Shahid Afridi Biography
Sourece link(google.com)Sahibzada Mohammad Shahid Khan Afridi (born 1 March 1980 in Khyber Agency), popularly known as Shahid Afridi, is a Pakistani cricketer currently playing for the Pakistani national team in the international circuit. He made his ODI debut on 2 October 1996 against Kenya in Nairobi[1] and his Test debut on 22 October 1998 against Australia at Karachi.[2] He is known for his aggressive batting style, and currently holds the highest career strike rate in the history of international cricket. In a recent survey, Afridi was named as the most popular cricketer in Pakistan.[3] He also holds the record for the fastest one day century which he made in his debut innings, as well as scoring 32 runs in a single over, the second highest scoring over ever in an ODI.
Style
His general style of
batting is very aggressive and attack oriented and has earned him the nickname “Boom Boom Afridi”
for his fastest One Day International century just in 37 balls. As of 22 May
2007, he has an ODI strike rate of 109.38 runs per 100 balls, the highest in
the game’s history. This attitude has been transferred to Test cricket as well,
with Afridi scoring at a relatively high strike rate of 86.13 in Tests.
International career
In October 1996 at the age of sixteen he was brought into the
ODI team as a legspinner as a replacement for the injured Mushtaq Ahmed. He
then gained notability as a pinch-hitter and began opening with Saeed Anwar. He
holds the record for scoring the fastest century in one-day internationals (off
37 balls)[12], scored in only his second match and his first ODI innings. He
also shares with Brian Lara the record for the third-fastest century in ODIs
(off 45 balls). One of Pakistan’s most useful all-rounders, he has an extremely
aggressive batting style, which has garnered him over 5,000 ODI runs (including
an erstwhile world-record 249 sixes, recently broken by Sanath Jayasuriya), as
well as taking over 250 wickets at ODI and 47 at Test level.
Career Highlights
* On 4 October 1996, playing his maiden international innings,
Afridi hit the fastest One-Day century off 37 balls against Sri Lanka in
Nairobi. His innings included 28 runs off one of Sanath Jayasuriya’s overs, whose
record he broke.
* Youngest player in history to make an ODI century at just 16
years and 217 days with his 37 ball ton against Sri Lanka. It included 11 sixes
and 6 fours.
* Made a half-century from 26 balls and took 3 second-innings
wickets in Pakistan’s series-drawing Test victory against India in March 2005
Captaincy (2009–2011)
Shortly
after Pakistan won the 2009 ICC
World Twenty20 the captain Younis Khan announced his retirement from Twenty20
cricket the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) subsequently announced that Shahid
Afridi had taken over as captain in T20Is; the appointment was initially for
one match, with a decision on the permanent replacement to be made later.On 31
January 2010, Afridi was caught on camera biting into the ball towards the end
of the 5th Commonwealth Bank ODI series
in Australia. Later Afridi
pleaded guilty to ball tampering and he was banned from two Twenty20 internationals.
In March
2010 the board announced that Shahid Afridi had been appointed ODI captain in
place of the sacked Mohammad
Yousuf he led Pakistan in the 2010 Asia Cup and during his first three matches as
ODI captain he scored two centuries against Sri Lanka and Bangladesh he
finished as the tournaments highest runscorer with 384 runs from 3 matches.
On 25 May
2010, Afridi was appointed captain of the national team in all three formats,
after he announced his return to Test cricket. In July 2010, Afridi captained
Pakistan in the first Test of the series at Lord's against Australia. He scored 31 off 15
deliveries in the first innings and 2 in the second but was dismissed
succumbing to rash strokes in both the innings. After the match, he announced
retirement from Test cricket again citing lack of temperament for Test cricket
as the reason.
Shahid Afridi
Shahid Afridi
Shahid Afridi
Shahid Afridi
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