Friday, 22 November 2013

Waqar Younis

Waqar Younis Biography

Source(google.com.pk)
Waqar Younis Maitla is a former Pakistani right arm fast bowler born in Vehari Punjab. He is one of the top ten cricketers of all time and got worldwide fame. He is well known in cricket for his ability to “reverse swing a cricket ball” at high speed while bowling at cricket pitch. During his career he took “373 Test Wickets” and “416 One Day International Wickets”. Waqar Younis is considered as one of the best exponents of swing bowling delivery. He has a best strike rate for any bowler with more than “200 Test Wickets”.
Personal Information of Waqar Younis

Personal information
Full name Waqar Younis Maitla
Born 16 November 1971 (age 39)
Vehari, Punjab, Pakistan

Height 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Batting style Right hand bat
Bowling style Right arm fast
Role Bowler
Domestic Team Information
Domestic team information
Years Team
2003-2004 Allied Bank Limited
2003 Warwickshire
2001-2003 National Bank of Pakistan
2000-2001 Lahore Blues
1999-2000 REDCO Pakistan Limited
1998-1999 Rawalpindi
1998-1999 Karachi
1997-1998 Glamorgan
1990-1993 Surrey
1988-1989, 1996-1997 United Bank Limited
1987-1988, 1997-1998 Multan
International Information
International information
National side Pakistan
Test debut (cap 111) 15 November 1989 v India
Last Test 2 January 2003 v South Africa
ODI debut (cap 71) 14 October 1989 v West Indies
Last ODI 4 March 2003 v Zimbabwe
ODI shirt no. 99
Career Statistics
Career statistics
Competition Test ODI FC LA
Matches 87 262 228 411
Runs scored 1010 969 2972 1553
Batting average 10.2 10.3 13.38 10.42
100s/50s 0/0 0/0 0/6 0/0
Top score 45 37 64 45
Balls bowled 16224 12698 39181 19841
Wickets 373 416 956 675
Bowling average 23.56 23.84 22.33 22.36
5 wickets in innings 22 13 63 17
10 wickets in match 5 n/a 14 n/a
Best bowling Jul-76 Jul-36 17-Aug Jul-36
Catches/stumpings 18/– 35/– 58/– 56/–
From 2006 to 2007 he worked as a national bowling coach. He was appointed as a coach of “Pakistan Cricket Team” on 3rd March 2010. He will take part in all form of cricket matches due to his managerial contract with “Pakistan Cricket Board” right up to December 2011.

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Umar Akmal

Umar Akmal Biography

Source(google.com.pk)
Full name Umar Akmal Born May 26, 1990, Lahore, Punjab Current age 20 years 238 days Batting style Right-hand bat Fielding position Occasional wicketkeeper Relation Brother – Kamran Akmal, Brother – Adnan Akmal Umar Akmal Picture Major teams Pakistan, Lahore...
Umar Akmal (born 26 May 1990 in Lahore) is a Pakistani cricketer. He made his ODI debut on August 1, 2009 against Sri Lanka.
Current age 20 years 238 days

Batting style Right-hand bat

Fielding position Occasional wicketkeeper

Relation Brother - Kamran Akmal, Brother - Adnan Akmal
Playing Roll: Batsman
Batting Style: Right
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Umar Akmal Profile

