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Saturday, February 7

Haseeb Ahsan (1939-2013) Teast Cap #.25

© Pakistan Cricket Board
Full name Haseeb Ahsan
Born July 15, 1939, Peshawar, North-West Frontier Province (now PKP)
Died March 8, 2013, Karachi (aged 73 years 236 days)
Major teams Pakistan, Karachi, Pakistan International Airlines, Peshawar Cricket Association
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak

Profile
© PA Photo
Haseeb Ahsan was a Pakistani cricketer who played 12 Tests for Pakistan between 1958 and 1962. He was born in Peshawar, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. A right-arm off spinner, he took 27 wickets in Test cricket at an average of 49.25, including 2 five-wicket hauls. During his first-class career, he played 49 matches and took 142 wickets at the average of 27.71.Former Pakistan cricketer Waqar Hasan said about him that he "was a fighter to the core and served Pakistan cricket with honour and dignity.He worked as chief selector, team manager of Pakistan, and member of the 1987 Cricket World Cup organising committee. He died in Karachi on 8 March 2013, aged 73.

Gul Mohammad (1921-1992) Test Cap #:24

© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Full name Gul Mohammad
Born October 15, 1921, Lahore, Punjab
Died May 8, 1992, Lahore, Punjab (aged 70 years 206 days)
Major teams:India (Test: 1946-1952/53); Pakistan (Test: 1956/57); Northern India (1938/39-1943/44); Muslims (1938/39-1944/45); Baroda (1943/44-1950/51); Hyderabad (India) (1951/52-1954/55); Lahore (1958/59);
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Left-arm medium
Relations:Son: Firdaus Gul

© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Profile
Gul Mahomed was one of the small band of cricketers who have represented two countries in Tests. He played eight times for India and once for Pakistan. He was born in Lahore and died there on May 8,1992, aged 70, after a long illness. Gul Mahomed was a diminutive, dashing left-handed batsman who could bowl steady left-arm seamers at medium pace. Above all, he was an outstandingly brilliant fielderin the cover area; he could gather left-handed and return at great speed at a time when Indian fielding was often very unathletic. It was once said that a fish could not slither out of his hands. As a youth, heplayed for Islamia College, the nursery of many Test cricketers from Punjab, and made his début in theRanji Trophy in 1938-39 for Northern India when he was 17. He soon announced his class by hitting 95for Muslims against Hindus in the Northern India Triangular Tournament. He made real progress in 1942and scored a forceful hundred for the Rest of India against Western India, facing an attack of Teststandard. Meanwhile, the Bombay Pentangular Tournament had provided him with the chance of makingtwo more hundreds and he and Hazare - batsmen of contrasting styles - shared a stand of 302 for aBengal Cyclone XI against a Bijapur Famine XI in the Brabourne Stadium in Bombay. This was aforetaste of what came later.

The 1946 Indian touring squad © Wisden Cricket Monthly
Gul Mahomed did well enough in trials to secure a place on the trip to England in 1946 but, in an interview many years later, he was sharply critical of the Nawab of Pataudi's captaincy, maintaining that no one apart from Merchant was given a proper chance to run into consistent form. He played without success at Lord's in the First Test. Back in India, however, he and Hazare shared what remains the largest stand for any wicket in first-class cricket. It was in the final of the Ranji Trophy between Baroda and Holkar. Gul Mahomed came in with the score at 91 for three. When he was out for 319, eight hours 53 minutes later, they had put on 577 for the fourth wicket, part of a total of 784.
Gul was a member of the post-Independence team which toured Australia as pioneers in 1947-48,captained by Lala Amarnath. The team failed dismally and he made only 130 runs in five Tests but fielded brilliantly throughout. He represented India against the newcomers Pakistan in their first two Tests in 1952-53. But he then migrated to Pakistan and in 1956-57 he was chosen for his new country against Ian Johnson's Australians at Karachi, and made the winning hit. Earlier, he had been a greatsuccess as a professional in the Lancashire League with Ramsbottom.

Test debut England v India at Lord's, Jun 22-25, 1946
Last Test Pakistan v Australia at Karachi, Oct 11-17,
First-class span 1938-1959

Wallis Mathias (1935-1994) Test Cap #:23

© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Full name Wallis Mathias
Born February 4, 1935, Karachi, Sindh
Died September 1, 1994, Karachi, Sindh (aged 59 years 209 days)
Major teams:Pakistan (Test: 1955/56-1962); Sindh (1953/54-1973/74); Karachi Blues (1956/57-1967/68); Karachi A (1957/58-1962/63); Karachi (1958/59-1968/69); Karachi Whites (1961/62-1969/70); National Bank of Pakistan (1969/70-1976/77); National Bank of Pakistan A (1975/76);
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
Wallis Mathias, who died on September 1, 1994, after a brain haemorrhage, aged 59, was the first non-Muslim to play for Pakistan. He made his debut in November 1955 as a 20-year-old and played in 21 Tests over the next seven years. His greatest merit was his fielding; he was the safe pair of hands in the slips that Pakistan's strong medium-pace attack of that era desperately wanted. He had exceptional reflexes and, though he took some spectacular catches, his great skill was to make hard chances look simple. He was also a middle-order batsman whose figures did not do justice to the usefulness of his runs:he scored 783 runs in Tests at 23.72, but regularly played critical little innings. The 64 and 45 he scored in Pakistan's win over West Indies at Dacca in 1958-59 made him easily the most successful batsman in a low-scoring game; a year earlier he had scored 73 and 77 in successive Tests in the Caribbean.

