Batting and fielding averages
|
Mat |
Inns |
NO |
Runs |
HS |
Ave |
BF |
SR |
100 |
50 |
4s |
6s |
Ct |
St |
| Tests |
46 |
67 |
13 |
544 |
47 |
10.07 |
1313 |
41.43 |
0 |
0 |
53 |
22 |
12 |
0 |
| ODIs |
163 |
84 |
40 |
394 |
43 |
8.95 |
538 |
73.23 |
0 |
0 |
27 |
12 |
20 |
0 |
| T20Is |
15 |
6 |
3 |
21 |
8* |
7.00 |
16 |
131.25 |
0 |
0 |
2 |
1 |
2 |
0 |
| First-class |
133 |
186 |
50 |
1670 |
59* |
12.27 |
|
|
0 |
1 |
|
|
41 |
0 |
| List A |
221 |
123 |
45 |
877 |
56 |
11.24 |
|
|
0 |
1 |
|
|
35 |
0 |
| Twenty20 |
38 |
19 |
5 |
75 |
14 |
5.35 |
76 |
98.68 |
0 |
0 |
4 |
5 |
7 |
0 |
|
Mat |
Inns |
Balls |
Runs |
Wkts |
BBI |
BBM |
Ave |
Econ |
SR |
4w |
5w |
10 |
| Tests |
46 |
82 |
8143 |
4574 |
178 |
6/11 |
11/78 |
25.69 |
3.37 |
45.7 |
10 |
12 |
2 |
| ODIs |
163 |
162 |
7764 |
6169 |
247 |
6/16 |
6/16 |
24.97 |
4.76 |
31.4 |
6 |
4 |
0 |
| T20Is |
15 |
15 |
318 |
432 |
19 |
3/38 |
3/38 |
22.73 |
8.15 |
16.7 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
| First-class |
133 |
|
20460 |
12265 |
467 |
6/11 |
|
26.26 |
3.59 |
43.8 |
|
28 |
2 |
| List A |
221 |
|
10627 |
8522 |
338 |
6/16 |
6/16 |
25.21 |
4.81 |
31.4 |
13 |
7 |
0 |
| Twenty20 |
38 |
38 |
804 |
978 |
44 |
5/23 |
5/23 |
22.22 |
7.29 |
18.2 |
2 |
1 |
0 |
| Test debut |
Pakistan v West Indies at Rawalpindi, Nov 29-Dec 3, 1997 scorecard |
| Last Test |
India v Pakistan at Bangalore, Dec 8-12, 2007 scorecard |
| Test statistics |
|
| ODI debut |
Zimbabwe v Pakistan at Harare, Mar 28, 1998 scorecard |
| Last ODI |
New Zealand v Pakistan at Pallekele, Mar 8, 2011 scorecard |
| ODI statistics |
|
| T20I debut |
England v Pakistan at Bristol, Aug 28, 2006 scorecard |
| Last T20I |
New Zealand v Pakistan at Hamilton, Dec 28, 2010 scorecard |
| T20I statistics |
|
| First-class debut |
1994/95 |
| Last First-class |
Khan Research Laboratories v Sui Northern Gas Pipelines Limited at Rawalpindi, Jan 9-11, 2009 scorecard |
| List A debut |
1993/94 |
| Last List A |
New Zealand v Pakistan at Pallekele, Mar 8, 2011 scorecard |
| Twenty20 debut |
Lancashire v Durham at Manchester, Jun 24, 2003 scorecard |
| Last Twenty20 |
New Zealand v Pakistan at Hamilton, Dec 28, 2010 scorecard |
About the worst way to assess Shoaib Akhtar would be to do so through his numbers; they aren't unimpressive but rarely have they revealed so little.
From the moment Shoaib emerged on the scene in the late 90s, the world knew it was in for some career. First there was the extreme pace and there was also the attitude; Shoaib was the fastest bowler in the world, he knew it, he made sure others knew it. He was a natural successor to the legacy of Imran, Wasim and Waqar. But that he will end his career an 'if only' or a 'coulda been' is the great tragedy. He had it all and he blew it.