The runs didn't cease to flow for Umar Akmal, the younger brother of Pakistan wicketkeeper Kamran and Adnan, in his maiden first-class season. In a triumphant 2007-08 for Sui Northern Gas Pipelines Limited, Umar failed to score in his first outing but then went on to amass 855 runs from nine matches in the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, at an average of 77.72 and an impressive strike-rate of 90.18. He showed a penchant for both brisk and big scoring, with knocks of 248 off 225 balls and 186 off 170. In January 2008, he was picked in Pakistan's Under-19 team for the World Cup in Malaysia. He was the leading run-getter - with 255 runs at a strike-rate of 123.18 - in a tri-nation tournament involving England and Sri Lanka in the lead-up to the World Cup. A successful tour of Australia with Pakistan A was followed up a maiden international call-up for the ODIs in Sri Lanka, and Umar started off with a half-century in his second game and a power-packed hundred in his third. A Test call-up was inevitable and he gave an optimistic glimpse into the future of Pakistan cricket, with a century on debut, under pressure followed by a string of consistent scores in New Zealand.
As explosive starts to one’s International careers go, few can rival Umar Akmal. He announced his entry with scores of 66 and 102* within his first 3 ODI innings (at Sri Lanka, 2009) in addition to a 129 and 75 on Test debut (at New Zealand, 2009). Those performances weren’t a surprise. At first class level, Akmal was renowned for his big scores amassed in quick time. 7 years prior to his debut, Umar’s elder brother Kamran had already gotten his taste of international cricket. By 2010, the siblings featured regularly, in tandem for Pakistan.
As a fearless, middle-order batsman, throughout Pakistan’s disappointing spree of series losses against Sri Lanka in 2009 and later at Australia in early 2010, Umar Akmal’s ascendance was one of their few positives. But as the series in Australia progressed, complacency began to creep into Akmal’s Test form, which started to dip. In ODIs though, a hundred and five fifties by his 18th outing maintained a steady average. It was enough to justify an inclusion in Pakistan’s 2010 T20 World Cup squad. He finished the tournament as Pakistan’s 3rd highest-run getter towards their semi-final run.
While still protected as a batsman, featuring at 3-down, in a Pakistan side that lacks specialist batsmen with the temperament for all forms of the game, Umar Akmal is their most proven rookie to fill the void for the years to come.
The runs didn't cease to flow for Umar Akmal, the younger brother of Pakistan wicketkeeper Kamran and Adnan, in his maiden first-class season. In a triumphant 2007-08 for Sui Northern Gas Pipelines Limited, Umar failed to score in his first outing but then went on to amass 855 runs from nine matches in the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, at an average of 77.72 and an impressive strike-rate of 90.18. He showed a penchant for both brisk and big scoring, with knocks of 248 off 225 balls and 186 off 170. In January 2008, he was picked in Pakistan's Under-19 team for the World Cup in Malaysia. He was the leading run-getter - with 255 runs at a strike-rate of 123.18 - in a tri-nation tournament involving England and Sri Lanka in the lead-up to the World Cup. A successful tour of Australia with Pakistan A was followed up a maiden international call-up for the ODIs in Sri Lanka, and Umar started off with a half-century in his second game and a power-packed hundred in his third. A Test call-up was inevitable and he gave an optimistic glimpse into the future of Pakistan cricket, with a century on debut, under pressure followed by a string of consistent scores in New Zealand.
Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 4s 6s Ct St
Tests 15 29 2 988 129 36.59 1481 66.71 1 6 115 17 12 0
ODIs 43 39 6 1249 102* 37.84 1430 87.34 1 8 98 21 18 0
T20Is 22 21 3 571 64 31.72 474 120.46 0 4 41 18 18 1
First-class 46 79 7 3346 248 46.47 4652 71.92 7 20 410 53 41 0
List A 68 63 9 2012 104 37.25 2298 87.55 3 12 150 38 32 0
Twenty20 46 43 8 1114 68* 31.82 861 129.38 0 7 107 30 35 1
Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 15 - - - - - - - - - - - -
ODIs 43 - - - - - - - - - - - -
T20Is 22 - - - - - - - - - - - -
First-class 46 1 6 10 0 - - - 10.00 - 0 0 0
List A 68 2 24 13 0 - - - 3.25 - 0 0 0
Twenty20 46 1 24 36 1 1/36 1/36 36.00 9.00 24.0 0 0 0
Fast Facts

