 Waqar  Younis, the former Pakistan fast bowler and bowling coach, would be  open to the prospect of taking on a broader coaching role with the  Pakistan side if he were approached. Waqar was bowling and fielding  coach with Pakistan during the disastrous trip to Australia, but was  appointed for that series only. His immediate future options are open  for now, but he has said he would love to coach the senior side on a  longer-term basis.
Waqar  Younis, the former Pakistan fast bowler and bowling coach, would be  open to the prospect of taking on a broader coaching role with the  Pakistan side if he were approached. Waqar was bowling and fielding  coach with Pakistan during the disastrous trip to Australia, but was  appointed for that series only. His immediate future options are open  for now, but he has said he would love to coach the senior side on a  longer-term basis. Though the Pakistan board has not said so openly, it is acknowledged  that they are looking for a new coach to replace Intikhab Alam. Nothing  will be officially announced until the inquiry committee set up to look  into the Australian tour reaches a conclusion and that has been delayed  till after Pakistan returns from a short trip to Dubai, where they play  England in two Twenty20s. 
The PCB has already contacted -and  been turned down by - Greg Chappell and senior officials have said  they are willing to look abroad as well as locally. The Pakistan post is  not a particularly attractive one for a foreigner: an unstable  administration and security concerns decree as much, so a local option  may well have to be the way forward. Ijaz Ahmed is with the senior side  in Dubai as a batting and fielding trainer and his name has also come  up, after taking the Under-19 team to a World Cup final. 
"If offered I would love to take on the role of coach," Waqar told Media. "Pakistan cricket remains my 
absolute passion and number one  priority. I don't want to do it on an appointment or short-term basis  though. I'd like to have time to work with the boys, to really be able  to plan ahead." Waqar's first stint as bowling coach was between March 2006 and January  2007 and though it didn't end well, his role and contribution was widely  acknowledged, especially by bowlers such as Umar Gul and  Naved-ul-Hasan. "I enjoyed that stint when I was with [Bob] Woolmer,  though I worked with limited resources then and in a limited role," he  said. "It would make more sense to have a broader role and greater  authority if I do work with the side again." 
Even as the inevitable finger-pointing and blame game swiftly followed  the whitewash in Australia Waqar has remained silent, instead quietly  handing in his own report of the tour to the inquiry committee.  Surprisingly, he wasn't asked to appear before it, though Intikhab,  Aaqib Javed [assistant coach] and Abdur Raquib [team manager] have all  been summoned by the committee. 
"I said what I wanted to say in the report and gave it in" Waqar said.  "I just want to help make things better and not point fingers at anyone  in particular. We lost the series and my report says why I think we  lost. I have given some suggestions as well. 
"Pakistan plays best when they do with passion, like we used to when we  were playing, that aggression and that Pakistani-ness. There was a lot  of stuff happening off the field as well in those days, but when it came  to matters on the field, we always had that hunger to just go out and  play as well as we could for Pakistan." 
It is believed Waqar met Ijaz Butt, the PCB chairman, during a short  trip to Pakistan though it is unclear whether possible roles have been  discussed. Butt refused to confirm whether a meeting had taken place,  saying only that he "meet[s] any number of ex-Test players to take their  inputs. I don't want to comment on something that will only be decided  once the committee's work is concluded." 
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