He played three Tests in England in 1962, but the following year he suffered a finger injury in the nets which left him with a slight deformity that restricted his brilliant catching.He continued in domestic cricket and scored 278 not out for Karachi Blues against Railway Greens in 1965-66. In 1969-70 he became National Bank's first captain and played on until 1975-76 before becoming coach, selector and manager. In 146 first-class matches he made 7,520 runs, average 44.49, including 16 centuries. He held 130 catches, 22 in Tests. He was a popular captain and a much respected man.

Test debut Pakistan v New Zealand at Dhaka, Nov 7-12, 1955
Last Test England v Pakistan at The Oval, Aug 16-20, 1962
First-class span 1953-1977

Agha Saadat Ali (1929-1995) Test Cap #:22

© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Full name Agha Saadat Ali
Born June 21, 1929, Lahore, Punjab
Died October 25, 1995, Lahore, Punjab (aged 66 years 126 days)
Major teams Pakistan (Test: 1955/56); Pakistan Universities (1949/50); Bahawalpur (1953/54); Lahore B (1961/62);
Batting style Right-hand bat

Profile
Agha Saadat Ali died in his native Lahore on October 25 from carcinomatosis aged 66. He played one Test for Pakistan. Recognised as possessing a talent comparable to Imtiaz Ahmed, Khan Mohammad and Parsi cricketer Rusi Dinshaw, he was sent in the first batch to the Alf Gover school for coaching in what became a forerunner to the many Pakistan Eaglet tours of England. Unfortunately he did not develop as expected. Nevertheless his brilliant fielding against the New Zealand touring team of 1955-56 at Karachi, where he played as twelfth man, led to his inclusion in the following Test at Dhaka where he scored 8 not out and held three catches. Opportunities for first-class cricket were rare in the early days of Pakistan cricket. Appearances against the touring West Indians in 1948 and a Commonwealth team in 1949 did not count as first-class. Between 1950 when he made his first-class debut for Pakistan Universities against Ceylon, until 1961/62 when he captained Lahore `B', Agha Saadat played only 16 matches, scoring 325 runs at an average of 14.13. He also took one wicket and held eight catches. After retirement he became a coach at the national level. His growing status within the game was reflected in his position as Assistant Secretary of the BCCP which he held for some time. Both of his sons played first-class cricket.Agha Saadat also served as President of the Billiard and Snooker Association of Lahore.

Only Test Pakistan v New Zealand at Dhaka, Nov 7-12, 1955
First-class span 1949-1962

Malik Miran Bakhsh (1907-1991) Test Cap #:21

© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Full name Malik Miran Bakhsh
Born April 20, 1907, Rawalpindi
Died February 8, 1991, Dhok Rata, Rawalpindi (aged 83 years 294 days)
Major teams Pakistan (Test:1954/55); Pakistan Combined Services (1954/55-1956/57); Punjab B (1957/58); Rawalpindi (1958/59);
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak

Profile
Pakistan offspinner Miran Bux's main claim to fame is that he was the second-oldest debutant in Test history. He was 47 years 275 days when, in his last season of first-class cricket in 1954-55, he was called up against India at Lahore. It was a short-lived experiment - he took only two wickets in his twoTests - but Miran did at least end with a first-class bowling average of 19.

Test debut Pakistan v India at Lahore, Jan 29-Feb 1, 1955
Last Test Pakistan v India at Peshawar, Feb 13-16, 1955
First-class span 1949-1959

Aslam Khokhar (1920-2011) Test Cap #:20

© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Full name Mohammad Aslam Khokhar
Born January 5, 1920, Lahore, Punjab
Died January 22, 2011, Lahore (aged 91 years 17 days)
Major teams Pakistan (Test: 1954); Muslims (1938/39); Northern India (1941/42-1946/47); Pakistan Railways (1953/54-1963/64);
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak

Profile
Mohammad Aslam was a dashing strokeplayer, renowned for his electric fielding, and also occasionally bowled a mixture of mixture of leg-breaks and googlies. He toured England in 1954, and despite making 421 runs on the tour at 28.06 he struggled in his one Test, scoring 16 and 18 at Trent Bridge, and did not play for his country again. Though he played only one official Test, Aslam also took part in the first 'unofficial' Test Pakistan played before they gained Test status in 1952-53, against the touring West Indies in Lahore's Bagh-e-Jinnah in 1947-48. After retiring he took up umpiring, on the insistence of Pakistan's first - unofficial Test - captain Mian Mohammad Saeed and officiated in three Tests - all involving Pakistan and England - in 1973 and 1977. He took over as senior coach at Lahore's Aitchson College and worked at a national training camp in the mid-80s.

Khalid Hasan (1937-2013) Test Cap #.19

Full name Khalid Hasan
Born July 14, 1937, Peshawar, North-West Frontier Province
Died December 3, 2013, Lahore (aged 76 years 142 days)
Major teams Pakistan, Lahore, Punjab
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak googly

Profile
Aged just 16 years 352 days, Khalid Hassan made his Test debut for Pakistan against England at Trent Bridge. At the time Hassan was the youngest Test cricketer, but he has since been left behind by a series of younger men. Hassan does have one (unwanted) record: as a one-cap wonder, his last day of Test cricket came at the tender age of 16 years 356 days.

Khalid Hasan played 2 innings in his only test and scored 17 runs while remaining not out in one. 10 was his highest score and he averaged 17.00, but in 17 first-class matches he scored 113 runs with a maximum score of 30 while remaining not out 6 times in 16 innings. 2 for 116 runs in Tests and 28 wickets for 1071 runs in first-class matches are also part of his career.

