Sunday, 10 November 2013

Umar Gul

                                     Umar Gul Biography                                                                                                                                         source(google.com.pk)                                                                                                                                               
Full Name: Umar Gul
Date of Birth: Apr 14, 1984, Peshawar, North-Western Frontier Province
Major Team: Pakistan, Gloucestershire, Habib Bank Limited, Kolkata Knight Riders, North West Frontier Province, North West Frontier Province Panthers, Pakistan A, Pakistan International Airlines, Peshawar
Playing Roll: Bowler
Batting Style: Right
Bowling Style: Right-arm fast-medium


International Debut: 2003
Batting and fielding records
MInnsNORunsHSAveBFSR100504s6sCtSt
Test4767957765*9.95121547.49-1632011-
ODI1165816414399.8659569.58--341015-
T20I522481603210.00146109.59--111018-

Bowling records
MInnsBallsRunsWktsBBIBBMAveEcoSR4W5W10W
Test4790959955531636/1359/16434.073.4758.89124-
ODI116114540746041616/426/4228.605.1133.5852-
T20I525210501217745/65/616.456.9514.1942-

Career Statistics
Test Debut: Pakistan v Bangladesh at Karachi, 20-24, Aug 2003
ODI Debut: Pakistan v Zimbabwe at Sharjah, Apr 03, 2003
Twenty20 Debut: Kenya v Pakistan at Nairobi, Sep 04, 2007

Umar Gul
Umar Gul
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Umar Gul

Saturday, 9 November 2013

Wasim Akram

                                 Wasim Akram Biography                                 source(google.com.pk)                                                                                                                                
  • Full Name: Wasim Akram
  • Birthplace: 3 June 1966,Lahore,Punjab
  • ODI Debut: Pakistan vs NewZealand at Faisalabad,2nd ODI,1984/85
  • Test Debut: Pakistan vs NewZealand at Auckland,2nd Test,1984/85
  • Major Teams: Pakistan,Lancashire,Hampshire
  • Bowling Style: Left Hand Fast
  • Batting Style: Left Handed Batsman

Wasim Akram (born June 3, 1966 in Lahore, Punjab) is a former Pakistani cricketer. He was a left-arm fast bowler and left-handed batsman, who represented the Pakistani cricket team in TestsOne-Day Internationals. He is widely regarded as one of the finest fast bowlers ever and holds world records for the most wickets taken in both ODIs (502) and List A cricket (881).