What he had was remarkable. Early on, in 1999, there wasn't a more thrilling sight in the world than Shoaib hurtling in off an impossibly long run and beating the world's best batsmen for pace. Rahul Dravid and Sachin Tendulkar were clean bowled off successive deliveries at Eden Gardens and the World Cup in England later in the year was all but Shoaib's.
Other peaks came intermittently, but from 2004 to 2006, he rediscovered a spark; the trophy was the home series win over England in 2005-06 in which he took 17 wickets. By this time not only was he still very, very quick, but he had become an extremely smart bowler, an oft-underrated aspect of his development.
But it was a false dawn and a last hurrah. In between whiles and after, there have been as many lows. The list of misdemeanours is impossibly long; doubts about his action, ball-tampering offences, beating up his own team-mates, courtroom battles against his board, long bans and heavier fines, serious career-threatening injuries and most damagingly, doping charges. In his time, he missed more than half of the Tests Pakistan played.
So much so that what he did on the field had long ago ceased to matter and has been eclipsed by his scrapes off the field. For any sportsman, that is a damning indictment.
Osman Samiuddin
-
1997
-
Tours England with Pakistan A and makes an impact on and off the field; is cited for indiscipline by the Pakistan manager in the end of tour report. Finally makes his
international debut in November in the second Test against West Indies in Rawalpindi. Takes two wickets.
-
1999
-
The breakthrough year starts with
those two balls at the Asian Test Championship
in Kolkata and continues through the World Cup, where he ends not only as one of the leading wicket-takers, but also its leading star. His best was the
fiery spell in the semi-final against New Zealand at
Old Trafford. Soon after, he signs a contract to play for Nottinghamshire. He ends the year by being
called for the first time in his career in Australia by umpires Peter Willey and Darrell Hair and John Reid, the match referee; a pattern for highs followed inevitably and immediately by lows is set.
-
2001
-
Returns in March for his first international outing in ten months, against New Zealand in
Auckland. Five wickets suggests he is back but breaks down with a hamstring injury nine balls into the next game. .. and is called again by umpires Steve Dunne and Doug Cowie. A report from the University of Western Australia concludes his action is the result of "unique physical characteristics." Pakistani officials say the report `clears him'. Misses much of England summer tour due to injury and poor health and is called again in November in Sharjah. Again, he is 'cleared' by the University in December.
-
January-May 2002
-
Hit by a
brick from the Dhaka crowd in January, forcing him to miss the end of the tour. Recovers to destroy New Zealand twice at home, in the process bowling the
first-ever 100 mph delivery. Takes
6 for 16 in an ODI in Karachi and follows it up with
6 for 11 in the Test at the same venue.
-
October 3-7, 2002
-
Blitzes Australia with a match-turning spell in
Colombo, which all but won them the match.
-
2003
-
Axed from the team after a poor World Cup and told by PCB chief Tauqir Zia to clean up his act or be excluded from the team forever. Recalled in May for a triangular in Sri Lanka and promptly becomes the
second player ever to be banned for ball-tampering. Appointed vice-captain for Test against South Africa and is served up a lawsuit by a Pakistani citizen for attending a fashion show on a night of religious significance. Banned for one Test and two ODIs for
abusing Paul Adams in the first Test. Misses Test in New Zealand with calf and groin injuries but is photographed one day before enjoying a jet-ski ride, much to his management's chagrin. Typically, returns for second Test, helps Pakistan win with a
stupendous seven-wicket burst (11 in the match) and gets injured again in the ODI series.
-
April 2004
-
A disappointing series against India ends with a back injury in the final Test. Unable to bowl for the rest of the match, he comes out to bat later, freely smacking boundaries in a 14-ball 28. Inzamam publicly questions the
authenticity of the injury. Amid disquiet over his commitment and attitude, Shoaib is called before a medical inquiry which eventually finds his
injury to be a genuine one.
-
December 2004
-
Returns to the squad where on the tour to Australia at the year's end his true Jekyll and Hyde nature comes out. He fights a lone battle against Australian batsmen in the first two Tests, but in the process is
disciplined by match referees (for sending Matthew Hayden on his way) and injures his shoulder at Perth. By the time of the last Test in Sydney, looks physically spent and rumours of disciplinary breaches and problems with the team management emerge.