Khalid Hasan died on December 3, 2013 in Lahore at the age of 76 years and 146 days.

Only Test England v Pakistan at Nottingham, Jul 1-5, 1954
First-class span 1953-1959 

MEZ Ghazali (1924-2003) Test Cap #:18

© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Full name Mohammad Ebrahim Zainuddin Ghazali
Born June 15, 1924, Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra, India
Died April 26, 2003, Karachi, Pakistan (aged 78 years 315 days)
Major teams Pakistan (Test: 1954); Maharashtra (1942/43-1946/47); Muslims (1943/44-1945/46); Sindh (1947/48); Pakistan Combined Services (1953/54-1955/56);
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak

Profile
Ebbu Ghazali was an offspinning allrounder who played two Tests on Pakistan's first full tour of England, in 1954. He made 18 and 14 at Trent Bridge, but at Old Trafford bagged a pair inside two hours - the fastest in Test history. In all he scored 601 runs (28.61) and took 17 wickets (39.64) on that tour. He was also a member of the strong Pakistan Eaglets side which toured England the year before.

His highest first-class score was 160, for Services at Karachi in 1953-54, and his best bowling (5 for 28) came the following season against Punjab at Lahore. Mohammad Ebrahim Zainuddin Ghazali was born in Gujarat, played for Maharashtra before Partition from India, and served as an administrator after his retirement. He was manager of the Pakistan tour of Australia in 1972-73, by which time he was a wing commander in the Pakistan Air Force.

Test debut England v Pakistan at Nottingham, Jul 1-5, 1954
Last Test England v Pakistan at Manchester, Jul 22-27, 1954
First-class span 1942-1955

Shujauddin Butt (1930-2006) Test Cap #:17

© Pakistan Cricket Board
Full name Shujauddin Butt
Born April 10, 1930, Lahore, Punjab
Died February 7, 2006, London, England (aged 75 years 303 days)
Major teams (Test: 1954-1961/62); Northern India (1946/47); Punjab University (1947/48-1951/52); Pakistan Combined Services ( 1953/54-1963/64); Bahawalpur (1957/58-1969/70); Rawalpindi (1965/66);
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Slow left-arm orthodox

Profile
Shujauddin Butt played 19 Tests between 1954 and 1962 and also served as a national selector. He took 20 wickets with his left-arm spin and also scored 395 runs. In 101 first-class games, he took 319 wickets and scored 3,490 runs. A colonel in the army, he was a prisoner of war during the 1971 India-Pakistan conflict. A gentle and down-to-earth person, Butt was born in Lahore in 1930 and represented Northern Punjab, Services, Bahawalpur, Rawalpindi and Punjab University

Syed Khalid Wazir (1936-2020) Test Cap # 16

Full name:Syed Khalid Wazir
Born:April 27, 1936, Jullundur (now Jalandhar), Punjab, India
Died:June 27, 2020, Chester, (aged 84y 61d)
Major teams:Pakistan
Batting style:Right hand Bat
Bowling style:Right arm Fast medium
Relations:S Wazir Ali (father),S Nazir Ali(uncle)

Profile

Syed Khalid Wazir was a Pakistani cricketer who played in two Test matches in 1954.He was selected for the 1954 tour of England after just two first-class matches in which he had made 18 runs and taken 5 wickets. In 16 first-class matches on the tour he made 253 runs at 16.86 as a middle-order batsman and took 9 wickets at 54.90. He played in the first and third Tests, batting in the lower order and not bowling. He played no more first-class cricket after the tour,[4] and is thus the only Test cricketer whose first-class career ended before he turned 19.

He played one match as a professional for East Lancashire in the Lancashire League in 1957, taking 5 for 57.He was educated at the St. Patrick's High School, Karachi. His father Wazir Ali played Test cricket for India in the 1930s.

Test Debut:England vs Pakistan at Lord's - June 10 - 15, 1954
LastTest:England vs Pakistan at Manchester - July 22 - 27, 1954
FC Span:1952/53 - 1953/54

Alimuddin (1930-2012) Test Cap # 15

©Pakistan Cricket Board
Full name Alimuddin
Born December 15, 1930, Ajmer, Rajasthan, India
Died July 12, 2012, Northwick Park Hospital, Harrow (aged 81 years 210 days)
Major teams Pakistan, Bahawalpur, Gujarat, Karachi, Muslims, Public Works Department, Rajputana, Sind
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak
Other Coach
Relation Brother - Azimuddin, Brother - Salimuddin, Nephew - J Uddin

Profile
Alimuddin & Hanif Mohammad come out to bat ,
Pakistanis v Indian Gymkhana Club,
May 4, 1954,© Getty Images
Own Signed Picture,
Alimuddin born December 15, 1930, Ajmer, British India is a former Pakistani cricketer who played in 25 Tests from 1954 to 1962. He was the leading batsman during the 1954-55 series with India and scored 103 at Karachi. During the disastrous 1962 tour to England, Alimuddin top-scored in both innings with 50 and 60 at the Leeds Test. In the early years he formed a stable opening pair with Hanif. In the Karachi Test of 1962 he hit a stroke-filled 109 against England. He was known for his solid technique and was a member of the team which England at The Oval in 1954.He is the youngest person to have played first-class cricket, appearing for Rajasthan in the Ranji Trophy at the age of just 12 years 73 days.

Alimuddin was a burley opening batsman who preferred attack to defence and an outstanding fielder. He made his mark at an early age, appearing for Rajasthan in the pre-partition Ranji Trophy when aged 12 year and 73 days, the youngest person to play in a first-class match. He top-scored in his first innings, albeit with 13, and then was second top score in the second innings with 27. Eleven years later, on Pakistan's first tour of England in 1954, he started with a hundred at Worcester and a second one against Cambridge but his form fell away and in three Tests he managed only 51 runs.