Playing style

An immensely talented player first discovered by Imran Khan, Wasim Akram played for his college(Govt. Islamia College Civil Lines, Lahore) as an opening bowler and batsman. As a bowler, Wasim possessed genuine pace, accurate control of line and length and seam position, and could swing the ball both in and out. With a very deceptive ball-concealing action, he could bowl equally well from both sides of the wicket. His mastery of reverse swing with the old ball meant he was at his most dangerous towards the end of an innings, and earned him the nickname Sultan of Swing.
As well as often being able to find the edge of the bat, Wasim would also focus his attack on the stumps and had a particularly lethal yorker. Of his 414 Test wickets, 193 were taken caught, 119 were taken LBW and 102 were bowled.In partnership with Waqar Younis, he intimidated international batsmen in the 1990s. Together Wasim and Waqar, known as “the two Ws” of the Pakistani team, were one of the most successful bowling partnerships ever.
Wasim was also skilled with the bat and was regarded as a bowling all-rounder. He was especially effective against spinners. However, he liked to slog and was criticised for his lack of big scores and giving away his wicket too cheaply for a player of his talent. He did silence his critics in October 1996 when he scored 257, not out, of the team’s total of 553 against Zimbabwe at Sheikhupura. He also made good scores in difficult times for the Pakistan team such as his 123 against Australia and his 45 not-out to take Pakistan to victory in a low-scoring match. Pakistan, needing six runs in two balls two win the Nehru Cup saw Akram come out to bat. The first ball he faced was hit out of the ground and secured the cup. Ahmed Bilal was his coach who gave him tricks on reverse swing.
A Feature by Sidharth Monga
The fifth ODI between Pakistan and South Africa was dedicated to Wasim Akram who retired just after the World Cup. A moment to rejoice for the oppositions all over the world and the way Proteas easily beat Pakistan one could see how Pakistan missed Wasim. But things aren’t forever and as all good things must come to an end, Wasim has finally called it a day. Here’s a piece that I wrote earlier in tribute to the Big W, God’s own left arm.
“First of all, convince yourself that you are the best because the rest of your life is gonna go proving this to others” -Wasim Akram, in a T.V commercial.
One thing Wasim has shown us in his 19 year long career is he enacts what he says. The tremendous confidence he had as a young boy of 18 when some more ordinary guy would be nervous participating in a school debate would make even greatest of champions envious of him. He damn sure knew he was the best and boy, has he proved this to the whole world! Yes he has and in fact, he has done this in a manner that the best of the batsmen in the world fear him. But there’s good news for some new batsmen, the Sultan of Swing has finally decided to retire from international cricket. This would mean batters need not worry about a lanky fast bowler whose run up was a mere 10-15 steps but who could bowl fast, swinging toe crushing yorkers that could render even the best of batsmen mere spectators. And they also need not worry about the late swinging deliveries to which the umpires couldn’t resist raising the finger indicative of an LBW. (29% of his wickets include LBWs!). And bowlers over the world can save themselves blushes, the kind when the very same man got stuck into them and hit them a mile. (Ask Zimbabweans whom he hit for a record number of sixes in his 257 run knock!)
Time and again, I have seen teams fighting back against a Pakistan bowling attack after early setbacks requiring just about one and a half run per ball in the last few overs. But that’s where the party ends-because then the ball is thrown to Wasim and the whole world knows how desperately impossible it is to score at more than a run a ball when Wasim is bowling at the death. Arguably the best bowler at death, his straight late swinging yorkers are responsible for the shortening of most tails all over the world. And who said that with the advent of helmets and protective equipment, tailenders will be able to contribute more? At least not against a Wasim led Pak attack.
They say that with age, flair gives way to simplicity; exuberance gives way to soberness and childhood gives way to wisdom that comes with the realization that you have grown old. Flamboyance and age happen to share a negative correlation, but not with Wasim. You have seen him around for about 19 years now, he must be old. He needs insulin everyday, a severe diabetic, he must be really old. And yet, when you watch him take his n hundred and nth wicket, the childish joy on his face makes you believe he is a young debutant who has just taken his first wicket. That’s Wasim Akram for you. Even at the fag end of his career in World Cup 2003, one cannot forget his consecutive deliveries to get Hayden and Martyn. And who could say he is a 37 year old?
Talk of Wasim and the mind inevitably goes back to World Cup 1992 finals- England cruising towards a victory and all of a sudden Wasim produces two unplayable balls to dismiss Allan Lamb and Chris Lewis in succession. That was when he was at his vintage best. And that he could produce such deliveries consistently when his team desperately needed those is the factor that sets him aside. What’s similar in Steve Wuagh, Sachin Tendulkar, Brian Lara, and Wasim Akram? We all come to expect the unexpected with them. Hand Wasim the ball when nothing is happening for you and he will bring some magic.
It’s a rare breed, this- the left arm pacemen. Come to think of the names and you don’t have much more than Allan Davidson, Gary Sobbers or Bill Voce. But hands down, the best of them all was spotted by one wise man- Javed, ‘The Spotter’ Miandad. In his very first series against New Zealand in 1984-85, he drew comparisons with all the big names mentioned above. In only his second test, he bagged a 10-wicket haul and became the youngest man to do so. And since then, looking behind is one thing he has never done. Now that when he looks into retrospect, he would like to change the 1996 World Cup Quarter Final against India, the 1999 World Cup Final and the supposed match fixing allegations against him. I call these allegations ‘supposed’ because not in my life have I seen him ever give anything less than One Hundred Percent. Yes it hasn’t been all rosy. It never is, for anyone.
He has had to take the wrath of a cricket crazy nation and a corrupt administration for every failure of his, no matter how few and far within these failures have come. Add to this the fact that he has taken a majority of his 916 international wickets on subcontinent pitches- dead as dodos, not to forget a long menu of injuries he has fought. The brunt of Akram’s cricket has been borne by his groin and shoulder. His groin was first operated on in 1988 and again two years later. The latter operation was complicated when an adductor muscle separated from his pelvis, leaving his left leg only half as strong as his right: it was restored only by intensive physiotherapy.
He first experienced shoulder pain seven years ago, while representing Lancashire, and delayed surgery, only to break down when he tried to bowl a bouncer during the Singer Cup Final in Sharjah in April 1997: there were further operations, a six-month lay-off and a regime of painkillers. Add to this, severe diabetes and fading eye sight. And still he continued till 2003 and stayed among the top few bowlers all through. Nothing short of a medical miracle- Is it?
Despite all the match fixing allegations and personal controversies, he still remains the best quick bowler I have seen operate in 20 years of my life.
And what better a testimony than the highest run-getter himself-“If I ever get a chance to be reborn as a cricketer, I would want to be Wasim”-Allan Border

