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Saeed Anwar Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For the Pakistani field hockey player, see Saeed Anwar (field hockey).
Saeed Anwar
سعید انور
Personal information
Full name Saeed Anwar
Born 6 September 1968 (age 44)
Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan
Batting style Left-handed
Bowling style Slow left arm orthodox
International information
National side Pakistan
Test debut (cap 120) 23 November 1990 v West Indies
Last Test 31 August 2001 v Bangladesh
ODI debut (cap 68) 1 January 1989 v West Indies
Last ODI 4 March 2003 v Zimbabwe
Career statistics
Competition Test ODI FC LA
Matches 55 247 146 325
Runs scored 4,052 8,824 10,169 11,223
Batting average 45.52 39.21 45.19 37.91
100s/50s 11/25 20/43 30/51 26/54
Top score 188* 194 221 194
Balls bowled 48 242 653 858
Wickets 0 6 9 31
Bowling average – 31.83 45.77 20.80
5 wickets in innings – 0 0 0
10 wickets in match – n/a – n/a
Best bowling – 2/9 3/83 4/39
Catches/stumpings 18/– 42/– 65/– 64/–
Source: ESPNcricinfo, 29 May 2012
Saeed Anwar (Urdu: سعید انور; born 6 September 1968) is a former Pakistani opening batsman and occasional Slow left arm orthodox bowler who played international cricket between 1989 and 2003. He played 55 Test matches scoring 4052 with the help of eleven centuries; while in 247 One Day Internationals (ODIs) he made 8824 runs. He made twenty centuries in ODIs which are the most than any other Pakistani batsman in the format.[1][2]
In February 1999, Anwar became the third Pakistani to carry his bat through a Test innnings, following father and son Nazar Mohammed and Mudassar Nazar. He scored 188 not out – single-handedly beating his team's previous innings (185), when he mad a duck, and contributing 60 per cent of a total of 316.[3][4] It was also the highest Test score by a Pakistani on Indian soil which was surpassed by Younis Khan (267) in 2005.[4][5][6] He is most notable for scoring 194 runs against India in Chennai in 1997, then the highest, and now the joint third highest individual score in an ODI.[7][8]
Contents [hide]
1 Personal life
2 International career
2.1 One-Day International career
2.2 Test career
3 Records and achievements
4 Retirement
5 Performance
5.1 Test Performance by Opponent
5.2 ODI Performance by Opponent
5.3 Performance Graph
6 Awards
6.1 Test Awards
7 See also
8 References
9 External links
[edit]Personal life
Saeed anwar was born on 6 September 1968 in Karachi. In 1973, he shifted with his family to Tehran and came back to Karachi in 1977. Anwar got his education from Government Degree Science College, Malir Cantt, and graduated by profession as a Computer system engineer from NED University of Engineering and Technology, Karachi, in 1989. He was planning to go to the United States for his Master's studies before becoming a professional Test cricketer.[9][10]
Anwar married his cousin, Lubna, a doctor by profession, in March 1996.[9] He faced a personal tragedy in 2001, when his daughter, Bismah, died after a prolonged illness.[11] As a result he turned to religion.[12] He made his return to Cricket after a long hiatus and was one of the most consistent Pakistani batsmen in the 2003 World Cup.
He devoted his life to preaching Islam across Pakistan with the Tablighi Jamaat. He led the funeral prayers for his former team mate Wasim Akram's spouse, Huma Akram, in Lahore.[13] He is also believed to be responsible for Yousuf Youhana's conversion to Islam in 2005. Youhana was the only Christian in the Pakistan cricket team till then and was said to be heavily influenced by Anwar and the Tablighi Jamaat.[14][15]
[edit]International career
An opening batsman capable of annihilating any bowling attack on his day, Anwar was an attacking batsman in ODI matches and once settled in Test matches, scored quickly and all over the field. His success came from good timing. Anwar became famous for his trademark flick. He was able to lift a ball that had pitched outside off stump for six over midwicket. Anwar's timing and ability to score quick runs made him a crowd favourite. In 1997, when he was as one of the Wisden Cricketers of the Year, the cricket almanack Wisden described him that he "moved his front foot and head well across, then his wrists hovered, hawk-like, over the advancing ball, extending further and further as if they were elastic if the ball was slanted ever more away from him, before the bat flowed into a square-drive to the boundary".[9]
[Anwar] used an eclectic approach to batting – classical betrothed to unorthodox, footwork against spin as quick as a hiccup supple yet powerful to brush the field like a Picasso.
