one of the best I have worked with," added Arthur, who is now with Sri Lanka and has also coached South Africa and Australia.</p>.<p>Pakistan cricket statistician Mazhar Arshad has estimated that without his ban, Amir would have taken 250 wickets in both Tests and ODIs.</p>.<p>Only four players -- Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis, Imran Khan and Danish Kaneria -- have taken 250 Test wickets for Pakistan. Amir, now retired from Tests, has 119 in the long format and 81 in ODIs.</p>.<p>"Amir missed 43 Tests, 137 ODIs and 57 T20 internationals in those five years," said Arshad.</p>.<p>"Projection-wise he would have reached 250 in both Tests and ODIs and, who knows maybe, won Pakistan the World Cup in 2011 (when Pakistan lost to India in the semi-finals)."</p>.<p>Playing international cricket is already a phenomenal achievement for Amir, who grew up in a humble village called Changa Bangyaal two hours' drive south of Pakistan's capital, Islamabad.</p>.<p>There he learned the game playing 'tape-ball' cricket, bowling a tennis ball wrapped in electric tape with a pile of bricks used as wickets.</p>.<p>But soon his talent was spotted at the Asif Bajwa academy in Rawalpindi and Amir was picked out by Wasim, Pakistan's legendary left-arm pacer.</p>.<p>Amir made huge strides, claiming 55 wickets in the 2008 first-class season, paving his way to selection for Pakistan's victorious Twenty20 World Cup campaign in England in 2009.</p>.<p>Former Pakistan skipper Ramiz Raja said Amir's talent was clear for all to see.</p>.<p>"When I first saw him I found him crafty and skilful," said Raja.</p>.<p>"He was a quick learner and very skilful and had he not lost those five years he would have been a star in all formats."</p>.<p>A five-wicket burst at the MCG in 2009 and a seven-wicket haul in a neutral-venue game at Leeds in 2010 -- both against Australia -- heralded Amir's arrival on the Test scene.</p>.<p>Amir's pace, swing and wicket-taking ability were drawing comparisons with Wasim, and his status was rising with 19 wickets in four Tests against England -- until it all came crashing down at Lord's.</p>.<p>"A cricketer's life is very short, especially a fast bowler's career and a five-year gap did a lot of damage to my body," Amir admitted in a YouTube interview last month.</p>.<p>"My body just sort of shut down. When I returned in 2016, I played regularly and that took a toll on my body and that's why I retired from Test cricket."</p>.<p>Amir attracted criticism with the decision to step away from Tests last year, aged just 28. Bowling coach Waqar Younis accused him of "ditching the team".</p>.<p>But Amir, who helped Pakistan win the 2017 Champions Trophy final against India with a burst of 3-16, said one more world title would help him end his compromised career on a high.</p>.<p>"Whatever format I play in, I wear the Pakistan star on my chest. If I get 500 wickets in ODIs and T20Is and win one more title then I would think I have done justice to my career."</p>