News Sports Cricket Know the Pakistan cricket captains, from westernized to fundamentalist

Know the Pakistan cricket captains, from westernized to fundamentalist

New Delhi: Cricket is perhaps the only sport where a captain not only has to have good, consistent cricketing abilities but should also have a penchant for the kind of leadership found in a military


it was under Imran that the team notched its first ever Test series wins against England (in England) and against India (in India) – both in 1987.

He would also often exhibit his anger on the field at players he thought weren't giving their all, and the spectacle of Khan admonishing players with some choice Urdu and English abuses became a common sight.
Khan was famous for being a ‘party animal' who encouraged his team to live it up, especially when it came to women.

Qasim Omar, a dashing middle-order batsman, after he was admonished by Imran in the dressing room for getting out playing a rash stroke in Australia, returned to Pakistan and accused Khan and his team of being ‘compulsive hashish smokers' and for ‘regularly bringing women into their hotel rooms.'

Khan finally wrapped up his career by leading Pakistan to win the 1992 World Cup.

Imran retired immediately after the World Cup, aged 41. After getting married, he entered politics as a ‘born-again Muslim.'

Captaincy Record (1982-84/1986-88/1989-92):
Tests: 14 won, 8 lost, 26 drawn.
ODIs: 75 won, 59 lost, 1 tied, 4 no result.