-
2005
-
Starts the year with a hamstring injury and misses most of the VB Series. Hamstring keeps him out of the India tour and fitness problems preclude his inclusion for the tour to the Caribbean. On the bright side, he is offered a Bollywood role.
Relationship with both Inzamam and Bob Woolmer erodes steadily and his stock is at its lowest ebb when he is verbally maligned by Worcestershire chairman John Elliott for being a disruptive influence. Comes back for the series against England after proving his fitness in a training camp,
finishes with 17 wickets, and silences any number of critics with a rehabilitated performance. Ankle injury surfaces in the last Test at Lahore.
-
January-August 2006
-
Questions are raised about his action again, this time,
by Greg Chappell after the Faisalabad Test against India. Ankle injury becomes a stress fracture and rules him out of the ODI series. All the while rumours fly about ICC concern over his action although no official action is taken or statement made. Injury forces him to miss the Sri Lanka tour and doctors discover soon after a degenerative knee condition which threatens to end his career. Is due to
undergo surgery, the results of which will determine whether or not he can continue playing but speculation about whether it is his action or his injury which have forced him out intensifies. Takes his
200th ODI wicket in Cardiff.
-
November 2006
-
Banned for two years after
testing positive for the banned substance Nandrolone, Shoaib is sent back to Pakistan and misses the Champions Trophy. The verdict, however, is
overturned by a three-man tribunal a month later.
-
January-March 2007
-
Named in a 30-man squad for the World Cup, as the selectors have a change of heart. But
a televised spat with Bob Woolmer results in Shoaib being fined by the board. Later, after much deliberation, Shoaib is declared
unfit to take part in the World Cup due to injury at the very last minute. Speculation has it that his exclusion was from fear of being dope-tested by the ICC, and that traces of Nandrolone were still present in his body.
-
July-August 2007
-
A fit-again Shoaib is named in the Asia XI squad to take on an Africa XI but is withdrawn by the Pakistan board after declaring himself unavailable for Pakistan's tour of Abu Dhabi. Shoaib is included in the squad for Scotland and later named in the team for the inaugural ICC World Twenty20. He leaves a training camp in Karachi without permission and is
fined at a disciplinary hearing. On appeal, a second hearing suspends the fine and charges and puts Shoaib on a
six-week probationary period.
-
September 2007
-
A
dressing-room spat with Mohammad Asif in South Africa results in Shoaib being sent back home prior to the World Twenty20. Shoaib is consequently handed a
13-match ban and a fine of approximately US$57,000 for a number of breaches of discipline. He is also placed on a two-year probationary period during which any disciplinary breaches could result in a life ban.
-
January 2008
-
The board's announcement of new central contracts in January sees Shoaib
demoted from the top category to a retainership. He is handed
a five-year ban, preventing him from playing for and in Pakistan, after
accusing the board of double standards over the contracts. He pushes for a
suspension of the ban and earns a reprieve when the Appellate Tribunal decides to suspend his five-year ban for one month. It made him
eligible to represent Kolkata Knight Riders in the IPL.
-
January 2009
-
Selected in the top category of the
central contract by a new administration and team management despite missing most of Pakistan's commitments and playing only three Twenty20 games in a four-nation tournament in Canada.
-
May 2009
-
Further embarrassment for Shoaib as he's withdrawn from the World Twenty20 squad after being diagnosed with
genital viral warts. He later says he could have
sued the PCB for going public over his skin condition. The board responds by serving a
show-cause notice for violating his contract.
-
October 2009
-
Shoaib is ruled out of selection for the ODI series against New Zealand in November as he will be heading to England for
knee surgery. His recovery is expected to take six weeks, which means he will also miss the start of Pakistan's first-class competition.
-
February 2010
-
Except for the
omission of Shoaib, there are no major surprises in Pakistan's preliminary 30-man squad for the defence of their World Twenty20 title in the Caribbean. Ijaz Butt, the PCB chairman, said Shoaib had been overlooked because he had hardly played any cricket in the past ten months.
-
March 2010
-
Shoaib says he will contest the Pakistan board's decision to
deduct Rs 7 million ($82,353) from his annual earnings as punishment for a contested misdemeanor under the previous PCB regime.
