player

PLAYER BIO

Amir Elahi

  • Matches

    131
  • Runs

    2644
  • Wickets

    520
Role Bowler
Batting Style Right-hand bat
Bowling Style Right-arm medium, Legbreak
Nationality Pakistan
Nickname Amir Elahi
DOB 01 September 1908

Amir Elahi, who died on December 28, 1980, aged 72, could lay claim to two unusual distinctions: he was one of only twelve cricketers to have played for two different countries and one of the twenty oldest cricketers to have played in a Test match. He appeared once for India, against Australia at Sydney in 1947, and five times for Pakistan, all in India in 1952-53. In his last Test match, at Calcutta, he was 44. Having begun life as a medium-paced bowler, he turned to leg-breaks and googlies, and it was in this latter role that he was best known. On his first tour, to England in 1936, he met with limited success (seventeen wickets at 42.94). In Australia, too, in 1947-48, he found wickets hard to come by (eight at 65.87), as, indeed, he did when, after partition, he went with Pakistan to India (thirteen at 38.76). In the Ranji Trophy, however, he was a prolific wicket-taker (193 wickets, 24.72), mostly for Baroda, whom he helped to win the competition in 1946-47, shortly before becoming a Pakistan citizen. His finest hour with the bat (he was most at home at number eleven) was when he shared a last-wicket partnership of 104 (a Test rarity) with Zulfiqar Ahmed for Pakistan against India at Madras. Amir Elahi's share was a surprising 47. To meet him and talk about his cricketing days was always a pleasure.


BATTING AVERAGES

Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 4s 6s
Test 6 9 1 82 47* 10.25 0 0 0 0 0
F-C 125 172 20 2562 96* 16.85 0 0 3 0 0

BOWLING AVERAGES

Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Test 6 4 400 248 7 4/134 4/134 35.42 3.72 57.1 57 1 0
F-C 125 0 24822 13221 513 8/94 - 25.77 3.19 48.3 48 0 30

CAREER STATISTICS

Test debut Australia v India at Sydney, Dec 12-18, 1947
Last Test India v Pakistan at Kolkata, Dec 12-15, 1952
ODI debut -
T20I debut -
First-Class debut 1934/35
Last First-Class 1953/54
List A debut -