Imran Farhat Biography
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Imran Farhat (born 20 May 1982 in
Lahore) is a Pakistani cricketer who has played 20 Tests and 26 One Day
Internationals for Pakistan, opening the batting in 47 of his 49 international
innings. When in form, Farhat is an excellent player of the pull shot. However,
he has the tendency to fall for one too many. A fine player of the drives
either side of the wicket Farhat made his senior debut aged 15 in a one-day
match for Lahore City against Malaysia, together with three other players who
went on to play Test cricket (Taufeeq Umar, Bazid Khan and Kamran Akmal). Three
years later, in February 2001, Farhat made his One Day International debut,
against New Zealand in Auckland, scoring five runs in a chase of 150 to win.
After the tour of New Zealand, where Farhat played three Tests and three ODIs,
he was sent back to domestic cricket before returning against Australia in the
third Test of the 2002–03 series, where he made 29 and 18 in an innings defeat.
However, he was retained for the home two-Test series against South Africa in
2003–04, where he scored 235 runs including a maiden Test century in a 1–0
series win, second behind fellow opener Taufeeq Umar. A month later, Farhat
played in an ODI-only series against New Zealand, which Pakistan won 5–0, and
Farhat made three fifties along with his second international century, ending
with 348 runs at a batting average of 69.60, once again the second-highest
amount of runs — this time behind Yasir Hameed. The season was rounded off with
another century, this time against India, where he made 101 to help Pakistan
gain a 202-run first-innings lead and eventually won the match by nine wickets.
However, Farhat tallied 81 runs in the other two matches, which Pakistan lost
to lose the series 1–2. Farhat was less impressive the following season,
however, and in four Tests, two against Sri Lanka and two against Australia, he
only passed fifty twice, ending the season with 199 runs at 24.87 before the
selectors left him out for the third Test of the series with Australia. In September
2004, just before the 2004–2005 season, he had been dropped from the ODI side
following the 2004 Champions Trophy, as he had failed to pass 40 with any of
his last ten innings, and that included 38 not out against the non-Test nation
of Kenya, 20 against ODI debutants Hong Kong and 24 against bottom-ranked
Bangladesh. He continued to score heavily in the domestic competitions and a
century in a practise game against the visiting Indian team was rewarded with a
place in the squad to take on India in the Test series (2006). He returned to
Test cricket in style, with an important half century in the deciding third
Test at Karachi. His brother Humayun Farhat has also played International
cricket for pakistan
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