— Former Pakistan captain Ramiz Raja, 2010.[16]
Anwar was the first Pakistani batsman to score a century against India on Indian soil in an ODI match.[citation needed] He has the highest Test batting average (59.06) of any Pakistani against Australia, and once scored two consecutive centuries against them.[17] He scored a classic century against South Africa in Durban, which allowed Pakistan to win a Test match for the first time in South Africa.[18]
[edit]One-Day International career
Anwar played 247 ODI matches for Pakistan and scored 8824 runs from 244 innings at the average of 39.21. He is third in the list of leading run-scorers for Pakistan in the format after Inzamam-ul-Haq and Mohammad Yousuf. With 20 centuries, he is Pakistan's leading century-maker in ODIs.[1][2][19]
Under the captaincy on Imran Khan, Anwar started his international career on 1 January 1989 with an ODI match played at WACA Ground which Pakistan lost to West Indies. He scored only 3 runs in the match.[20] His first match-winning performance came against India in December 1989 at Jinnah Stadium, Gujranwala. He scored unbeaten 42 runs off 32 balls in the match.[21] In 1993, he made four ODI centuries at Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium, including three consecutive centuries against Sri Lanka, West Indies and Sri Lanka during 1993–94 Wills Trophy and became the second of the four players to do so.[22][23] He scored two successive hundreds on three other occasions in his career, and was the first batsman to complete this feat in ODIs.[24]
On 21 May 1997 in Chennai, Anwar scored 194 against India in India in an ODI match.[25] Charles Coventry equalled the feat on 16 August 2009, against Bangladesh.[26] This was the highest individual score by any batsman in the world till Sachin Tendulkar scored an unbeaten 200 against South Africa on 24 February 2010 which later was surpassed by Virender Sehwag's 219.[7][27][28]
World Cup Performance
Anwar played in three Cricket World Cups for Pakistan: 1996, 1999 and 2003.[29][30][31] He played 21 matches and scored 915 runs at the average of 53.82, and his highest score in a world cup match remained 113 not out.[32] In 1996 Cricket World Cup, Anwar made three fifties, Against India in the second Quarter-final at Banglore, he made 48. Pakistan lost the match by 39 runs.[33] He made 329 in the tournament. In 1999 Cricket World Cup, he made two consecutive centuries, 103 against Zimbabwe and 113 not out against New Zealand in the Semi-final, and led Pakistan into the Final.[34][35] He scored 368 runs in the tournament. He played his last match against Zimbabawe during the 2003 World Cup in which he made unbeaten 40 runs. The match was lasted without result due to rain.[36] In the previous match played against India which Pakistan lost by six wickets, he scored his fourth century against them and 20th in overall.[37] Anwar dedicated the century to his daughter, who died in 2001.[38]
[edit]Test career
Anwar was an outstanding opener in Test cricket.[39] He played 55 Test matches for Pakistan and scored 4052 at the average of 45.52. He is the seventh-highest run scorer for Pakistan in Test cricket, and scored 11 centuries and 25 half-centuries during his international career.[1] As an aggressive opening batsman, most of his centuries turned into relatively big scores.[40][41] He scored many of his centuries away against almost every team he toured, and averaged more than 40 against the three of four nations (South Africa, Australia, New Zealand and England) which have been most difficult for an Asian batsman.