Akmal’s total of 204 runs on his Test debut (against New Zealand) is the 8th highest ever.
It’s also the second highest for a Pakistani debutant behind Yasir Hameed’s 275 in 2003.
Akmal’s 129 on Test debut is the 4th highest for a Pakistani, making him one of only 7 players from his country to score a century on debut. Among those on the list, Akmal is the only centurion to have achieved the feat on foreign soil.
It took Umar Akmal 38 matches (6 Tests, 18 ODIs and 14 T20s) until playing for Pakistan in Pakistan, the third most behind teammate Mohammad Aamer (41) and Sri Lankan Greame Labrooy (53).
Along with brother Kamran Akmal, the Akmals are the 4th blood brothers to feature for Pakistan in the 60-odd years of cricket history.
Among top order batsmen, Akmal has the 4th best strike rate overall (Test, ODI and T20) for Pakistani players. (Minimum of 40 matches).
Umar Akmal Batting, Fielding and Bowling

The above stats are as per date of this post.

Umar Akmal Career

Test:
2009-2010

ODI:
2009-2010

T20:
2009-2010

Umar Akmal Test

Debut:
Pakistan Vs New Zealand at University Oval, Dunedin - Nov 24, 2009
Last played:
Pakistan Vs South Africa at Dubai Sports City Cricket Stadium, Dubai - Nov 12, 2010

Umar Akmal ODI

Debut:
Pakistan Vs Sri Lanka at Rangiri Dambulla International Stadium, Rangiri - Aug 01, 2009
Last played:
Pakistan Vs South Africa at Dubai Sports City Cricket Stadium, Dubai - Nov 08, 2010

Umar Akmal T20

Debut:
Pakistan Vs Sri Lanka at R.Premadasa Stadium (Khettarama), Colombo - Aug 12, 2009
Last played:
Pakistan Vs New Zealand at AMI Stadium, Christchurch - Dec 30, 2010
International Debut: 2009
Batting and fielding records
M Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 4s 6s Ct St
Test 15 29 2 988 129 36.59 1481 66.71 1 6 115 17 12 -
ODI 43 37 6 1201 102* 38.74 1355 88.63 1 8 94 21 17 -
T20I 22 18 3 504 64 33.60 400 126.00 - 4 37 17 13 -

Bowling records
M Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Eco SR 4W 5W 10W
Test 15 - - - - - - - - - - - -
ODI 43 - - - - - - - - - - - -
T20I 22 - - - - - - - - - - - -

Career Statistics
Test Debut: New Zealand v Pakistan at Dunedin, 24-28, Nov 2009
ODI Debut: Sri Lanka v Pakistan at Dambulla, Aug 01, 2009
Twenty20 Debut: Sri Lanka v Pakistan at Colombo, Aug 12, 2009
The runs didn't cease to flow for Umar Akmal, the younger brother of Pakistan wicketkeeper Kamran and Adnan, in his maiden first-class season. In a triumphant 2007-08 for Sui Northern Gas Pipelines Limited, Umar failed to score in his first outing but then went on to amass 855 runs from nine matches in the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, at an average of 77.72 and an impressive strike-rate of 90.18. He showed a penchant for both brisk and big scoring, with knocks of 248 off 225 balls and 186 off 170. In January 2008, he was picked in Pakistan's Under-19 team for the World Cup in Malaysia. He was the leading run-getter - with 255 runs at a strike-rate of 123.18 - in a tri-nation tournament involving England and Sri Lanka in the lead-up to the World Cup. A successful tour of Australia with Pakistan A was followed up a maiden international call-up for the ODIs in Sri Lanka, and Umar started off with a half-century in his second game and a power-packed hundred in his third. A Test call-up was inevitable and he gave an optimistic glimpse into the future of Pakistan cricket, with a century on debut, under pressure followed by a string of consistent scores in New Zealand.

Umar Akmal Batting, Fielding and Bowling

The above stats are as per date of this post.

