Abdul Razzaq Biography
source link(google.com)Full name Abdul Razzaq
Born December 2,
1979, Lahore, Punjab
Current age 31 years 41 days
Major teams Pakistan, Asia XI, Hampshire, Hampshire 2nd XI, Hyderabad Heroes, ICL Pakistan XI, Khan Research Labs, Lahore, Lahore Lions, Middlesex, Pakistan International Airlines, Surrey, Worcestershire
Also known as Abdur Razzaq
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium
Profile:
Abdul Razzaq was
once rapid enough to open the bowling and remains composed enough to bat
anywhere, though he is discovering that the lower-order suits him nicely. His
bowling – the reason he was first noticed – is characterised by a galloping
approach, accuracy, and reverse-swing. But it is his batting that is more
likely to win matches. He boasts a prodigious array of strokes and is
particularly strong driving through cover and mid-off off both front and back
foot. He has two gears: block or blast. Cut off the big shots and Razzaq gets
bogged down, although patience is his virtue as he demonstrated in a match-saving
fifty against India in Mohali in 2005. Just prior to that he had also played a
bewilderingly slow innings in Australia, scoring four runs in over two hours.
When the occasion demands it though, as ODIs often do, he can still slog with
the best of them: England were pillaged for a 22-ball 51 at the end of 2005.
and then again for nearly 60 runs in the last three overs of an ODI in
September the following year.It has hardly been smooth sailing though through his
career. He suffered a slump, particularly in his bowling, between 2002 and 2004
when, though his place in the team wasn't under threat, there was uncertainty
over how best to use him. But there were signs he was rediscovering some of his
old guile if not his pace and nip. And if the pitch is in anyway helpful to
seam - as it was in his first and only Test five-wicket haul at Karachi in 2004
or against India at the same venue in January 2006 - he can be a proper danger.
Though Kamran Akmal's hundred overshadowed all in the Karachi win over India,
Razzaq's performance was easily his most emphatic as an allrounder: he scored
45 and 90 as well as taking seven wickets in the match. A combination of
injuries and poor form put his Test place into question and a knee injury days
before the 2007 World Cup meant Pakistan missed his presence in a disastrous
campaign.Current age 31 years 41 days
Major teams Pakistan, Asia XI, Hampshire, Hampshire 2nd XI, Hyderabad Heroes, ICL Pakistan XI, Khan Research Labs, Lahore, Lahore Lions, Middlesex, Pakistan International Airlines, Surrey, Worcestershire
Also known as Abdur Razzaq
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium
Profile:
A lackluster comeback
to international cricket against Sri Lanka in Abu Dhabi and mediocre
performance in the practice matches saw Razzaq being omitted from the 15-man
squad for the Twenty20 World Championship and consequently announce his
retirement from international cricket. He then went on to sign for
Worcestershire towards the end of the county season as well as signing up with
the Indian Cricket League, which ruled him out of Pakistan contention. He took
back his decision to retire but committed himself to the ICL for two seasons,
during which he served the Hyderabad Heroes as one of their star players.
After a global amnesty
and quitting the ICL, he was welcomed back to the Pakistan fold for the World
Twenty20 in England and made an immediate impact as Pakistan won the
tournament. His Test comeback also looked set to be complete after he was
included in Pakistan's 15-man squad for the tour of Sri Lanka in June. Early in
his career he promised to be Pakistan's most complete allrounder since Imran
Khan, and though for a variety of reasons he hasn't translated that into
achievement, his country wouldn't mind having just a very solid allrounder.
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