Umar Gul
Umar Gul Biography
Source(google.com.pk)
Contents [hide]
1 Personal life
2 Career
2.1 Early career
2.2 Test matches
2.3 Twenty20
2.4 One Day Internationals
2.5 Batting-skills
2.6 Injuries
3 Five-wicket hauls
3.1 ODI Five-wicket hauls
3.2 Twenty20 International five-wicket hauls
3.3 Test cricket Five-wicket hauls
4 References
5 External links
Personal life
Gul was born in
the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan he was born in a
middle-class family and frequently played tape-ball cricket. People on
the street encouraged Gul to become an international cricketer as they
saw his superb bowling. On October 2010 Gul's family announced that he
was to wed a Dubai Doctor. The doctor is from the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa
province and she was born there as well.[5][6][7] On 30 May 2012,
Pakistan Army raided Umar Gul's house in Peshawar and arrested his
brother on the charge of hiding a wanted militant.[8]
Career
Early career
Gul was first
called up for the team in April 2003, playing four one-day matches at
the Cherry Blossom Sharjah Cup against Zimbabwe, Kenya and Sri Lanka,[9]
where he took four wickets, and he was in and out of the one-day team
after that tournament. However, he played the whole of the 2003–04 home
series against Bangladesh, making his Test debut and taking 15 wickets
in the three Tests, and took the second-most wickets of any Pakistani
bowler in the series, behind Shabbir Ahmed with 17. However, Shoaib
Akhtar, who took 13 in third place, only played two of the Tests.
Gul was
retained for the ODIs against Bangladesh, taking a List A best five for
17 in nine overs in the third match, and ended with 11 wickets in the
5–0 series win. However, he could still not command a regular spot,
playing three of Pakistan's nine next ODIs before finally getting
dropped after one for 36 against New Zealand.
Test matches
He was recalled
and played two Tests after that taking four wickets in a drawn Test
against New Zealand before coming in as replacement for Shabbir Ahmed in
the second Test of the three-Test series against India. After coming on
as first-change bowler, Gul dismissed Virender Sehwag in his second
over, and then bowled unchanged for 12 overs either side of lunch to
take five Indian top order wickets - including Rahul Dravid and Sachin
Tendulkar, who both had Test batting averages above 50, as did Sehwag.
Gul finished with five for 31 in his spell, earning him commendation
from Cricinfo journalist Dileep Premachandran, who praised his "control
of line and length",[10] and he was also named Man of the Match despite
conceding runs at five an over in the second innings in a nine-wicket
win.
After a length
injury lay-off, which kept him out of international cricket for nearly
two years, Gul returned to the Pakistan fold in 2006. Firstly with quiet
away series against Sri Lanka then followed by a tour to England in
2006. Gul was quickly made the lead bowler in the side due to the
injuries to other front line bowlers. Gul to 18 wickets in four tests,
justifying the selectors faith in him.
Later in 2006,
against West Indies at home, Gul had perhaps his most successful test
series. He took 16 wickets in 3 tests, including notable spells of
reverse swing bowling. He was responsible for breaking Ramnaresh
Sarwan's toe with a dipping yorker.
Test appearances however remained few and far between due to injuries and lack of test cricket for Pakistan.
In February 2009, Gul recorded his best test figures in the Pakistan team, taking 6 for 135 on an otherwise flat pitch.
In July 2010,
Pakistan faced England at Trent Bridge and were 147/9 in their first
innings. Gul scored 30* before the day was called off due to bad light.
He returned the next day with Mohammad Asif and batted with intent to
add another 35 runs in five overs. This saw Pakistan avoid the follow-on
against England and therefore survive an innings defeat.[11]
Gul then
suffered a hamstring injury in the second test when he was touring
England in 2010 he was ruled out for three weeks that meant he would
miss the remaining two tests. However Gul managed to recover and became
fit enough to play in the fourth test[12] However they decided to rest
Gul for the final test match despite the fact that he had recovered
quicker than expected.
His next chance
to play test cricket came against South Africa in November 2010 when he
took 3 wickets in a first innings and triggered a South African
collapse of 380 on a flat wicket. He took the crucial wicket with an
excellent inswinger against AB de Villiers[13]
Twenty20
With injuries
limiting Gul's test cricket participation, he made a distinct change to
his bowling set-up. Making a focus on bowling in the late overs of T20.