Umar Akmal Career

Test:
2009-2010

ODI:
2009-2010

T20:
2009-2010

Umar Akmal Test

Debut:
Pakistan Vs New Zealand at University Oval, Dunedin - Nov 24, 2009
Last played:
Pakistan Vs South Africa at Dubai Sports City Cricket Stadium, Dubai - Nov 12, 2010

Umar Akmal ODI

Debut:
Pakistan Vs Sri Lanka at Rangiri Dambulla International Stadium, Rangiri - Aug 01, 2009
Last played:
Pakistan Vs South Africa at Dubai Sports City Cricket Stadium, Dubai - Nov 08, 2010

Umar Akmal T20

Debut:
Pakistan Vs Sri Lanka at R.Premadasa Stadium (Khettarama), Colombo - Aug 12, 2009
Last played:
Pakistan Vs New Zealand at AMI Stadium, Christchurch - Dec 30, 2010
 Umar Akmal carried on from where he left off at Lord's by scoring a century on the opening day of Pakistan's first-class three-day tour match against Kent on Monday.

Akmal made 153 out of a total of 360 all out just a day after top-scoring with 51 in Pakistan's tour-opening six-run Twenty20 win over MCC at Lord's.

His innings against Kent was much needed by the tourists as Pakistan slumped to 53 for three with hard-hitting captain Shahid Afridi out for a duck.

Kent's seamers made the ball nip around and the Pakistan top three were dismissed inside the first hour, all lbw, with Umar Amin, Fawad Alam and Salman Butt falling cheaply.

And before lunch Kent triallist Mark Lawson had Shoaib Malik caught at backward point.

All-rounder Alex Blake struck twice after the interval, having Kamran Akmal caught in the gully before Afridi sliced to deep backward point.

Akmal held firm and went to his fifty with a six off Lawson but largely kept himself in check on his way to completing a 150-ball hundred.

However, once he reached the landmark, he opened up and hit four more sixes, three off Lawson before he was stumped off the spinner by Paul Dixey.

Lawson finished with four for 93 on his Kent debut and, in the day's remaining over, the hosts reached two without loss.

Pakistan will play Australia in two Twenty20 internationals on July 5 and 6 at Edgbaston before playing two Tests against the same opponents at Lord's and Headingley.

After playing Australia, Pakistan will feature in four Tests, two Twenty20 and five one-day games against England. The tour ends on September 22.

Brief score
Pakistan 360 ( Umar Akmal 153, Lawson 4-93) by 358 runs with 10 wickets remaining
Kent 2 for 0
Status Kent trail by 358 runs
Recent matches
Bat & Bowl Team Opposition Ground Match Date Scorecard
8 Lahore Lions v R Rams Faisalabad 30 Jun 2011 Twenty20
8 Lahore Lions v Hawks Faisalabad 29 Jun 2011 Twenty20
20 Lahore Lions v Leopards Faisalabad 27 Jun 2011 Twenty20
43* Lahore Lions v S Stallions Faisalabad 25 Jun 2011 Twenty20
60* Pakistan v Ireland Belfast 30 May 2011 ODI # 3158
- Pakistan v Ireland Belfast 28 May 2011 ODI # 3157
56, 30 Pakistan v West Indies Basseterre 20 May 2011 Test # 1993
33, 47 Pakistan v West Indies Providence 12 May 2011 Test # 1992
26 Pakistanis v Guyana BP XI Georgetown 8 May 2011 Other match
24 Pakistan v West Indies Providence 5 May 2011 ODI # 3156
Profile
The runs didn't cease to flow for Umar Akmal, the younger brother of Pakistan wicketkeeper Kamran and Adnan, in his maiden first-class season. In a triumphant 2007-08 for Sui Northern Gas Pipelines Limited, Umar failed to score in his first outing but then went on to amass 855 runs from nine matches in the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, at an average of 77.72 and an impressive strike-rate of 90.18. He showed a penchant for both brisk and big scoring, with knocks of 248 off 225 balls and 186 off 170. In January 2008, he was picked in Pakistan's Under-19 team for the World Cup in Malaysia. He was the leading run-getter - with 255 runs at a strike-rate of 123.18 - in a tri-nation tournament involving England and Sri Lanka in the lead-up to the World Cup. A successful tour of Australia with Pakistan A was followed up a maiden international call-up for the ODIs in Sri Lanka, and Umar started off with a half-century in his second game and a power-packed hundred in his third. A Test call-up was inevitable and he gave an optimistic glimpse into the future of Pakistan cricket, with a century on debut, under pressure followed by a string of consistent scores in New Zealand.
Cricinfo staff
December 2009
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Mohammad Yousuf