Retirement

Wasim retired in 2003, after a brief spell with Hampshire in England. Since then, Wasim has taken up commentary and can currently be seen as a sportscaster for the ESPN Star network, and is also running shows on ARY Digital.
He is married to Huma Mufti, daughter of Mr. Humayaun Mufti. Huma and Wasim have two sons from their marriage of thirteen years

Records

  • In his Test career, Wasim took 414 wickets in 104 matches, a Pakistani record, at an average of 23.62, and scored 2,898 runs, at an average of 22.64.
  • In One-Day Internationals, Wasim took a world record 502 wickets in 356 appearances, at an average of 23.52, and scored 3,717 runs, at an average of 16.52.
  • Wasim was the first bowler in international cricket to take more than 400 wickets in both forms of the game, and only Muttiah Muralitharan has since achieved this.
  • Wasim Akram also held the record for the most wickets in Cricket World Cups — a total of 55 in 38 matches. Australia’s Glenn McGrath broke the record during the 2007 World Cup, ending with a final tally of 77 from 39 matches.On passing Wasim’s record, McGrath said, “Wasim Akram, to me, is one of the greatest bowlers of all time. Left-armer, swung it both ways with the new ball and he was so dangerous with the old ball. To go past him is something I will always remember. Probably the other side of the coin is that if you play long enough, you’re going to break records here and there.”
  • Uniquely, Wasim took four hat-tricks in international cricket, two each in Tests and ODIs. He is one of only three bowlers to have taken two Test hat-tricks (the others being Hugh Trumble and Jimmy Matthews), and also one of only three bowlers to have taken two ODI hat-tricks (the others being fellow Pakistani Saqlain Mushtaq and Chaminda Vaas of Sri Lanka). Wasim’s Test hat-tricks are unique, since they were taken in consecutive Test matches in the same series, against Sri Lanka in 1999. Wasim is also one of only two bowlers to have taken both a Test and ODI hat-trick (the other being fellow Pakistani Mohammad Sami).
  • Playing in a Test against the West Indies at Lahore in 1990-91, he became one of only six players to have taken four wickets in an over during a Test match. In Wasim’s case, the feat was not part of a hat-trick, the third ball of the series being a dropped catch, which allowed a single.
  • Wasim has also achieved the highest score by a number eight batsman in Test cricket — 257 not out from 363 balls against Zimbabwe at Sheikhupura. The innings contained 12 sixes which is also a world record for Test crick
  • He also has the joint-highest number of Man of the Match awards in Test cricket, along with South African Jacques Kallis, with 17
  Wasim Akram

Wasim Akram

Wasim Akram

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Wasim Akram

Wasim Akram

Wasim Akram

                      Wasim Akram                         

Thursday, 7 November 2013

Mohammad Irfan

Mohammad Irfan Biography                                                            source(google.com pk)                                                                                              

