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Today's Poll
In your opinion which side will win the World Cup 2007?
South Africa 
Sri Lanka 
Australia 
New Zealand 
Previous Poll Results



Inzamam-ul-Haq

Pakistan

Full name Inzamam-ul-Haq
Born March 3, 1970, Multan, Punjab
Current age 37 years 4 days
Major teams Pakistan, Asia XI, Faisalabad, ICC World XI, Multan,
National Bank of Pakistan, Rawalpindi, United Bank Limited
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Slow left-arm orthodox

Stats
Test player, ODI player


 

Batting and fielding averages

 

Mat

Inns

NO

Runs

HS

Ave

BF

SR

100

50

4s

6s

Ct

St

Tests

119

198

22

8813

329

50.07

16309

54.03

25

46

1104

48

81

0

ODIs

375

347

53

11665

137*

39.67

15711

74.24

10

83

 

 

109

0

Twenty20 Int.

1

1

1

11

11*

-

15

73.33

0

0

0

1

0

0

First-class

241

387

58

16679

329

50.69

 

 

45

86

 

 

167

0

List A

449

422

69

13523

157*

38.30

 

 

12

95

 

 

123

0

Twenty20

2

2

1

32

21

32.00

37

86.48

0

0

 

 

0

0

 

Bowling averages

 

Mat

Balls

Runs

Wkts

BBI

BBM

Ave

Econ

SR

4

5

10

Tests

119

9

8

0

-

-

-

5.33

-

0

0

0

ODIs

375

58

64

3

1/0

1/0

21.33

6.62

19.33

0

0

0

Twenty20 Int.

1

0

0

0

-

-

-

-

-

0

0

0

First-class

241

2704

1295

38

5/80

 

34.07

2.87

71.15

 

2

0

List A

449

896

740

30

3/18

3/18

24.66

4.95

29.86

0

0

0

Twenty20

2

0

0

0

-

-

-

-

-

0

0

0

 

 Career statistics

Statsguru Tests filter | Statsguru One-Day Internationals filter

Test debut 

England v Pakistan at Birmingham - Jun 4-8, 1992 scorecard

Last Test 

South Africa v Pakistan at Cape Town - Jan 26-28, 2007 scorecard

ODI debut 

Pakistan v West Indies at Lahore - Nov 22, 1991 scorecard

Last ODI 

South Africa v Pakistan at Johannesburg - Feb 14, 2007 scorecard

Only Twenty20 Int. 

England v Pakistan at Bristol - Aug 28, 2006 scorecard

First-class span 

1985/86 - 2006/07

List A span 

1988/89 - 2006/07

Twenty20 span 

2004/05 - 2006

 

 Profile

Inzamam-ul-Haq is a symbiosis of strength and subtlety. Power is no surprise, but sublime touch is remarkable for a man of his bulk. He loathes exercise and often looks a passenger in the field, but with a willow between his palms he is suddenly galvanised. He plays shots all round the wicket, is especially strong off his legs, and unleashes ferocious pulls and lofted drives. Imran Khan rates him the best batsman in the world against pace. Early on he is vulnerable playing across his front pad or groping outside off stump. He uses his feet well to the spinners, although this aggression can be his undoing. Inzi keeps a cool head in a crisis and has succeeded Javed Miandad as Pakistan's premier batsman, but his hapless running between wickets is legendary and most dangerous for his partners. There were no such problems against New Zealand at a boiling Lahore in 2001-02, when Inzamam belted 329, the second-highest Test score by a Pakistani and the tenth-highest by anyone. However, he was then dogged by poor form, scoring just 16 runs in Pakistan's ill-fated World Cup campaign in 2003. He was dropped from the team briefly, but then roared back to form, scoring a magnificent unbeaten 138 and guiding Pakistan to a thrilling one-wicket win against Bangladesh at Multan. He was rewarded with the captaincy of the team, and despite leading them to victory in the Test series in New Zealand, question-marks about his leadership qualities surfaced when Pakistan were beaten in both the Test series and the one-dayers against India. But the selectors persevered with him and this bore results when he took a team thin on bowling resources to India and drew the Test series with a rousing performance in the final Test, Inzamam's 100th. After scoring a magnificent 184, Inzamam led the team astutely on a tense final day and took Pakistan to victory. Since that day, Inzamam has gone from strength to strength as captain and premier batsman. By scoring a hundred against West Indies in June 2005, he kept up a remarkable record of matchwinning centuries, amongt the best of modern-day batsmen. A magnificent year ended with Inzamam leading his team to triumph over Ashes-winning England; personally the series was arguably his best ever. He never failed to make a fifty, scored twin centuries at Faisalabad for the first time, going past Miandad as Pakistan's leading century-maker and joining him as only the second Pakistani with 8000 Test runs. As captain, he never looked more a leader, uniting a young, inexperienced team and turning them, once again, into a force to matter globally. The turn of the year brought contemplation; he missed the Test victory over India at Karachi with a persistent back injury. The subsequent ODI thrashing also raised concerns about Inzamam as ODI captain, none of which were entirely wiped away during ODI and Test wins in Sri Lanka. Pakistan were then beaten comprehensively in the Test series in England though all was forgotten - including Inzamam's own poor form - by events at The Oval. There, Inzamam, astonishingly for a man perceived as so insouciant, became the most controversial figure in cricket for a week, leading his side off the field in protest at charges of ball tampering made by umpires Billy Doctrove and Darrell Hair. They refused to come out at first, then delayed the start before eventually forfeiting the Test, the first time in the history of the game. In Pakistan, he became a national hero, saviour of a country's pride and honour. Though nobody is saying it just yet, the World Cup 2007 is likely to be his last act.

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