Mohammad Yousuf Biography

Source(google.com.pk)
Mohammad Yousuf (formerly Yousuf Youhana, born 27 August 1974, Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan) is a Pakistani cricketer who has been a member of the Pakistani national cricket team since 1998. He is best known for his achievement in 2006 when he broke the great West Indian batsman, Sir Vivian Richards', world record for the most Test runs in a single calendar year. Prior to his conversion to Islam in 2005, Yousuf was one of the few Christians to play in the Pakistan national cricket team. He made his Test debut against South Africa at Durban and ODI debut against Zimbabwe at Harare. He has scored over 9,000 ODI runs at an average of 43.63 (2rd highest batting average among Pakistani batsmen after Zaheer Abbas and 6,770 Test runs at an average of 55.49 (highest batting average amongst all Pakistani batsmen) with 23 Test centuries. He has the record of scoring the most runs without being dismissed in ODIs, 405 against Zimbabwe in Zimbabwe in 2002-03. He has also scored a 23-ball fifty in ODIs, and a 68-ball hundred. In Tests he has scored a 27-ball fifty, which is 3rd fastest by any player. He was top scorer during the successive years of 2002 and 2003 in the world in ODIs. In 2004, he scored a memorable 111 against the Australians in the Boxing Day Test. In December 2005, he scored 223 against England at Lahore, also earning him the man of the match award. Seven months later in July 2006, when Pakistan toured England, he scored 202 and 48 in the first Test, again earning himself the man of the match award. He followed up with 192 in the third Test at Headingley and 128 in the final Test at the Oval. Yousuf was named CNN-IBN�s Cricketer of the Year for 2006, ahead of the likes of Australian captain Ricky Ponting, West Indies Brian Lara, Australian spinner Shane Warne, South Africa�s bowling spearhead Makhaya Ntini and Sri Lanka�s Muttiah Muralitharan. He was selected as a Wisden Cricketer of the Year in the 2007 edition. Yousuf became the fourth recipient of the ICC 'Test Cricketer of the Year' award for 2007, he scored 944 runs at an average of 94.40 including five centuries and two fifties in just 10 innings and that was enough to be awarded the honour ahead of Kevin Pietersen and Ricky Ponting. Yousuf was also named in the 2007 Test team of the Year alongside compatriot Mohammad Asif. A year that started on a promising note, Yousuf carried it forward to break two world records both held earlier by West Indian great Sir Vivian Richards. The 32-year-old smashed an unparalleled 1788 runs in just 11 Test matches with the help of nine centuries � his second record � taking him beyond the Windies great yet again. Yousuf is known for his ability to score runs at exceptional rate through his great technique and composed strokeplay. Although capable of hitting the ball hard, Yousuf is quick between the wickets, although he is prone to being run out. Yousuf is a skillful infielder, with a report prepared in late 2005 showing that since the 1999 Cricket World Cup, he had effected the ninth highest number of run-outs in ODI cricket of any fieldsman. He is also distinguished by his characteristic celebration after hitting one hundred runs for his country, where he prostrates in thankfulness to Allah in the direction of Mecca. He has observed this act (known as the Sajdah) recently since his conversion to Islam.