He bounced back to be the best batsman on either side in Pakistan's first home series, against India in 1954-55, but he rarely found his best form thereafter, losing his place in the West Indies, but hitting back with a Test-best 109 and 53 against England at Karachi in 1961-62. After captaining Karachi B, he became the national coach before moving to London to work for Pakistan International Airlines. 

Test debut England v Pakistan at Lord's, Jun 10-15, 1954
Last Test England v Pakistan at Nottingham, Jul 26-31, 1962
First-class span 1942-1968

Wazir Mohammad (1929-2025) Test Cap # 14




Zulfiqar Ahmed (1926-2008) Test Cap #:13

© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Full name Zulfiqar Ahmed
Born November 22, 1926, Lahore, Punjab
Died October 3, 2008, Combined Military Hospital, Lahore (aged 81 years 316 days)
Major teams  (Test: 1952/53-1956/57); Punjab University (1947/48); Bahawalpur (1953/54-1959/60); PIA (1964/65);
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak

Profile
Zulfiqar Ahmed, an offspinner and a useful lower-order batsman, was part of Pakistan's first Test squad for the tour of India in 1952-53. He made his debut in Lucknow and was part of Pakistan's tour to England in 1954 and the home series against New Zealand and Australia in 1955-56 and 1956-57 respectively. He played nine Tests in all and scored 200 runs and took 20 wickets. He scored a crucial 34 at No.10 to help set a competitive target in Pakistan's first victory at The Oval.

The highlight of his career, however, was the Karachi Test against New Zealand in 1955 in which Ahmed took 11 for 79. In the next Test in Lahore, Ahmed was part of Pakistan's tail which added a record 450 runs for the last four wickets. Pakistan were struggling at 111 for 6 and finished with 561. Ahmed began his innings with his team on 482 for 8 and remained unbeaten on 21. He died of cardiac arrest in Lahore at the age of 81. He was Pakistan's second-oldest cricketer, after Mohammad Aslam, at the time of his death.

Test debut India v Pakistan at Lucknow, Oct 23-26, 1952
Last Test Pakistan v Australia at Karachi, Oct 11-17, 1956
First-class span 1947-1965

Mahmood Hussain (1932-1991) Test Cap #:12

© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Full name Mahmood Hussain
Born April 2, 1932, Lahore, Punjab
Died December 25, 1991, Northwick Park, Middlesex, England (aged 59 years 267 days)
Major teams,Pakistan (Test: 1952/53-1962); Pakistan Universities (1949/50); Punjab University (1950/51-1951/52); Karachi (1953/54-1961/62); East Pakistan (1955/56); Karachi Whites (1956/57-1961/62); Karachi A (1957/58);
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Profile
© cricket.mohankumars.com
Mahmood Hussain, one of the stalwarts of Pakistan's early cricket, who took 60 wickets in 29 Test matches, died at Northwick Park Hospital at the age of 59, having been admitted there in September for the treatment of diabetes mellitus. Known as a 'great fighter' during his playing days, he maintained his spirit to the end, in his battle with the dreaded complications of diabetes.

Mahmood was the fastest of a trio of new ball bowlers around whom Pakistan's attack was built in the 1950s. Fazal Mahmood, Khan Mohammed and Mahmood Hussain were all born in Lahore and did their city proud as they helped Pakistan to one famous victory after another in their early days. The first of these came on the inaugural tour of India in the Second Test at Lucknow in 1952-53. Mahmood was brought into the side as a result of injury to Khan and took four wickets on his debut, including three for 35 in the first innings (off 23 overs). The second of these victories and in many ways their greatest came at The Oval against England in 1954 with Mahmood taking five wickets in the match including four for 58 in the first innings. He missed the series against Australia in 1956 because of commitments to studies and business, but in 1958-59 when Pakistan beat the touring West Indies 2-1, he took five wickets in the second Test of the series at Dacca, including four for 48 in the second innings.

For much of his career Mahmood was overbowled, particularly on the featherbeds encountered on the sub-continent and the Caribbean at the time. As a result he often broke down with injuries but he was always a great trier to the last. When other heads went down, Mahmood was still available to give it one more try for captain and country. After an unsuccessful tour of England in 1962 Mahmood faded but he made one more appearance in England as manager of the 1978 Pakistan team. By now he had become a successful businessman spending summers at his Wembley home and winters in Pakistan.Mahmood will be remembered as the gentle giant with a great sense of humour and a fighter to the last. A larger than life figure, he will be counted amongst those who were pioneers of Pakistan cricket.

Test debut India v Pakistan at Lucknow, Oct 23-26, 1952
Last Test England v Pakistan at Leeds, Jul 5-7, 1962
First-class span 1949-1969

Waqar Hasan (1932-2020) Test Cap # 11

Full name:Waqar Hasan
Born:September 12, 1932, Amritsar, Punjab, India
Died:February 10, 2020, Karachi, (aged 87y 151d)
Major teams:Pakistan,Karachi,Punjab University,Services (Pakistan)
Batting style:Right hand Bat
Bowling style:Right arm Bowler
Relations:Pervez Sajjad (brother)

Profile

Waqar Hasan Mir was a Pakistani cricketer who played in 21 Test matches from 1952 to 1959, and the last surviving member of Pakistan's inaugural Test squad. He scored 1,071 runs in Test cricket, and played in 99 first-class matches.Waqar Hasan attended Government College, Lahore, where he played for the cricket team. He toured England with the Pakistan Eaglets team of young cricketers in 1951.

