Fawad Alam Biography
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Fawad Alam (Urdu: فواد عالم, born 8 October 1985) is a Pakistani first-class cricketer. He is primarily a left-handed batsman but bowls handy slow left-arm orthodox. His father Tariq had a long first class career in Pakistan. Fawad Alam currently captains National Bank of Pakistan.
Making
his first class debut at the age of 17, Fawad played with Pakistan
Customs and Karachi. He impressed enough to be selected to play in the
U-19 World Cup, which Pakistan won.
Fawad starred in the 2006–07 domestic season, finishing as the fifth
highest run scorer in the Quaid-e-Azam trophy. He took a 5 wicket haul
in the Twenty20 Cup final which earned him Man of the Match and was also
named Man of the Series, Best Batsman and Best Bowler.
After Pakistan's disappointing World Cup campaign, Alam was drafted into a 16-man squad for a One Day International series against Sri Lanka in Abu Dhabi. His debut in the 3rd ODI was one to forget, he was caught and bowled by Dilhara Fernando for a first ball duck.
His second One-day International was a better experience, as he contributed 32 unbeaten runs down the order as Pakistan beat India by 31 runs in Jaipur.
In between those two matches, he travelled to South Africa as part of Pakistan's squad for the 2007 ICC World Twenty20 tournament. He played in the semi-final, taking two wickets against New Zealand, one a superb caught and bowled effort to dismiss Lou Vincent,
as Pakistan progressed to the final, for which he was not selected. In
Asia Cricket Cup in June 2008, he scored his maiden half century against
Hong Kong. In that match, Pakistan's top order was ripped by Hong Kong
bowlers before Fawad and another team mate Sohail Tanvir
set up a 100 runs partnership for the 8th wicket. Sohail ended at 59
while Fawad Alam remained unbeaten at 63*. However, he was unexpectedly
dropped for the Sri Lanka series in January 2009.
In October 2008, he was selected for the quadrangular Twenty20 International tournament to be played in Canada between Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Zimbabwe and hosts Canada In the 4th match of the tournament, he hit 23* from just 8 balls with 3 sixes and supported the captain Shoaib Malik and guided the team to an exclusive victory by the margin of 3 wickets. In that match, he also got the wicket of SHT Kandamby.
In the very next match
against Zimbabwe, he got 3/7 from 3 overs. In that tournament he got 5
wickets and has proved to be a handy all-rounder. In the Final against
Sri Lanka, he was dismissed on just 2 runs but he also got 1 wicket in
that match.
Alam was picked to play against England in 2010 and wanted to make the most of his opportunity to get picked for the two upcoming tours and then be selected for the 2011 Cricket World Cup.
He also stated that he had played a little bit of club cricket in
England to help him get used to the english conditions and to train for
the tour.[1]
Alam scored well in the first two matches but his major break came in
the third One-Day International when he increased his top score to 64.
He then retained his place for the ODI series against South Africa in the UAE.
After scoring 123 runs in the 5 match series, he was subsequently
dropped from the ODI team and later that year, lost his place in the T20
team after the tour to New Zealand.
Back at first class cricket, he now captains National Bank of
Pakistan. Fawad also has been highest run getter in first class season
of 2012–13. Alam has been the top rated batsman in domestic cricket for
the past couple of seasons as per the rankings issued on PCB website.
After
being dropped from all formats for three and a half years, his
impressive displays domestically (most notably being the top run scorer
in the President's One Day Trophy in the season 2013/14) earned him a
deserved recall to the national side for the Asia Cup in 2014. His first match after his recall was against the host team Bangladesh, deputising for the injured Sharjeel Khan.
He contributed significantly to the team's victory, scoring 74 runs
from 70 balls in a competitive chase of 326. He continued his form by
scoring his maiden international ODI hundred (114*) against Sri Lanka in
the final, rescuing his side from 18/3 to 260/5 with the help of Misbah-ul-Haq and Umar Akmal. His effort was not enough though as Sri Lanka successfully chased the target to become the champions of the 2014 Asia Cup.[2]
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