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Abdul Razzaq

Abdul Razzaq Biography

Source(google.com.pk)
Full name: Abdul Razzaq


Date of Birth: December 2, 1979


Birth Place: Lahore, Punjab


Height: 6' 0" (1.82 m)


Major teams Pakistan, Asia XI, Hampshire, Hampshire 2nd XI, Hyderabad Heroes, ICL Pakistan XI, Khan Research Labs, Lahore, Lahore Lions, Middlesex, Pakistan International Airlines, Surrey, Worcestershire


Also known as Abdur Razzaq


Batting style: Right-hand bat


Bowling style: Right-arm fast-medium


Biography


Abdul Razzaq was once fast enough to open the bowling and is integrated enough to strike anywhere, although it is finding that the demands of lower order of good manners. His bowling - why was observed for the first time - is characterized by a galloping approach, precision, and reverse swing. But it's his batting that is more likely to win games.


He has a prodigious wide strokes and is particularly strong driving through the roof and half were from outside the front and back foot. He has two speeds: Block or explosion. Cut the fat cats and Razzaq stagnates, but patience is a virtue as demonstrated in a fifty-saving match against India in Mohali in 2005. Just before he had also played a surprisingly slow shift in Australia, scoring four runs over two hours.


When the occasion arises, though, as often ODIs, you can still slog with the best of them: England, were ransacked by a 22-ball 51 in late 2005. and then again for almost 60 runs in the last three overs of an ODI in September the following year.



International Debut: 1996
Batting and fielding records
M Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 4s 6s Ct St
Test 47 77 9 1946 134 28.62 4741 41.05 3 7 230 23 15 -
ODI 265 226 57 4995 112 29.56 6160 81.09 3 22 372 123 35 -
T20I 26 22 9 331 46* 25.46 261 126.82 - - 17 18 2 -


Abdul Razzaq best batting against south africa





Bowling records
M Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Eco SR 4W 5W 10W
Test 47 76 7008 3694 100 5/35 7/155 36.94 3.16 70.08 4 1 -
ODI 265 251 10833 8475 267 6/35 6/35 31.74 4.69 40.57 8 3 -
T20I 26 17 297 333 17 3/13 3/13 19.59 6.73 17.47 - - -