An "attractive stroke-making right-handed batsman, who was ideal in a crisis" he played in Pakistan's first 18 Tests, including its first five victories. In Pakistan's first Test series, against India in 1952–53, he was the highest scorer on either side, with 357 runs at an average of 44.62, playing several defiant innings when Pakistan were in trouble. He was less successful on the 1954 tour of England, with 103 runs at 14.71, but impressed with his fielding in the covers.He scored his only Test century against New Zealand in 1955–56 at Lahore, when he made 189 in 430 minutes, adding 309 for the seventh wicket with Imtiaz Ahmed after the score had been 111 for 6.His 189 set a new record for Pakistan's highest Test score which lasted only until Ahmed (who made 209) overtook it the next day. Hasan played five more Tests without reaching 50.

Nazar Muhammad (1921-1996) Test Cap #:10

© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Full name Nazar Mohammad
Born March 5, 1921, Lahore, Punjab
Died July 12, 1996, Lahore, Punjab (aged 75 years 129 days)
Major teams:Pakistan (Test: 1952/53); Northern India (1940/41-1946/47); Muslims (1940/41-1944/45); Punjab University (1947/48);
 Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm bowler
Relations:Brother: Mohammad Sharif; Nephew: Azmat Hussain; Son: Mudassar Nazar; Son: Mubashir Nazar

Profile
nazar muhammad son 
MUDASSAR NAZAR
© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Nazar Mohammad, who died on July 12, 1996, aged 75, faced the first ball received by a Pakistani in Test cricket, at Delhi in 1952-53, and in the next match became the country's first Test centurion. On a matting wicket at Lucknow, he carried his bat for 124 not out in eight hours 35 minutes and set up an innings victory; he was the first player to be on the field throughout a Test. He also made 55 and 47 in the final Test but, soon afterwards, a domestic accident damaged his arm and ended his career. He became a coach, selector and one of Pakistan's best cricketing raconteurs. His son, Mudassar Nazar, played 76 Tests from pakistan.

Test debut India v Pakistan at Delhi, Oct 16-18, 1952
Last Test India v Pakistan at Kolkata, Dec 12-15, 1952
First-class span 1940-1953

Maqsood Ahmed (1925-1999) Test Cap #:9

maqsood ahmed in england tour 1954
Full name Maqsood Ahmed
Born March 26, 1925, Amritsar, Punjab, India
Died January 4, 1999, Rawalpindi, Punjab (aged 73 years 284 day
Major teams:Pakistan (Test: 1952/53-1955/56), Southern Punjab (1944/45-1946/47), Punjab University ( 1947/48); Bahawalpur (1953/54); Karachi Blues (1956/57), Sindh B ( 1957/58), Rawalpindi (1962/63-1963/64)
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

 ESPNcricinfo Ltd©
Profile
Maqsood Ahmed, who died on January 4, 1999, aged 73, was one of the handful of cricketers to score 99 in a Test without ever reaching a century. The near-miss happened in the Lahore Test between Pakistan and India in 1954-55 when Maqsood was stumped. It was an appropriate conclusion, since he was the most carefree and aggressive batsman Pakistan had in their early years of Test cricket. He played in their first 16 Tests, and hoisted the banner of Pakistani batting from the very start. Maqsood had begun his career, before Pakistan's foundation, with 144 on his first-class debut, for Southern Punjab against Northern India at Lahore in 1944-45. He pressed the case for the new nation's elevation to Test status by scoring 137 not out against MCC on their 1951-52 tour. And on the opening day of first-class cricket by a Pakistani team in England, in 1954, he hit a thrilling 111 in two and a quarter hours at Worcester. In Tests, his approach was successful only spasmodically, but he enlivened the closing stages of Pakistan's hefty defeat at Trent Bridge with a rousing 69, getting out trying to hit a second successive six off Bob Appleyard. The press called him Merry Max. His success at Worcester helped him get work as a club professional in the area. He became chairman of Pakistan's selectors, in 1981-82, and a successful commentator and 
journalist: he was the first sports editor of The News, Rawalpindi

Test debut: India v Pakistan at Delhi, Oct 16-18, 1952
Last Test: Pakistan v New Zealand at Lahore, Oct 26-31, 1955
First-class span: 1944-1964

















Khan Muhammad (1928-2009) Test Cap #:8

ESPNcricinfo.LTD By © Hashim Khan  
Full name Khan Muhammad
Born January 1, 1928, Lahore, Punjab
Died July 4, 2009, London, England (aged 81 years 184 days)
Major teams Pakistan (Test: 1952/53-1957/58); Northern India (1946/47); Punjab University (1947/48-1948/49); Pakistan Universities (1949/50); Somerset (1951); Bahawalpur ( 1953/54); Sindh (1955/56); Karachi Whites (1956/57); Lahore (1960/61);
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Profile
With Presedent Mushraff To Recived Medal Of  Honour / ESPNcricinfo
The life story of Khan Muhammad is not much different from the first batch of Pakistan Test cricketers. Born on New years day 1928, he grew up in the old walled city (Kashmiri Gate) of Lahore. Son of a timber merchant, Jan Mohammad, Khan was the only among the four brothers to take up cricket. He recalls his introduction to the game at Central Model High School, Lahore. There was lot of encouragement to take up the game in that school. Once a week there used to be a thirty-minute period exclusively for cricket.