He made his Test debut against the West Indies in a match which Pakistan lost at Iqbal Stadium, Faisalabad, in 1990. He got a pair in the match. Bowlers like Curtly Ambrose and Ian Bishop dismissed him in the first and second innings respectively.[42][43] His highest score of 188 not out, came against came against India during the 1998–99 Asian Test Championship at Eden Gardens, Kolkata, in a match in which he carried his bat, in 1999.[3][4]
[edit]Records and achievements
Main article: List of international cricket centuries by Saeed Anwar
Named as one of the Wisden Cricketers of the Year in 1997.[9]
Opened in 32 ODI innings with Aamir Sohail for Pakistan, in 1994–95, the most consecutive by a Pakistan opening pair and fourth overall.[44]
The third Pakistan batsman after Nazar Mohammed and Mudassar Nazar to carry his bat in a test innings.[3] He scored unbeaten 188 runs in the match and Pakistan won the match by 46 runs.[4] It was also the highest Test score by a Pakistani on Indian soil which was surpassed by Younis Khan in 2005.[4][5][6]
Anwar (194) and Charles Coventry (194*) shared the record for highest individual score in an ODI match until it was overtaken by India's Sachin Tendulkar (200*) against South Africa on 24 February 2010 and then Virender Sehwag's 219 against West Indies on 8 December 2011 at Indore.[7][27][28][45][46]
Anwar scored two or more successive hundreds on four occasions, and made 20 hundreds in One Day Internationals as a Pakistani opening batsman.[47]
He holds the highest Test batting average (59.06) of any Pakistani against Australia in Test matches.[17]
[edit]Retirement
He announced his retirement from International cricket on 15 August 2003, after he was dropped from the squad for the upcoming One-Day International tournament in Sharjah.[10]
[edit]Performance
[edit]Test Performance by Opponent
Seed Anwar's performance in Test matches[1][17]
Opponent Matches inn NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 Ct
Australia 8 15 0 886 145 59.06 3 5 1
Bangladesh 1 1 0 101 101 101.00 1 0 0
England 8 14 0 545 176 38.92 1 3 4
India 3 6 0 289 188* 57.80 1 1 0
New Zealand 5 8 0 418 169 52.25 2 1 3
South Africa 7 15 0 279 118 23.25 1 1 1
Sri Lanka 11 16 0 919 136 57.43 2 8 6
West Indies 4 5 0 96 65 19.20 0 1 1
Zimbabwe 8 14 1 519 145 59.06 0 5 2
Total 55 91 2 4052 188* 45.52 11 25 18
[edit]ODI Performance by Opponent
Seed Anwar's performance in ODI matches[1][48]
Opponent Matches inn NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 Ct
Australia 30 30 1 683 104* 23.55 1 0 6
Bangladesh 6 6 1 285 90 57.00 0 3 3
England 11 11 0 488 77 44.36 0 5 1
India 50 48 2 2002 194 43.52 4 8 12
Kenya 3 3 1 29 27 9.66 0 0 0
Namibia 1 1 0 23 23 23.00 0 0 0
Netherlands 3 3 2 136 83* 136.52 0 1 0
New Zealand 32 32 4 1260 113* 45.00 4 7 5
Scotland 1 1 0 6 6 6.00 0 0 0
South Africa 24 24 1 398 42 17.30 0 0 1
Sri Lanka 52 52 3 2198 126 44.85 7 13 9
United Arab Emirates 2 2 1 79 40* 79.00 0 0 0
West Indies 17 16 1 534 131 35.60 2 2 4
Zimbabwe 15 15 3 703 103* 58.58 2 4 1
Total 247 244 19 8824 194 39.21 20 43 42
[edit]Performance Graph
Saeed Anwar's career performance graph.
[edit]Awards
[edit]Test Awards
Player of the series award[49]
No Series (Opponents) Season Series performance
1 New Zealand in Pakistan (Test Series) 1996/97 157 Runs (2 Matches & 3 Innings, 1x100, 0x50); 2 Catches
Player of the match awards[50]
No Date Opposition Venue Match performance Result
1 9 August 1994 Sri Lanka Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu Stadium, Colombo 230 Runs (94 and136 runs) Won[51]
2 16 February 1999 India Eden Gardens, Kolkata 188* Won[52]
Saeed Anwar Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For the Pakistani field hockey player, see Saeed Anwar (field hockey).