Abdul Razzaq batting style

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 Abdul Razzaq

Thursday, 21 November 2013

Imran Farhat

Imran Farhat Biography

Source(google.com.pk)
Full name: Imran Farhat
Born: 20th May 1982, Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan
Batting: Left-hand batsman
Bowling: Leg-break
Occasional wicket-keeper Relations: Brother: Humayun Farhat
Teams: Pakistan (Test: 2000/01-2012/13); Pakistan (ODI: 2000/01-2013); Pakistan (Int Twenty20: 2009/10-2011/12); Lahore City (Main FC: 1998/99); Pakistan Reserves (Main FC: 1999/00); Lahore Blues (Main FC: 2000/01-2004/05); Biman Bangladesh Airlines (Main FC: 2000/01); Habib Bank Limited (Main FC: 2001/02-2013/14); Lahore (Main FC: 2003/04); Lahore Shalimar (Main FC: 2005/06-2006/07); Lahore Ravi (Main FC: 2012/13); Lahore City (Main ListA: 1997/98-1998/99); Habib Bank Limited (Main ListA: 1999/00-2013/14); Biman Bangladesh Airlines (Main ListA: 2000/01); Pakistan International Airlines (Main ListA: 2003/04); Lahore (Main ListA: 2003/04); Lahore Lions (Main ListA: 2004/05); Lahore Eagles (Main ListA: 2006/07); Punjab Stallions (Main ListA: 2009/10); Lahore Lions (Main Twenty20: 2004/05-2009); Lahore Eagles (Main Twenty20: 2005/06-2012/13); Uthura Rudras (Main Twenty20: 2012); Habib Bank Limited (Main Twenty20: 2013); Pakistan A (Other FC: 2000-2005/06); North West Frontier Province Governor's XI (Other FC: 2000/01); Pakistanis (Other FC: 2000/01-2009/10); Pakistan (Other FC: 2000/01-2012/13); Pakistan Cricket Board XI (Other FC: 2001/02); Punjab (Pakistan) (Other FC: 2010/11); Pakistan Cricket Board XI (Other ListA: 1999/00); Pakistan A (Other ListA: 2000-2005/06); Pakistan (Other ListA: 2000/01-2013); Pakistanis (Other ListA: 2001-2012/13); Pakistan Cricket Board Blues (Other ListA: 2002/03); Pakistan (Other Twenty20: 2009/10-2011/12); Pakistan Under-19s (Under-19 Test: 1998/99); Pakistan Under-19s (Under-19 ODI: 1999/00); Pakistan Under-19s (Under-19 two innings: 1998/99); Pakistan Under-19s (Under-19 limited overs: 1999/00); All teams
Lists of matches and more detailed statistics
Articles: The reasons for Pakistan's batting fragility
  Pakistan inch closer to squaring the series
  "No Clear Favourites at the Asia Cup" - Imran Farhat
  Pakistan surge ahead with 204 run lead
  List of all articles
Galleries: Pakistan v Sri Lanka ODI Series 2011/12 - pictures
Pictures: Imran Farhat works one behind square on the leg side
  Farhat and Kamran hug each other after historic win over Australia
  Butt and Farhat celebrate historic win over Australia
  Farhat and Aamer celebrate historic win over Australia
  List of all pictures
copyright © CricketArchive
Test Career Batting and Fielding (2000/01-2012/13)
M I NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 SRate Ct
Pakistan 40 77 2 2400 128 32.00 3 14 48.28 40 Test Career Bowling (2003/04-2010)
Balls Mdns Runs Wkts BB Ave 5wI 10wM SRate Econ
Pakistan 427 4 284 3 2-69 94.66 0 0 142.33 3.99
First-Class Career Batting and Fielding (1998/99-2013/14)
M I NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 Ct
Overall 160 277 13 11217 308 42.48 27 48 141 First-Class Career Bowling (1998/99-2013/14)
Balls Mdns Runs Wkts BB Ave 5wI 10wM SRate Econ
Overall 5710 142 3267 107 7-31 30.53 2 0 53.36 3.43
ODI Career Batting and Fielding (2000/01-2013)
M I NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 SRate Ct
Pakistan 58 58 2 1719 107 30.69 1 13 69.09 14 ODI Career Bowling (2000/01-2010)
Balls Mdns Runs Wkts BB Ave 4wI 5wI SRate Econ
Pakistan 116 2 110 6 3-10 18.33 0 0 19.33 5.68
List A Career Batting and Fielding (1997/98-2013/14)
M I NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 Ct
Overall 177 175 12 5804 164 35.60 13 28 67 List A Career Bowling (1997/98-2012/13)
Balls Mdns Runs Wkts BB Ave 4wI 5wI SRate Econ
Overall 2831 18 2457 84 4-13 29.25 3 0 33.70 5.20
International Twenty20 Career Batting and Fielding (2009/10-2011/12)
M I NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 SRate Ct
Pakistan 7 7 0 76 19 10.85 0 0 108.57 3 Twenty20 Career Batting and Fielding (2004/05-2013)
M I NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 SRate Ct
Overall 47 47 2 1319 115 29.31 2 8 149.54 21 Twenty20 Career Bowling (2004/05-2013)
Balls Mdns Runs Wkts BB Ave 4wI 5wI SRate Econ
Overall 389 0 510 27 5-26 18.88 0 1 14.40 7.86
Under-19 Test Career Batting and Fielding (1998/99)
M I NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 Ct
Pakistan Under-19s 2 4 1 57 40* 19.00 0 0 1 Under-19 Test Career Bowling (1998/99)
Balls Mdns Runs Wkts BB Ave 5wI 10wM SRate Econ
Pakistan Under-19s 6 0 5 0 0-5 5.00
Under-19 ODI Career Batting and Fielding (1999/00)
M I NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 SRate Ct
Pakistan Under-19s 4 4 0 11 5 2.75 0 0 15.49 0 Under-19 ODI Career Bowling (1999/00)
Balls Mdns Runs Wkts BB Ave 4wI 5wI SRate Econ
Pakistan Under-19s 120 1 59 2 1-12 29.50 0 0 60.00 2.95
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