The teachers during this period discussed various aspects of the game, generally without going into technicalities. However Khan shot into fame through club cricket which at that time was at its climax. It was through the annual matches of his club that Khan came into limelight with impressive bowling performances. The competitive nature of cricket in the region helped him to develop his cricket ability at a very young age. It was Khan's combined ability to generate pace without losing control over his line and length and great stamina, that enhanced his reputation among the top-notch pace bowlers of his time. Having a big heart was another essential ingredient that served him well even in poor fielding sides.

Abdul Hafeez Kardar (1925-1996) Test Cap #:7

The Unforgettable Oval Test:kardar thanxs from gallery © getty image
Full name Abdul Hafeez Kardar
Born January 17, 1925, Lahore, Punjab
Died April 21, 1996, Islamabad, Punjab (aged 71 years 95 days)
Major teams India (Test: 1946); Pakistan (Test: 1952/53-1957/58); Northern India (1943/44-1944/45); Muslims (1944/45); Oxford University (1947-1949); Warwickshire (1948-1950); Pakistan Combined Services ( 1953/54-1954/55);
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Slow left-arm orthodox

Profile
©cricdude.com
Kardar, Abdul Hafeez, who died on April 21, 1996, aged 71, may be regarded as the father figure of Pakistani cricket and, as such, an important character in the history of the country as a whole. He captained Pakistan in their First Test match in 1952 and was at the forefront of events from then until he resigned from the Pakistani Board in 1977 in protest against Government interference. But he was a Test cricketer before Pakistan even existed, playing for India on the 1946 tour of England under the name Abdul Hafeez. After the tour he added the family name Kardar, stayed in England and went to Oxford to read PPE and enhance his reputation as an idiosyncratic and fearless cricketer: a left-handed batsman, whose response to any bowler or situation was to dance down the track first ball and slam it back over the bowler's head, and a left-arm medium-paced bowler, economical on a good pitch, devastatingly effective on a bad one. Kardar had a couple of productive seasons with Warwickshire, where his successes included marrying the club chairman's daughter, then returned to Pakistan to take on the captaincy.

Israr Ali (1927-2016) Test Cap #:6

Full name Israr Ali
Born May 1, 1927, Jullundur (now Jalandhar), Punjab, India
Died February 1, 2016, Okara, Pakistan (aged 88 years 276 days)
Major teams Pakistan, Bahawalpur, Multan, Southern Punjab
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Left-arm fast-medium

Profile
Israr Ali made his debut for Punjab in 1946-47 before partition, returning to Indian in 1952-53 as a member of the Pakistan side. He played two Test on that tour, but made little impression. As a left-hand batsman he was initially tried at the top of the order, and latterly lower down, with no success. As a fast-medium bowler, he on occasion opened for Pakistan. He was recalled for two more Tests, against Australia in 1959-60, taking five wickets but again failing with the bat.

Imtiaz Ahmed (1928-2016) Test Cap #:5

  
Full name Imtiaz Ahmed
Born January 5, 1928, Lahore, Punjab
Died December 31, 2016, (aged 88 years 361 days)
Major teams Pakistan, Northern India, Pakistan Air Force, Punjab, Services
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak
Fielding position Wicketkeeper
Relation Brother - Iftikhar Ahmed

Profile
Imtiaz Ahmedwas a cricketer who played for the Pakistan's first Test team in 1952.Born in Lahore, Ahmed was educated at Islamia College. He played in 41 Tests and scored over 2000 runs. He was a middle order batsman who also sometimes batted in the top order. He was Pakistan's first Test wicketkeeper. He made the first Test double hundred by a wicketkeeper when he scored 209 against New Zealand in October 1955.On 6 March 1951, playing for India Prime Minister's XI against a Commonwealth XI, Ahmed scored a triple century (300 not out) while following on, a feat that has been achieved by only two others.He received Pride of Performance Award from the Government of Pakistan for sports in 1966.Ahmed also played in the Ranji Trophy.He died six days shy to his 89th birthday.

Imtiaz Ahmed was one of the fine, proud, patriotic band of cricketers, most of them Lahore College graduates, who gave Pakistan such a successful start in the 1950s. As a batsman he was a magnificent hooker: Majid Khan said he was inspired by the sight of Imtiaz taking on Wes Hall at Lahore in 1958-59. He was also Pakistan's first regular wicketkeeper, which often forced him to bat down the order when he was so suited to being an attacking opener. In England in 1954 he came closer than any tourist before or since to the wicketkeeper's double of 1000 runs and 100 dismissals in a first-class season - he finished 14 dismissals short.

Test debut India v Pakistan at Delhi, Oct 16-18, 1952
Last Test England v Pakistan at The Oval, Aug 16-20, 1962
First-class span 1944/45 - 1972/73

Hanif Mohammad (1934-2016) Test Cap #:4

© newsone.tv

Full name Hanif Mohammad
Born December 21, 1934, Junagadh, Gujarat, India
Died August 11, 2016, Karachi (aged 81 years 234 days)
Major teams Pakistan, Bahawalpur, Karachi, Pakistan International Airlines
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak
Fielding position Wicketkeeper
Relation Brother - Wazir Mohammad, Brother - Raees Mohammad, Brother - Mushtaq Mohammad, Brother - Sadiq Mohammad, Son - Shoaib Mohammad, Grandson - Shehzar Mohammad

Profile
© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Hanif was the first star of Pakistan cricket, the "Little Master" who played the longest innings in Test history - his 970-minute 337 against West Indies in Bridgetown in 1957-58 - then followed it a year later with the highest first-class innings to that point, 499 run out. With such feats, broadcast on radio, he turned cricket in Pakistan from the preserve of the Lahore educated elite into the mass sport it is today. Although famous for his immaculate defence and never hitting the ball in the air, Hanif could also attack, and was probably the originator of the reverse-sweep. His versatility extended to captaining and keeping wicket, and bowling right- and left-handed in Test cricket. But in addition to being the jack of all trades, he was the master of one.

