Saeed Anwar's rising graph
KARACHI: On December 15, 1997 during the Sharjah champions
trophy match against England, Saeed Anwar crossed the milestone
of 4000-plus runs in One-day Internationals. He becomes the 4th
Pakistani and 17th in the history of one-day internationals to
reach this landmark.
A rumbustious left-handed batsman and a slow left-arm spin
bowler, Saeed made his first-class debut in 1986-87 and went
through the grind of under 19 matches, later playing with great
authority for Karachi, United Bank, and ADBP. Attacking and
enterprising, he became one of the most entertaining and
successful batsmen for Pakistan in one-day matches and late
developed into highly responsible opening batsman in Test
cricket. A brilliant fielder near the Wicket or in the outfield,
he has the ability to destroy pace or spin with equal ease. He
came into the limelight against the 1988 Australians by scoring
127 not out from NWFP Governor's XI at Peshawar in his first
appearance against an international team. He had been taken to
Australia for the World Series Cup, he made his one-day debut
against West Indies at Perth in 1988-89 where he did not make
much impression. He was sent back home to play against Sri Lanka
under-25 and scored heavily. His 42 in Pakistan's seven-run win
at Gujranwala in the 2nd one-day against India earned him the
Man of the Match award.
Saeed toured Australia again in 1989-90 and batted magnificently
in the World Series Cup. Against Sri Lanka he hammered a century
in 99 balls at Adelaide, sharing a record 202 runs opening stand
with Ramiz Raja. He finished the home season in 1989-90 making
1,082 runs (67.62) including five centuries and three fifties
and later was proud member of the Australasia Cup winning team
in Sharjah. He won his first Test cap against the West Indies in
the second Test at Faisalabad, making a pair, and was ignored
for the tour of England in 1992. He bounced back to regain to
his place for the 1993-94 tour of New Zealand and made his
maiden Test century (169) in the second Test at Wellington,
adding 197 for the third wicket with Basit Ali. On the Sri
Lankan tour in 1994 he made another Test century. A landmark in
his life todate a remarkable world record in one-day
international against India in Independence Cup at Madras of
scoring 194 runs.
Source:: Dawn (https://dawn.com/)