He got his opportunity with the absence of Shoaib Akhtar and Abdul
Razzaq in the 2007 ICC World Twenty20 held in South Africa. He was
generally used by Pakistan from the 13th over onwards and finished the
tournament with 13 wickets, making him the leading wicket taker ahead of
Shahid Afridi and RP Singh.
In the 2009 ICC
World Twenty20, he performed excellently, earning the mantle from at
least one pundit of "the outstanding seam bowler of the World
Twenty20".[14] His five-wicket haul for just six runs when Pakistan
dismantled New Zealand won especial acclaim. The spell made him the
first bowler in history to take a five wickets in a Twenty20
international, and he held the record of best T20I bowling figures until
8 August 2011, when surpassed by Ajantha Mendis (6/16).[15] Mutterings
were made about a possible correlation between ball tampering and the
exorbitant amounts of reverse-swing he was able to extract, but he
denied them categorically: "Whenever an Asian bowler performs and uses
the reverse-swing, the Western cricketing countries raise the issue of
ball-tampering against them."[16]
He was also
part of the Pakistan team that lifted the trophy at Lord's while also
finishing as the leading wicket taker of the tournament for the second
consecutive time.[17]
He gained a lot
of wickets bowled, in particular with late reverse swinging yorkers,
which dip late to slide under the bat and leave little room for batsmen
to maneuver the ball. Consequently he has also an excellent economy rate
in this format of the game.
In February
2008, Gul signed with the Indian Premier League and was drafted by
Shahrukh Khan's Kolkata Knight Riders franchise for US $150,000.[18] He
played in six matches, taking 12 wickets at an average of 15.33,[19]
including a player of the match award in Kolkata's final game in which
Gul took 4-23 and scored 24 runs from 11 balls.[20]
In December
2008 Gul signed with the Western Warriors to compete in the Australian
domestic 2008-09 KFC Twenty20 Big Bash tournament.[21] He performed very
well in his debut match for the Warriors, taking 4 wickets for 15 runs
in a losing side. He was amongst the most successful bowlers in the
competition despite not being available for the entire tournament he
finished second top wicket taker with 12 wickets.[22]
Internationally,
Gul has taken 47 wickets in just 32 games at an average of 14.65, a
truly outstanding statistic. He is the second leading wicket-taker in
Twenty20 Internationals behind teammate Shahid Afridi
One Day Internationals
Gul appeared in
all three of Pakistan's group matches in the 2007 World Cup taking four
wickets with an economy rate of 3.13, only Shane Bond of those to
deliver 100 balls was more economical.[23] He also appeared in all of
Pakistan's matches at the 2007 ICC World Twenty20 taking 3/15 of 4 overs
in the semi-final victory over New Zealand. He took three wickets in
the final to finish as the tournament's leading wicket-taker.[24]
Batting-skills
Despite the
fact that Gul is a bowler he can perform well as a lower order batsman
and has proved that he has the ability to score runs quickly he finest
moment with the bat came in a test match vs England in August 2010 when
Pakistan were at 103/7 and Gul came into bat he scored 29 of 30
deliveries when play was ended on that day however two more wickets had
fallen and the team were at 148/9 by night-time Pakistan would need 11
runs to avoid the follow-on. Gul then came and with his number 10
partner Mohammad Asif; Gul scored 34 runs in just 11 deliveries however
his partner Mohammad Asif was run out at the other end and Gul ended on
65*.
Injuries
However, Gul
was then ruled out of the third Test with a back injury which kept him
out of cricket for an entire year. He returned to play two games at the
2004–05 Faysal Bank T20 Cup, and played some matches for Pakistan A and a
Pakistan XI in warm-up games before the Test matches against England
the following season, but he was not selected for the matches and has
instead played three matches with Peshawar at the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy.
Gul had signed a
one year contract with Gloucestershire to play in 2007, but the
Pakistan Cricket Board failed to give them their permission.[25]
Shortly after
making a six-month come-back from a shoulder injury in July 2010 Gul
picked up a hamstring injury against England in August but it wasn't too
serious and he only missed the two Test matches.
Five-wicket hauls
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