Fazal Mahmood (1927-2005) Test Cap #:3

Photo by,Umar Babry
Full name Fazal Mahmood
Born February 18, 1927, Lahore, Punjab
Died May 30, 2005, Lahore (aged 78 years 101 days)
Major teams Pakistan (Test: 1952/53-1962); Northern India (1943/44-1946/47); Lahore (1958/59); Marylebone Cricket Club (1961)
Indian Cricket Cricketer of the Year: 1952/53
Wisden Cricketer of the Year: 1955
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Profile

fazal mahmood, who died on May 30, 2005, aged 78, was Pakistan's first great bowler, inspiring his country to several famous victories in the 1950s. "He was the torch-bearer," said his modern counterpart Shoaib Akhtar. Tall and handsome, with a Comptonesque mop of hair that led him to feature in advertisements as Pakistan's own Brylcreem Boy, Fazal's ability to cut and seam the ball at a fair pace led him to be compared -instyle and stamina - to England's Alec Bedser. 

© Pakistan Cricket Board
He was especially difficult to handle on the artificial pitches widely used in Pakistan in the 1950s: Neil Harvey, the great Australian batsman of the time, said that Fazal "could make the ball talk" on matting. When Pakistan beat India by an innings on the mat at Lucknow in October 1952 - only their second official Test - Fazal took 12 wickets, seven for 42 in the second innings. Then, on the inaugural tour of England in 1954, he again took 12 wickets as Pakistan pulled off a stunning series-levelling win at The Oval. England were 109 for two, chasing only 168, but lost their last eight wickets for 34. He took 13 for 114 at Karachi when Pakistan won their maiden Test against Australia, "varying his swing with a mixture of leg-cutters and breakbacks", according to Wisden. Overwork dulled his edge after that: he bowled 250 overs in the first three Tests of the 1957-58 series in West Indies. Fazal still managed eight wickets in the final Test, which Pakistan won. And the following season he became the first Pakistani to reach 100 Test wickets, in only his 22nd match, and added 12 more as they won the next game, against West Indies at Dacca. By then, he was Pakistan's captain, and led them in ten Tests in all. 
© PA Photos

He retired after the 1962 England tour with a first-class bowling average of under 19. Hanif Mohammad, Pakistan's first star with the bat, recalled: "He was a great human being, always willing to help anyone who sought his advice. All our wins since we started playing Test cricket were indebted to him." Fazal might have played for India: the senior Nawab of Pataudi wanted him in his side for the 1946 tour of England, but the other selectors thought he was too young; he was selected for the 1947-48 tour of Australia, but then came Partition, and he chose Pakistan. He was instrumental in getting the new country Test status: his six for 40 in an unofficial Test against the 1951-52 MCC tourists helped convince Lord's of Pakistan's suitability. He had a long career in the police force, running the sports department where he groomed several top-class hockey players, and was still working, as director of a textile firm, when he had a heart attack in his office.
Test debut India v Pakistan at Delhi, Oct 16-18, 1952
Last Test England v Pakistan at The Oval, Aug 16-20, 1962
First-class span 1943-1964

Anwar Hussain Khokhar (1920-2002) Test Cap #:2

© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Full name Anwar Hussain Khokhar
Born July 16, 1920, Lahore, Punjab
Died October 9, 2002, Lahore, Punjab (aged 82 years 85 days)
Major teams Pakistan (Test: 1952/53); Muslims (1940/41-1945/46); Northern India (1940/41-1946/47); Bombay (1943/44-1945/46); Sindh (1947/48-1948/49); Karachi (1954/55);
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Profile
Anwar Hussain died in Lahore on October 9, 2002, aged 82. It was 50 years to the month since he had played in Pakistan's first Test, at Delhi in 1952-53. However, his four games in that series against India realised only 42 runs and one wicket and he never represented Pakistan again. Anwar Hussain Khokar faced the first ball bowled in first-class cricket in Pakistan, though he wouldn't have been aware of that when he opened for Sind against West Punjab at Lahore in December 1947 - it was the 1990s before the match was reckoned to warrant first-class status.

Amir Illahi (1908-1980) Test Cap # 1

Amir Elahi (1908 - 1980) & Dattaram Hindlekar (1909 - 1949),
members of the All-India cricket team which will tour England,
 in 1936 © life.com
Full name Amir Elahi
Born September 1, 1908, Lahore,
Died December 28, 1980, Karachi, (aged 72 years 118 days)
Major teams India (Test: 1947/48); Pakistan (Test: 1952/53); Northern India (1934/35-1943/44); Muslims (1935/36-1944/45); Patiala (1935/36); Rajputana (1937/38); Southern Punjab (1938/39-1941/42); Baroda (1943/44-1949/50); Bahawalpur (1953/54);
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium, Legbreak

Profile
© Pakistan Cricket Board
Amir Elahi, who died on December 28, 1980, aged 72, could lay claim to two unusual distinctions: he was one of only twelve cricketers to have played for two different countries and one of the twenty oldest cricketers to have played in a Test match. He appeared once for India, against Australia at Sydney in 1947, and five times for Pakistan, all in India in 1952-53. In his last Test match, at Calcutta, he was 44. Having begun life as a medium-paced bowler, he turned to leg-breaks and googlies, and it was in this latter role that he was best known. On his first tour, to England in 1936, he met with limited success (seventeen wickets at 42.94). In Australia, too, in 1947-48,