Mohammad Irfan - Pakistan cricket's latest pace bowling hope towers above team-mates and opponents. Photograph: Asif Hassan/AFP/Getty Images
After a summer ruined by Mr Fix-it and the flannelled fools he preyed on, who do we feel more sorry for? For those beyond the boundary whose faith in clay-feet heroes can be unshakeable even in the worst of times? For stalwarts like Anil Kumble who worry that their legacy is tarnished after long careers that often involved surmounting intolerable pain and adversity? Or for young men and women who dreamt of one day gracing cricket's greatest amphitheatres?
Friday marks the end of the holy month of Ramadan. For Mohammad Irfan, who stands 2.1 metres (6ft 10in) in his socks, it could also be the culmination of the most remarkable of sporting odysseys. A little over a year ago, convinced that his chance had gone, the 28-year-old was working in a plastic-pipe factory. Last month, the Kolkata Knight Riders signed a $75,000 (£48,500) deal with him for the fourth season of the Indian Premier League. Now, with the Mohammads, Asif and Amir, scratched from the one-day side, he could become the tallest man to play international cricket.
In times like this, we need our feel-good stories, and Irfan's is as improbable as they come. The quest for daily bread and the distraction offered by club cricket were his priorities when a website run by Pakistan fans interviewed Nadeem Iqbal, who once shared the new ball with Waqar Younis for the Multan region. During the course of that chat, Iqbal raved about the young giant who played for the Gaggu Cricket Club.
When that information was passed on to Aaqib Javed, working with the Pakistan Cricket Academy, he decided to call Irfan over to Lahore and see what he had. Within months, he had made his first-class debut for Khan Research Laboratories and a haul of 43 wickets in 10 games earned him a place on the fringes of the national set-up.
His village, Gaggu Mandi in Punjab's interior, is once again on the cricket map, more than a decade after injury cruelly snuffed out the career of another tearaway fast bowler. Matthew Engel once poignantly referred to Colin Milburn, his boyhood hero, as "the cricketer we could least afford to lose". Englishmen born a couple of decades later probably think of Ben Hollioake the same way. For me, the words "young talent" and "regret" are forever intertwined with two names, Laxman Sivaramakrishnan and Mohammad Zahid. One could have been as good as Warne if he hadn't lost his way. The other remains the fastest bowler I've laid eyes on, hurling the ball with a ferocity that his back ultimately couldn't withstand.
When you think of Zahid, you think of a World Series game at the Gabba in January 1997. The West Indies won that night, but Carl Hooper, man of the match after a gritty half-century, announced that the quick he'd faced was a "couple of yards quicker than ours". Considering that the Caribbean arsenal still included Ambrose, Bishop and Walsh, it was some compliment.
"The talking point of the night, however, was the storming Australian international debut of stringbean Pakistan pace bowler Mohammad Zahid," said the Wisden Almanack. "In a Test-style confrontation, he captured the Gabba crowd's attention by livening up Lara with speed and lift and eventually snared him with a snick behind. Hooper branded the 21-year-old [he was actually 20] Zahid the fastest bowler he had faced on tour."
But after just five Tests and 11 one-day games, the dream was over . While Shoaib Akhtar, Brett Lee and Shaun Tait soaked up the acclaim that came with breaching the 100mph barrier, Zahid receded into the recesses of our memory. All he has are the flashbacks and when he says that he was a better bowler than Shoaib because he could swing the ball at that pace, there will be at least a handful of us who nod our heads in sympathy.
Irfan is not fast, but his height makes him a dangerous proposition for any batsman. In a recent tri-series in Sri Lanka also featuring South Africa A, his best performances came against the hosts as he exploited the diffidence that many batsmen from the region have against the short ball.
The youngest of five brothers [he also has two sisters], Irfan also played basketball with the army for a while. But it was his ability to propel a cricket ball from Joel Garner-height that first caught the eye. To get to Gaggu Mandi, you take the Lahore-Multan Highway and then turn left at Sahiwal. If you go on another 20 minutes past the village, you reach Burewala, Waqar's hometown.
"I was playing barefoot for the school team in my small village when Miah Shafqat Zahoor of the Gaggu Cricket Club from Gaggu Mandi saw me bowling," said Irfan in an interview with Pakpassion, the website that facilitated his remarkable journey. "I was already very tall back then and he came to me after the game to offer me a place at his club. He told me that they would train me, give me the proper cricket shoes that I needed and play me in their team. Nadeem Iqbal's academy is linked to the Gaggu Club and that's how I got to know him."
With a father as tall as him and brothers who are 6'5" and 6'3", it's probably fair to say that the tall gene runs in the family. But while the bouncer comes naturally to him, it's the ability to land the ball on a spot that makes him a tricky opponent. A right-hander who bowls with his left arm, he gets that natural shape away from right-handed batsmen and the sessions with Aaqib have seen him develop the delivery that shapes back in as well.
He's no speed merchant, and his choice of role model gives some idea of what his methods are going to be like. "Ambrose really caught my attention because he was a tall fast bowler like me," he says. "I've tried to learn as much as I can from watching videos of him."
When he walks out in his nation's colours for the first time, he will find himself part of a battle to restore the game's credibility. But that aside, every ball he bowls will also be a tribute to perseverance and to the likes of Zahid, who walked down the same road not so long ago.