Saeed Anwar
سعید انور
Personal information
Full name Saeed Anwar
Born 6 September 1968 (age 44)
Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan
Batting style Left-handed
Bowling style Slow left arm orthodox
International information
National side Pakistan
Test debut (cap 120) 23 November 1990 v West Indies
Last Test 31 August 2001 v Bangladesh
ODI debut (cap 68) 1 January 1989 v West Indies
Last ODI 4 March 2003 v Zimbabwe
Career statistics
Competition Test ODI FC LA
Matches 55 247 146 325
Runs scored 4,052 8,824 10,169 11,223
Batting average 45.52 39.21 45.19 37.91
100s/50s 11/25 20/43 30/51 26/54
Top score 188* 194 221 194
Balls bowled 48 242 653 858
Wickets 0 6 9 31
Bowling average – 31.83 45.77 20.80
5 wickets in innings – 0 0 0
10 wickets in match – n/a – n/a
Best bowling – 2/9 3/83 4/39
Catches/stumpings 18/– 42/– 65/– 64/–
Source: ESPNcricinfo, 29 May 2012
Saeed Anwar (Urdu: سعید انور; born 6 September 1968) is a former Pakistani opening batsman and occasional Slow left arm orthodox bowler who played international cricket between 1989 and 2003. He played 55 Test matches scoring 4052 with the help of eleven centuries; while in 247 One Day Internationals (ODIs) he made 8824 runs. He made twenty centuries in ODIs which are the most than any other Pakistani batsman in the format.[1][2]
In February 1999, Anwar became the third Pakistani to carry his bat through a Test innnings, following father and son Nazar Mohammed and Mudassar Nazar. He scored 188 not out – single-handedly beating his team's previous innings (185), when he mad a duck, and contributing 60 per cent of a total of 316.[3][4] It was also the highest Test score by a Pakistani on Indian soil which was surpassed by Younis Khan (267) in 2005.[4][5][6] He is most notable for scoring 194 runs against India in Chennai in 1997, then the highest, and now the joint third highest individual score in an ODI.[7][8]
Contents [hide]
1 Personal life
2 International career
2.1 One-Day International career
2.2 Test career
3 Records and achievements
4 Retirement
5 Performance
5.1 Test Performance by Opponent
5.2 ODI Performance by Opponent
5.3 Performance Graph
6 Awards
6.1 Test Awards
7 See also
8 References
9 External links
[edit]Personal life
Saeed anwar was born on 6 September 1968 in Karachi. In 1973, he shifted with his family to Tehran and came back to Karachi in 1977. Anwar got his education from Government Degree Science College, Malir Cantt, and graduated by profession as a Computer system engineer from NED University of Engineering and Technology, Karachi, in 1989. He was planning to go to the United States for his Master's studies before becoming a professional Test cricketer.[9][10]
Anwar married his cousin, Lubna, a doctor by profession, in March 1996.[9] He faced a personal tragedy in 2001, when his daughter, Bismah, died after a prolonged illness.[11] As a result he turned to religion.[12] He made his return to Cricket after a long hiatus and was one of the most consistent Pakistani batsmen in the 2003 World Cup.
He devoted his life to preaching Islam across Pakistan with the Tablighi Jamaat. He led the funeral prayers for his former team mate Wasim Akram's spouse, Huma Akram, in Lahore.[13] He is also believed to be responsible for Yousuf Youhana's conversion to Islam in 2005. Youhana was the only Christian in the Pakistan cricket team till then and was said to be heavily influenced by Anwar and the Tablighi Jamaat.[14][15]
[edit]International career
An opening batsman capable of annihilating any bowling attack on his day, Anwar was an attacking batsman in ODI matches and once settled in Test matches, scored quickly and all over the field. His success came from good timing. Anwar became famous for his trademark flick. He was able to lift a ball that had pitched outside off stump for six over midwicket. Anwar's timing and ability to score quick runs made him a crowd favourite. In 1997, when he was as one of the Wisden Cricketers of the Year, the cricket almanack Wisden described him that he "moved his front foot and head well across, then his wrists hovered, hawk-like, over the advancing ball, extending further and further as if they were elastic if the ball was slanted ever more away from him, before the bat flowed into a square-drive to the boundary".[9]
[Anwar] used an eclectic approach to batting – classical betrothed to unorthodox, footwork against spin as quick as a hiccup supple yet powerful to brush the field like a Picasso.
