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Syed Abid Ali
India
Player profile
Full name Syed Abid Ali
Born September 9, 1941, Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh
Current age 66 years 319 days
Major teams India, Hyderabad (India)
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium-fast
Batting and fielding averages
|
Mat |
Inns |
NO |
Runs |
HS |
Ave |
BF |
SR |
100 |
50 |
4s |
6s |
Ct |
St |
| Tests |
29 |
53 |
3 |
1018 |
81 |
20.36 |
|
|
0 |
6 |
|
0 |
32 |
0 |
| ODIs |
5 |
3 |
0 |
93 |
70 |
31.00 |
132 |
70.45 |
0 |
1 |
6 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
| First-class |
212 |
333 |
35 |
8732 |
173* |
29.30 |
|
|
13 |
41 |
|
|
190 |
5 |
| List A |
12 |
8 |
2 |
169 |
70 |
28.16 |
|
|
0 |
1 |
|
|
5 |
0 |
Bowling averages
|
Mat |
Inns |
Balls |
Runs |
Wkts |
BBI |
BBM |
Ave |
Econ |
SR |
4w |
5w |
10 |
| Tests |
29 |
49 |
4164 |
1980 |
47 |
6/55 |
7/116 |
42.12 |
2.85 |
88.5 |
2 |
1 |
0 |
| ODIs |
5 |
5 |
336 |
187 |
7 |
2/22 |
2/22 |
26.71 |
3.33 |
48.0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
| First-class |
212 |
|
25749 |
11336 |
397 |
6/23 |
|
28.55 |
2.64 |
64.8 |
|
14 |
0 |
| List A |
12 |
|
783 |
367 |
19 |
3/20 |
3/20 |
19.31 |
2.81 |
41.2 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
Career statistics
| Test debut |
Australia v India at Adelaide, Dec 23-28, 1967 scorecard |
| Last Test |
India v West Indies at Delhi, Dec 11-15, 1974 scorecard |
| Test statistics |
|
| ODI debut |
England v India at Leeds, Jul 13, 1974 scorecard |
| Last ODI |
India v New Zealand at Manchester, Jun 14, 1975 scorecard |
| ODI statistics |
|
| First-class span |
1959/60 - 1978/79 |
| List A span |
1973/74 - 1975 |
Abid Ali had the feet of a sprinter, the energy of a marathon runner and the will of a decathlete, but his misfortune was that he was born 20 years too early. His game was made to order for one-day cricket: he bowled brisk medium-pace, fielded outstandingly, and was a busy lower-order batsman who ran between the wickets as if on invisible skates. On his Test debut against Australia at Brisbane in 1967-68, he took a memorable 6 for 55, but Abid Ali was forever destined to play choirboy to India's famous spin quartet. In the same series, he scored 78 and 81 at Sydney, a performance that earned high praise from Jack Fingleton, the noted Australian cricketer-turned-journalist. His career ended abruptly when he was at his peak, after he had top-scored with 70 from No. 7 and taken 2 for 35 against New Zealand in the 1975 World Cup. A bizarre postscript to this premature curtailment came when Abid Ali had the dubious pleasure of reading his own obituary after Farokh Engineer mistakenly announced his death on the air.
H Natarajan



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