Wednesday 23 April 2014

Imran Khan Profile,Latest news,Photos

Full name Imran Khan Niazi
Born November 25, 1952, Lahore, Punjab
Current age 61 years 149 days
Major teams Pakistan, Dawood Club, Lahore,New South Wales, Oxford University,Pakistan International Airlines, Sussex, Worcestershire
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast
Other Administrator
Relation Cousin - Majid Khan
In a nutshell Imran Khan is indisputably the greatest cricketer to emerge from Pakistan, and arguably the world's second-best allrounder after Garry Sobers. He took a mediocre side and transformed them into world-beaters, leading them to the World Cup title in 1992.
Batting and fielding averages
MatInnsNORunsHSAveBFSR100506sCtSt
Tests8812625380713637.6961855280
ODIs175151403709102*33.41510572.65119360
First-class382582991777117036.7930931170
List A4253848010100114*33.22566840
Bowling averages
MatInnsBallsRunsWktsBBIBBMAveEconSR4w5w10
Tests881421945882583628/5814/11622.812.5453.717236
ODIs175153746148441826/146/1426.613.8940.9310
First-class382652242872612878/3422.322.6450.67013
List A42519122113125076/146/1422.313.5437.71260
Few would dispute that Imran was the finest cricketer Pakistan has produced, or the biggest heartthrob. Suave, erudite and monstrously talented, he gave cricket in the subcontinent real sex appeal in the 1970s and 1980s. As such he and TV completed the popularisation of the game in his country which Hanif Mohammad and the radio had begun. Thousands, if not millions, who had never dreamt of bowling fast on heartless baked mud suddenly wanted to emulate Imran and his lithe bounding run, his leap and his reverse-swinging yorker.
He also made himself into an allrounder worth a place for his batting alone, and captained Pakistan as well as anyone, rounding off his career with the 1992 World Cup. He played hardly any domestic cricket in Pakistan: instead he just flew in for home series from Worcestershire or Sussex, or rather from the more fashionable London salons. His averages (37 with the bat, 22 with the ball) put him at the top of the quartet of allrounders (Ian Botham, Richard Hadlee and Kapil Dev being the others) who dominated Test cricket in the 1980s.
 And whereas Botham declined steadily, Imran just got better and better: in his last 10 years of international cricket he played 51 Tests, averaging a sensational 50 with the bat and 19 with the ball. He gave no quarter during some memorable battles with West Indies - Pakistan drew three series with them at a time when everybody else was being bounced out of sight - and he led Pakistan to their first series victory in England in 1987, taking 10 for 77 with an imperious display in the decisive victory at Headingley. After retirement he remained a high-profile figure, with his marriage - and subsequent split with - the socialite Jemima Goldsmith and a move into the labyrinthine world of Pakistan politics.
 Imran-Khan

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