— Former Pakistan captain Ramiz Raja, 2010.[16]
Anwar was the first Pakistani batsman to score a century against India on Indian soil in an ODI match.[citation needed] He has the highest Test batting average (59.06) of any Pakistani against Australia, and once scored two consecutive centuries against them.[17] He scored a classic century against South Africa in Durban, which allowed Pakistan to win a Test match for the first time in South Africa.[18]
[edit]One-Day International career
Anwar played 247 ODI matches for Pakistan and scored 8824 runs from 244 innings at the average of 39.21. He is third in the list of leading run-scorers for Pakistan in the format after Inzamam-ul-Haq and Mohammad Yousuf. With 20 centuries, he is Pakistan's leading century-maker in ODIs.[1][2][19]
Under the captaincy on Imran Khan, Anwar started his international career on 1 January 1989 with an ODI match played at WACA Ground which Pakistan lost to West Indies. He scored only 3 runs in the match.[20] His first match-winning performance came against India in December 1989 at Jinnah Stadium, Gujranwala. He scored unbeaten 42 runs off 32 balls in the match.[21] In 1993, he made four ODI centuries at Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium, including three consecutive centuries against Sri Lanka, West Indies and Sri Lanka during 1993–94 Wills Trophy and became the second of the four players to do so.[22][23] He scored two successive hundreds on three other occasions in his career, and was the first batsman to complete this feat in ODIs.[24]
On 21 May 1997 in Chennai, Anwar scored 194 against India in India in an ODI match.[25] Charles Coventry equalled the feat on 16 August 2009, against Bangladesh.[26] This was the highest individual score by any batsman in the world till Sachin Tendulkar scored an unbeaten 200 against South Africa on 24 February 2010 which later was surpassed by Virender Sehwag's 219.[7][27][28]
World Cup Performance
Anwar played in three Cricket World Cups for Pakistan: 1996, 1999 and 2003.[29][30][31] He played 21 matches and scored 915 runs at the average of 53.82, and his highest score in a world cup match remained 113 not out.[32] In 1996 Cricket World Cup, Anwar made three fifties, Against India in the second Quarter-final at Banglore, he made 48. Pakistan lost the match by 39 runs.[33] He made 329 in the tournament. In 1999 Cricket World Cup, he made two consecutive centuries, 103 against Zimbabwe and 113 not out against New Zealand in the Semi-final, and led Pakistan into the Final.[34][35] He scored 368 runs in the tournament. He played his last match against Zimbabawe during the 2003 World Cup in which he made unbeaten 40 runs. The match was lasted without result due to rain.[36] In the previous match played against India which Pakistan lost by six wickets, he scored his fourth century against them and 20th in overall.[37] Anwar dedicated the century to his daughter, who died in 2001.[38]
[edit]Test career
Anwar was an outstanding opener in Test cricket.[39] He played 55 Test matches for Pakistan and scored 4052 at the average of 45.52. He is the seventh-highest run scorer for Pakistan in Test cricket, and scored 11 centuries and 25 half-centuries during his international career.[1] As an aggressive opening batsman, most of his centuries turned into relatively big scores.[40][41] He scored many of his centuries away against almost every team he toured, and averaged more than 40 against the three of four nations (South Africa, Australia, New Zealand and England) which have been most difficult for an Asian batsman.