-
June 2010
-
Shoaib
makes a comeback that would rightly be considered remarkable anywhere else but in Pakistan, as the PCB announced a 15-man squad for the Asia Cup, due to begin in Sri Lanka from June 15. Shoaib, nearing 35, last played for Pakistan over a year ago and had been off the selection radar since.
-
March 2011
-
Shoaib is one of the biggest beneficiaries in the new list of
central contracts given to 19 players by the Pakistan board. He was not given a contract last year but is now among the seven men in the top category of contracts given out for the six-month period starting January 2011.
-
March 2011
-
Shoaib announces that he will
retire from the international game at the end of Pakistan's World Cup, bringing to an end one of cricket's most compelling and mercurial careers. He cites fitness as one of the reasons for his decision.
Batting and fielding averages
|
Mat |
Inns |
NO |
Runs |
HS |
Ave |
BF |
SR |
100 |
50 |
4s |
6s |
Ct |
St |
| World Cup |
19 |
9 |
7 |
76 |
43 |
38.00 |
68 |
111.76 |
0 |
0 |
5 |
4 |
2 |
0 |
| ODIs |
163 |
84 |
40 |
394 |
43 |
8.95 |
538 |
73.23 |
0 |
0 |
27 |
12 |
20 |
0 |
| List A |
221 |
123 |
45 |
877 |
56 |
11.24 |
|
|
0 |
1 |
|
|
35 |
0 |
|
Mat |
Inns |
Balls |
Runs |
Wkts |
BBI |
BBM |
Ave |
Econ |
SR |
4w |
5w |
10 |
| World Cup |
19 |
18 |
893 |
765 |
30 |
4/46 |
4/46 |
25.50 |
5.13 |
29.7 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
| ODIs |
163 |
162 |
7764 |
6169 |
247 |
6/16 |
6/16 |
24.97 |
4.76 |
31.4 |
6 |
4 |
0 |
| List A |
221 |
|
10627 |
8522 |
338 |
6/16 |
6/16 |
25.21 |
4.81 |
31.4 |
13 |
7 |
0 |
Limited Overs Career Statistics
| World Cup span |
1999-2011 |
| ODI debut |
Zimbabwe v Pakistan at Harare, Mar 28, 1998 scorecard |
| Last ODI |
New Zealand v Pakistan at Pallekele, Mar 8, 2011 scorecard |
| List A debut |
1993/94 |
| Last List A |
New Zealand v Pakistan at Pallekele, Mar 8, 2011 scorecard |
He's back and how he has done it nobody knows. Shoaib Akhtar is both the least and most likely member of this squad having been out of all equations until he was suddenly picked for the Asia Cup last year. He has cut down the run-up finally but the pace remains, if unveiled a little more judiciously now. The mind is as sharp as it was in his brief mid-2000s peak. Questions will be asked of his fitness, particularly in his comeback spells but consider that he has now played 14 ODIs in a row, something he has done only once before in his entire career.
Strengths
Pace, new ball outswing, old ball reverse and a killer slower one; a fit and on song Shoaib has always been a rounded fast bowler.
Key stats
Among all bowlers who have taken at least 150 wickets in ODI wins, AKhtar's bowling average of 18.16 is next only to Saqlain Musthaq's 15.84 and Glenn McGrath's 17.94
In global tournaments, Akhtar has picked up 34 wickets at an average just over 22 wth two four-wicket hauls
Akhtar's holds the record for the best strike rate in a World Cup match for a score over 25 during his 43 off 16 balls against England in 2003
All stats are updated till the start of the World Cup
World Cup tracker
The 1999 World Cup was Shoaib at his very best; lean, athletic, super-fast and pumped up there was no better sight through the tournament. He was instrumental in taking Pakistan to the final with 16 wickets. He picked up wickets in 2003, but the magic had long gone by then and he missed the 2007 tournament with what was ostensibly a knee injury, but widely thought to be a fallout of the doping scandal in the months before that tournament.
Expert view
"This is a chance for him now to really disprove a lot of people who question his ability and attitude, one final chance to shut up a lot of people. He's in reasonable form though sustained fitness is an issue, but the pace and smarts are there. The only difference is he's no longer the lone matchwinner, he needs support from those around him."- Rashid Latif, former Pakistan wicket-keeper
Osman Samiuddin