Sajid Mahmood

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Sajid Mahmood

England
Personal information
Full name Sajid Iqbal Mahmood
Nickname Saj, King
Born 21 December 1981 (1981-12-21) (age 26)
Bolton, Lancashire, England
Height 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)
Batting style Right-hand
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium
International information
Test debut (cap 633) 11 May 2006: v Sri Lanka
Last Test 5 January 2007: v Australia
ODI debut (cap 182) 4 July 2004: v New Zealand
Last ODI 17 April 2007: v South Africa
ODI shirt no. 19
Domestic team information
Years Team
2002–present Lancashire (squad no. 19)
Career statistics
Tests ODIs FC LA
Matches 8 25 54 95
Runs scored 81 85 862 332
Batting average 8.10 7.72 14.13 8.51
100s/50s 0/0 0/0 0/2 0/0
Top score 34 22* 94 29
Balls bowled 1130 1155 7665 4122
Wickets 20 29 150 142
Bowling average 38.10 38.89 31.70 25.14
5 wickets in innings 0 0 3 1
10 wickets in match 0 n/a 0 n/a
Best bowling 4/22 4/50 5/37 5/16
Catches/stumpings 0/– 1/– 10/– 11/–

As of 29 November 2007
Source: Cricinfo.com

Sajid Iqbal Mahmood (born 21 December 1981 in Bolton, Greater Manchester) is an English cricketer of Pakistani Janjua Rajput descent. He is a right-arm fast bowler who plays international cricket for England and county cricket for Lancashire.

Contents

[edit] Early life

Mahmood began playing club cricket in the Bolton Leagues, and played well enough to be signed by Lancashire in 2002. He made his debut for Lancashire in 2002 whilst on a scholarship with the club.[1] Despite having taken only six first-class wickets, Mahmood was chosen for England A's tour to India and Malaysia in 2003-04.

[edit] England career

He won the NBC Denis Compton Award in 2003;[2] in the same year, he inadvertently broke the hands of Lancashire team-mate Andrew Flintoff and England A team-mate Alex Gidman, an early indicator of his pace.

He made his One Day International debut for England against New Zealand at Bristol in July 2004, but his seven overs proved expensive, conceding 56 runs without a wicket. More recently, he toured India with England in early 2006, playing in the third, sixth and seventh ODIs and taking several wickets.

He was included in the Test squad against Sri Lanka in 2006 following injuries to Steve Harmison, James Anderson and Simon Jones, and earned his first cap on 11 May 2006 in the first Test at Lord's, becoming England's 633rd Test player. England reached an imposing first-innings score of 551, and Mahmood took three wickets in his first four overs in Test cricket at the end of the second day, as the Sri Lankan team disintegrated to 91 for 6 at the close. He was unable to add to his tally before Sri Lanka were forced to follow on early on the third day, but added two further wickets in Sri Lanka's more composed second innings on the fourth day.

Mahmood was replaced by Jon Lewis for the third Test against Sri Lanka. However on 27 July 2006 he was selected ahead of Lewis for the second Test against Pakistan at Old Trafford after Liam Plunkett was ruled out due to injury. Although the pitch at Old Trafford favoured seamers, Mahmood performed relatively poorly. However, he was retained for the Third Test at Headingley. He contributed 34 runs with the bat in England's first innings, but then went for 108 runs over 24 overs, albeit with two wickets, in a high-scoring Pakistan first innings. In the second innings, he took 4 wickets for only 22 runs in 8 overs, contributing significantly to England's series-clinching victory.[3] He featured in the final match of the series, dubbed Ovalgate. He took 2-101 in Pakistan's first innings before the game was forfeited by Pakistan for refusing to take the field during England's second innings.

[edit] England in Australia 2006-2007

Mahmood was selected for England's 2006-07 Ashes squad, but James Anderson was selected ahead of him for the first and second tests. For the third test in Perth Mahmood and Monty Panesar replaced Anderson and Ashley Giles. He featured sporadically in the test, bowling just 7 overs in Australia's first innings and 10 in their second, taking no wickets. He later expressed his unhappiness about not bowling more during the test.[4] Mahmood also played in the ODI match against Australia on 2nd February 2007 in Sydney, taking 2 wickets for 38 runs, and sharing the new ball with fellow fast bowler Liam Plunkett. He took the wicket of Brad Hodge by bowling him. He also took the wicket of destructive batsman Matthew Hayden after Hayden had scored 51. Hayden hit the ball straight to Jamie Dalrymple.

[edit] 2007 Cricket World Cup

After his successful performances in the Commonwealth Bank Series victory over Australia, Mahmood was shortlisted for the 15-man England squad for the World Cup. Although he wasn't selected for the first few matches, he came into the side against Canada. Against Sri Lanka in the Super Eight stage he produced his best figures in an ODI match, taking the wickets of Sanath Jayasuria and Kumar Sangakkara in his spell of 4-50.[5] After his successful bowling figures against Sri Lanka, he was picked for the match against Australia. Despite being England's most expensive bowler in that match,[6] he was picked for the following match against Bangladesh, in which he took 3 wickets for 27 runs.[7] England won and Mahmood was awarded Man of the Match.

[edit] Personal life

  • He is the older cousin of boxers Amir and Haroon Khan.
  • He has a younger brother named Rebak who wants to be a cricketer.
  • He had a double hernia operation.
  • He will appear in a Bollywood movie Victory.[8]

[edit] References

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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