Mohammad Irfan

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Mohammad Irfan

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Mohammad Irfan

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Mohammad Irfan

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Mohammad Irfan

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Mohammad Irfan

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Mohammad Irfan

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Mohammad Irfan

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Mohammad Irfan

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Mohammad Irfan

 

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Mohammad Irfan

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Wednesday, 6 November 2013

Junaid khan

Junaid Khan Biography                                                                source(google.com.pk)                                                                                                     

General Information
Full name Mohammad Junaid Khan
Born December 24, 1989, Matra, North-West Frontier Province
Current age 23 years 306 days
Major teams Pakistan, Abbottabad, Abbottabad Rhinos, Lancashire, Pakistan Under-19s
Playing role Bowler
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling Style Left-arm fast
 Career Statistics
Batting & Fielding Statistics
Test ODI T20
Matches Played 13 33 5
Innings Played 17 12 2
Not Outs 5 5 2
Runs 74 42 3
Highest 17 25 3*
Average 6.16 6.00 -
Balls Faced 210 80 4
St/R 35.23 52.50 75.00
100's 0 0 0
50's 0 0 0
4's 10 3 0
6's 0 1 0
Catches Taken 1 4 0
Stumpings Made 0 0 0
Bowling Statistics
Test ODI T20
Matches Played 13 33 5
Innings Played 24 33 5
Balls 2614 1524 90
Runs 1226 1239 136
Wickets 42 52 3
Best Inning Bowling 5/38 4/12 2/23
Best Match Bowling 6/115 4/12 2/23
Average 29.19 23.82 45.33
Economy Rate 2.81 4.87 9.06
St/R 62.2 29.3 30.0
4 Wickets 1 3 0
5 Wickets 3 0 0
10 Wickets 0 0 0

 Profile
At U-19 level Junaid Khan was among of a crop of the most promising young fast bowlers in recent years, alongside Mohammad Amir. Good pace and better stamina and an ability to move the ball around if the conditions are right, Khan finally made it to national contention when he was called up for Pakistan's 2011 World Cup squad as a late replacement for Sohail Tanvir. Khan is from the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province and has built up an impressive domestic career with Abbottabad, for whom he debuted in January 2007. The record acquires greater sheen given that Abbottabad are among the weaker sides on the circuit. Those performances have led him to Pakistan A selection, for whom he has been impressive in two series now, never less than when taking nine wickets in a 'Test' against Sri Lanka A in Hambantota in September 2010. Khan is from the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province and has built up an impressive domestic career with Abbottabad, for whom he debuted in January 2007. The record acquires greater sheen given that Abbottabad are among the weaker sides on the circuit. Those performances have led him to Pakistan A selection, for whom he has been impressive in two series now, never less than when taking nine wickets in a 'Test' against Sri Lanka A in Hambantota in September 2010.

                      

Junaid Khan

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Junaid Khan

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Junaid Khan

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Junaid Khan

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Junaid Khan

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Junaid Khan

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Junaid Khan

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Junaid Khan

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Junaid Khan

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Junaid Khan

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Junaid Khan

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