He made his Test debut against the West Indies in a match which Pakistan lost at Iqbal Stadium, Faisalabad, in 1990. He got a pair in the match. Bowlers like Curtly Ambrose and Ian Bishop dismissed him in the first and second innings respectively.[42][43] His highest score of 188 not out, came against came against India during the 1998–99 Asian Test Championship at Eden Gardens, Kolkata, in a match in which he carried his bat, in 1999.[3][4]
[edit]Records and achievements
Main article: List of international cricket centuries by Saeed Anwar
Named as one of the Wisden Cricketers of the Year in 1997.[9]
Opened in 32 ODI innings with Aamir Sohail for Pakistan, in 1994–95, the most consecutive by a Pakistan opening pair and fourth overall.[44]
The third Pakistan batsman after Nazar Mohammed and Mudassar Nazar to carry his bat in a test innings.[3] He scored unbeaten 188 runs in the match and Pakistan won the match by 46 runs.[4] It was also the highest Test score by a Pakistani on Indian soil which was surpassed by Younis Khan in 2005.[4][5][6]
Anwar (194) and Charles Coventry (194*) shared the record for highest individual score in an ODI match until it was overtaken by India's Sachin Tendulkar (200*) against South Africa on 24 February 2010 and then Virender Sehwag's 219 against West Indies on 8 December 2011 at Indore.[7][27][28][45][46]
Anwar scored two or more successive hundreds on four occasions, and made 20 hundreds in One Day Internationals as a Pakistani opening batsman.[47]
He holds the highest Test batting average (59.06) of any Pakistani against Australia in Test matches.[17]
[edit]Retirement
He announced his retirement from International cricket on 15 August 2003, after he was dropped from the squad for the upcoming One-Day International tournament in Sharjah.[10]
[edit]Performance
[edit]Test Performance by Opponent
Seed Anwar's performance in Test matches[1][17]
Opponent Matches inn NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 Ct
Australia 8 15 0 886 145 59.06 3 5 1
Bangladesh 1 1 0 101 101 101.00 1 0 0
England 8 14 0 545 176 38.92 1 3 4
India 3 6 0 289 188* 57.80 1 1 0
New Zealand 5 8 0 418 169 52.25 2 1 3
South Africa 7 15 0 279 118 23.25 1 1 1
Sri Lanka 11 16 0 919 136 57.43 2 8 6
West Indies 4 5 0 96 65 19.20 0 1 1
Zimbabwe 8 14 1 519 145 59.06 0 5 2
Total 55 91 2 4052 188* 45.52 11 25 18
[edit]ODI Performance by Opponent
Seed Anwar's performance in ODI matches[1][48]
Opponent Matches inn NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 Ct
Australia 30 30 1 683 104* 23.55 1 0 6
Bangladesh 6 6 1 285 90 57.00 0 3 3
England 11 11 0 488 77 44.36 0 5 1
India 50 48 2 2002 194 43.52 4 8 12
Kenya 3 3 1 29 27 9.66 0 0 0
Namibia 1 1 0 23 23 23.00 0 0 0
Netherlands 3 3 2 136 83* 136.52 0 1 0
New Zealand 32 32 4 1260 113* 45.00 4 7 5
Scotland 1 1 0 6 6 6.00 0 0 0
South Africa 24 24 1 398 42 17.30 0 0 1
Sri Lanka 52 52 3 2198 126 44.85 7 13 9
United Arab Emirates 2 2 1 79 40* 79.00 0 0 0
West Indies 17 16 1 534 131 35.60 2 2 4
Zimbabwe 15 15 3 703 103* 58.58 2 4 1
Total 247 244 19 8824 194 39.21 20 43 42
[edit]Performance Graph
Saeed Anwar's career performance graph.
[edit]Awards
[edit]Test Awards
Player of the series award[49]
No Series (Opponents) Season Series performance
1 New Zealand in Pakistan (Test Series) 1996/97 157 Runs (2 Matches & 3 Innings, 1x100, 0x50); 2 Catches
Player of the match awards[50]
No Date Opposition Venue Match performance Result
1 9 August 1994 Sri Lanka Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu Stadium, Colombo 230 Runs (94 and136 runs) Won[51]
2 16 February 1999 India Eden Gardens, Kolkata 188* Won[52]
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