Saturday, May 28, 2016

Sikandar Raza

Sikandar Raza

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sikandar Raza
Personal information
Full nameSikandar Raza Butt
Born24 April 1986 (age 30)
SialkotPunjabPakistan
Batting styleRight hand bat
Bowling styleRight arm medium
RoleBatsman
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 85)3 September 2013 v Pakistan
ODI debut (cap 116)3 May 2013 v Bangladesh
Last ODI10 july 2015 v India
ODI shirt no.24
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
2007–2009Northerns
2009/ 2011-presentMashonaland Eagles
2010Southern Rocks
Career statistics
CompetitionTestODIT20IFC
Matches429539
Runs scored327663772,296
Batting average40.8727.6215.4034.26
100s/50s-/43/10/03/13
Top score8214131200*
Balls bowled492282181361
Wickets55217
Bowling average60.6063.007.5050.00
5 wickets in innings-000
10 wickets in match-000
Best bowling3/1232/252/153/26
Catches/stumpings-/-11/–3/–35/–
Source: ESPN Cricinfo, 2 March 2015
Sikandar Raza Butt (Urduسکندر رضا‎ ;born 24 April 1986 in SialkotPunjab) is a Pakistani-born Zimbabwean cricketer.
Born in Sialkot, Raza emigrated to Zimbabwe in 2001 along with his family. He soon became one of the best batsman in the domestic competition and caught the eye of the Zimbabwe selectors. The only problem was citizenship issues, which was granted in 2011.[1]

Domestic career[edit]

Sikander Raza was born in Sialkot to Punjabi Muslim parents.[2] He studied at the Pakistan Air Force Public School Lower Topafor three years and aspired to be a Pakistan Air Force pilot, but his dreams were cut short when he failed a vision testmandatory for selection.[3][4] In 2002, Raza moved with his family to Zimbabwe. He went to Scotland, where he pursued a bachelor's degree in software engineering at the Glasgow Caledonian University. It was here where Raza played semi-professional cricket, realising his potential.[3] After the revamping of Zimbabwe's domestic structure in 2009, he went on to play first-class cricket for the Mashonaland Eagles. He is a successful first-class cricketer, with a top score of 146.
He also played List A cricket originally for Northerns but later switched to play for Mashonaland Eagles. He made his List A debut in 2007.[5] He made his Twenty20 debut for the Southern Rocks in 2010 against the Desert Vipers.[6]
He turned out to be a Twenty20 specialist, and was the leading run-scorer in the 2010 Stanbic Bank T20 Competition.
In the Metbank Pro40 Championship Final in 2010, he scored a brilliant 44 for Southern Rocks as they cruised to the title against Mid West Rhinos. It was his first big performance that caught the selectorial eye.[7] In January 2011, he achieved his career best List-A score of 80 runs.
His performances earned him a place in the preliminary squad for Zimbabwe's 2011 Cricket World Cup campaign, but did not make it to the final squads. By then he had another fine performance, at the Masvingo Sports Club where his opening stand of 161 with Chamu Chibhabha, simply by bludgeoning the Matabeleland Tuskers bowlers, led the foundation for a massiveSouthern Rocks victory.[8]
This made the Zimbabwean selectors select him for the training squad for the Australia A and South Africa A tri-series.[9] The only matter, was he did not have citizenship status,[10] which was granted in September 2011.[11][12] By then he had another remarkable performance scoring 93 off just 48 balls for Southern Rocks against Matabeleland Tuskers in just the previous week's Wednesday in a Twenty20 match.
Opening the innings with the legendary West Indian Brian Lara and then getting great support from Elton Chigumbura, Raza took on the Matabeleland Tuskers's bowling attack.[13] He then represented a Zimbabwe XI side before the Bangladeshi tour to Zimbabwe started. Zimbabwe XI won the two matches.

International career[edit]

Raza made his ODI debut for Zimbabwe in May 2013 against Bangladesh and scored 3 runs batting at no. 3, thus becoming the 116th player to appear for Zimbabwe in the format.
He scored 82 off 112 balls with 6 fours and two sixes against India in his 4th ODI only. He scored 60 runs on his debut against Pakistan at Harare Sports Club, in which he had a 127-run partnership for the fourth wicket that put the hosts on course for the lead. Despite scoring a half-century on his Test debut, he was dropped from the team when Zimbabwean captain Brendan Taylor returned to the team. He has also represented Zimbabwe in Cricket World Cup 2015. His world cup performance was not that great. But he impressed many by his Bowling. Raza made 100* off 84 balls against Pakistan in May 2015 at Gaddafi Stadium Lahore.
He made his T20I debut on 5 November 2013 against Bangladesh. He is also the youngest person to hit a fifty in T20I.[14] He achieved this feat when he was just above 17 years old.
He was named stand-in captain in second T20I during India tour of Zimbabwe 2015. Before this, he captained four times for Mash Eagles in domestic cricket in 2012. He led Zimbabwe in their first win of the tour by 10 runs.
During the second match against New Zealand in 2015 he scored his third century 100* on 95 deliveries

International centuries[edit]

One Day International centuries[edit]

Sikandar Raza's One Day International centuries
#RunsMatchAgainstCity/CountryVenueYearResult
114110 AfghanistanZimbabwe BulawayoZimbabweQueens Sports Club2014Won
2100*29 PakistanPakistan LahorePakistanGaddafi Stadium2015Lost
3100*35 New ZealandZimbabwe HarareZimbabweHarare Sports Club2015Lost

International Awards[edit]

One-Day International Cricket[edit]

Man of the Match awards[edit]

S NoOpponentVenueDateMatch PerformanceResult
1AfghanistanQueen's Sports ClubBulawayo20 July 20145-0-25-2 ; 141 (133 balls, 11x4, 7x6) Zimbabwe won by 8 wickets.[15]
2IrelandQueen's Sports ClubBulawayo9 October 20151 ct. ; 60* (72 balls, 4x4) Zimbabwe won by 2 wickets.[16]

Man of the series awards[edit]

#SeriesSeasonMatch PerformanceResult
1Afghanistan in Zimbabwe2014201 runs, 1 wicket. 3 ct. (4 Matches)Drawn.[17]
2Ireland in Zimbabwe2015/16143 runs with 2 fifties, 3 wickets. (3 Matches) Zimbabwe won the series 2-1.[18]

References[edit]

  1. Jump up^ Biography Cricinfo. Retrieved 22 October 2011

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