Derek Stirling (961– 2023) test cap#154


 

Martin David Crowe (1962-2016) Test Cap # 150

  
Full name Martin David Crowe 150
Born September 22, 1962, Henderson, Auckland
Died March 3, 2016, Auckland (aged 53 years 163 days)
Major teams New Zealand, Auckland, Central Districts, Somerset, Wellington
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium
Other Coach, Commentator
Relation Father - DW Crowe, Brother - JJ Crowe

profile
Martin David Crowe, MBE  was a New Zealand cricketer, commentator and author. He was a Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1985, and was credited as one of the "best young batsmen in the world".A right-handed batsman, Crowe represented New Zealand from the early 1980s until his retirement in 1996.Through the early part of his career he was also a medium-pace bowler. He captained New Zealand in the early 1990s, and during this period he brought many innovations, such as opening with spin bowlers and utilising pinch hitting batsmen.Crowe was born in September 1962 in Henderson, New Zealand, to Dave Crowe, a former New Zealand domestic cricketer. Crowe's brother, Jeff, also represented and captained New Zealand at international level, and both are cousins of actor Russell Crowe.Crowe represented four domestic cricket teams in his career, Auckland, Central Districts, Somerset and Wellington.He scored nearly 20,000 first-class runs, with 71 centuries.His average of 56.02 is one of the highest first-class averages of all time.

John Fulton Reid(1956-2020)Test Cap # 144

Full name:John Fulton Reid
Born:March 03, 1956, Auckland
Died:December 29, 2020 (aged 64y 301d)
Major teams:New Zealand,Central Districts
Batting style:Left hand Bat
Bowling Style:Legbreak
Relations:BA Reid (cousin)

profile
John Fulton Reid was a New Zealand cricketer. He was born in Auckland.Reid completed his education at Lynfield College, well known for its cricket. Reid house at Lynfield College is named after him. He worked as a high school geography teacher while playing cricket. Reid played in 19 Test matches and 25 One Day Internationals between 1979 and 1986. His Test average was 46.28 and included six Test centuries. His ODI average was 27.52. Despite having a very respectable batting average of 46.28, it was revealed by Cricinfo that Reid had the biggest difference in batting averages between first and second innings. He had a first innings average of 68.41, but a second innings average of only 12.09, a difference of more than 56 runs.

Neil Edwards(1955-2020)Test Cap # 139

Full name:Graham Neil Edwards
Born:May 27, 1955, Nelson, Nelson
Died:April 06, 2020 (aged 64y 315d)
Major teams:New Zealand,Central Districts
Batting style:Right hand Bat
Fielding Positions:Right arm Bowler

profile

Graham Neil Edwards  was a New Zealand cricketer. He played eight Test matches and six One Day Internationals for New Zealand.Edwards was born in Nelson, and attended Nelson College.He was a short, stocky wicketkeeper who was a good enough batsman to make his Test debut against Australia in 1976–77 as a specialist. He was brought back in 1977–78 as a wicketkeeper-batsman and made 55 and 54 on his comeback against England at Auckland. That won him selection for the England tour in 1978 where his performances were disappointing – one member of the BBC commentary team said that Edwards was "the worst wicketkeeper I've ever seen  he's made mistakes you'd have the 3rd XI 'keeper at school running round the pitch for". But the genial Edwards kept his spirits up and was a popular tourist. He returned for three home Tests against India in 1980–81 where he chipped in with useful runs, but the emergence of Ian Smith signalled the end of his international career.

Edwards played first-class and List A cricket for Central Districts from 1973–74 to 1984–85. His highest first-class score was 177 not out against Wellington in 1980–81, which was also his most successful season, with 812 runs at an average of 47.76. He was also a prominent player in the Hawke Cup for Nelson for many years, scoring 236 against North Canterbury in his last match, including six sixes and 29 fours.After retiring from cricket he ran a pub in Murchison, then worked as a gate-keeper at Port Nelson. He had several minor heart attacks before undergoing surgery for a triple bypass in 2007. He died on 6 April 2020.

Test Debut:New Zealand vs India at Christchurch - February 21, 1976
last test:New Zealand vs India at Hamilton - February 15, 1981
Span:1973/74 - 1984/85

Peter James Petherick (1942-2015) Test Cap # 136

© cricbuzz.com
Full name Peter James Petherick
Born September 25, 1942, Ranfurly, Otago
Died June 7, 2015, Perth, Western Australia (aged 72 years 255 days)
Major teams New Zealand, Otago, Wellington
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak

Profile
Peter James Petherick was an off-spinner who represented New Zealand in six Test cricketmatches between October 1976 and March 1977. He is one of two New Zealand bowlersto achieve a hat-trick in Test matches. He is one of only three players, along with Maurice Allom and Damien Fleming, to have taken a hat-trick on Test debut. Making his first-class debut at 33,he played for Otago from 1975-76 to 1977-78, and forWellington from 1978-79 to 1980-81. In his fifth match he took 9 for 93 in the first innings against Northern Districts,and he finished the 1975-76 season with 42 wickets at 20.13.After his retirement from cricket, Petherick took up lawn bowls, and skippered a two-man team to the final of the New Zealand national bowls championship in 2006.He died in 2015.

Test debut Pakistan v New Zealand at Lahore, Oct 9-13, 1976
Last Test New Zealand v Australia at Auckland, Feb 25-Mar 1, 1977
First-class span 1975/76 - 1980/81
List A span 1978/79 - 1980/81