Test cricket is the oldest form of cricket played at international level.[1] A Test match is scheduled to take place over a period of five days, and is played by teams representing Full Member nations of the International Cricket Council (ICC).[2] [3] Pakistan obtained Full Member status of the ICC in 1952, becoming the seventh nation eligible to play Test cricket.[4] The Pakistan national cricket team played their first Test match on 16 October 1952 against India which they lost by an innings and 70 runs.[5] They recorded their first victory in their second ever match against India on 23 October 1952.[5] Since then, they have played 434 matches, against every other Test-playing nation.[6] [7], Pakistan is the fourth-most successful team in Test cricket with an overall winning percentage of 32.87, behind Australia (47.39), South Africa (38.46) and England (36.39).[7]
Top order batsman and former captain Younis Khan holds several Pakistan batting records. He has scored the most runs (10,099) for Pakistan in Test cricket – the first and only player to score over 10,000 runs in the format for his country. He is the record holder for the highest number of centuries (34) as well as the highest number of double centuries (six with Javed Miandad) for Pakistan.[8] Hanif Mohammad's 337 runs against the West Indies in 1958 is the highest individual score by a Pakistani cricketer, surpassing the previous best of 209 by Imtiaz Ahmed, which was established in 1955.[9] It is also the eighth-highest individual score in Test cricket.[10] Hanif Mohammad (337), Inzamam-ul-Haq (329), Younis Khan (313) and Azhar Ali (302 not out) are the only Pakistani players who have scored triple centuries.[11]
Wasim Akram, regarded as "one of the greatest left-arm bowlers in the history of world cricket", holds several Test records.[12] He holds the record for the most Test wickets (414) as well as the record for the most five wickets per innings (25) for Pakistan.[13] Akram also holds the record of highest individual score batting at number 8 (257 not out) in Test cricket. This feat was achieved in 1996 playing against Zimbabwe.[14] Abdul Qadir's nine wickets for 56 runs, against England at Gaddafi Stadium in 1987, is the best bowling figures in an innings by a Pakistani bowler.[15] 14 wickets for 116 runs by Imran Khan against Sri Lanka in 1982 at the same ground is the best bowling performance in a Test by a Pakistani player.[16] He also holds the record for best bowling average for Pakistan with 22.81.[17] Younis Khan took 139 catches from 118 matches as fielder, the most by a Pakistani and twelfth-highest overall.[18] Wasim Bari is Pakistan's most successful wicket-keeper having taken 228 dismissals; he is eleventh in the list of most dismissals in Test cricket.[19]
The top five records are listed for each category, except in "team wins, losses, and draws" and "highest wicket partnerships". Tied records for the fifth place are listed as well. Explanations of the general symbols and cricketing terms used in the list are given below. Specific details are provided in each category where appropriate.
Symbol | Meaning | |
---|---|---|
† | Player is currently active in Test cricket | |
Player remained not out or partnership remained unbroken | ||
♠ | World record | |
d | Innings was declared (e.g. 952/6d) | |
Date | Starting date of the Test match | |
Innings | Number of innings played | |
Matches | Number of matches played | |
Opponent | The team Pakistan was playing against | |
Period | The time period when the player was active in Test cricket | |
Player | The player involved in the record | |
Venue | Test cricket ground where the match was played |
Pakistan has played 454 Test matches resulting in 147 victories, 140 defeats and 166 draws for an overall winning percentage of 32.38, the fourth-highest winning percentage of Test playing teams. A tie can occur when the scores of both teams are equal at the conclusion of play, provided that the side batting last has completed their innings. Only two matches have ended in a tie in Test cricket history, neither of which involved Pakistan.[7]
Opponent | Year of first Home win | Year of first Away win | |
---|---|---|---|
– | |||
2001 | 2002 | ||
1987 | |||
1987 | |||
YTP | 2018 | ||
1973 | |||
– | |||
1994 | |||
1959 | 2017 | ||
1993 | 1995 | ||
Last updated: 20 June 2020[20] |
Opponent | Home | Away | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Venue | Year | Venue | Year | ||
1977 | |||||
Multan | 2002 | ||||
1954 | |||||
1952 | |||||
YTP | YTP | 2018 | |||
1973 | |||||
1998 | |||||
1986 | |||||
1958 | |||||
1995 | |||||
Last updated: 20 June 2020[21] |
Opponent | Frequency | Series won | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
7 | 1956–57 (1-0), 1979–80 (1-0), 1982–83 (3-0), 1988–89 (1-0), 1994–95 (1-0), 2014–15 (2-0), 2018–19 (1-0) | ||||
2 | 2003 (3-0), 2019–20 (1-0) | ||||
5 | 1983–84 (1-0), 1987–88 (1-0), 2005–06 (2-0), 2011–12 (3-0), 2015–16 (2-0) | ||||
3 | 1978–79 (2-0), 1982–83 (3-0), 2005–06 (1-0) | ||||
N/A | Yet to Play | ||||
6 | 1955–56 (2-0), 1964–65 (2-0), 1976–77 (2-0), 1984–85 (2-0), 1990–91 (3-0), 2002 (1-0) | ||||
2 | 2003–04 (1-0), 2020–21 (2-0) | ||||
5 | 1981–82 (2-0), 1985–86 (2-0), 1991–92 (1-0), 2011–12 (1-0), 2019–20 (1-0) | ||||
5 | 1958–59 (2-1), 1997–98 (3-0), 2001–02 (2-0), 2006–07 (2-0), 2016–17 (2-1) | ||||
2 | 1993–94 (2-0), 1996–97 (1-0) | ||||
Last updated: 29 July 2023 [22] |
Opponent | Frequency | Series won | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | Yet to win | ||||
4 | 2001–02 (2-0), 2011–12 (2-0), 2014–15 (1-0), 2021–22 (2-0) | ||||
3 | 1987 (1-0), 1992 (2-1), 1996 (2-0) | ||||
1 | 1986-87 (1-0) | ||||
1 | 2018 (1-0) | ||||
7 | 1972–73 (1-0), 1978–79 (1-0), 1992–93 (1-0), 1993–94 (2-1), 1995–96 (1-0), 2003–04 (1-0), 2010–11 (1-0) | ||||
0 | Yet to win | ||||
5 | 1994 (2-0), 2000 (2-0), 2005–06 (1-0), 2015 (2-1), 2023 (2-0) | ||||
1 | 2016–17 (2-1) | ||||
5 | 1994–95 (2-1), 1997–98 (1-0), 2002–03 (2-0), 2011 (1-0), 2020–21 (2-0) | ||||
Last updated: 29 July 2023 |
Opponent | Frequency | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
7 | |||||
6 | |||||
8 | |||||
4 | |||||
1 | |||||
13 | |||||
2 | |||||
10 | |||||
6 | |||||
7 | |||||
Last updated: 29 July 2023 |
The highest innings total scored in Test cricket came in the series between Sri Lanka and India in August 1997. Playing in the first Test at the R. Premadasa Stadium in Colombo, the hosts posted a first innings total of 952/6d. This broke the longstanding record of 903/7d which England set against Australia in the final Test of the 1938 Ashes series at The Oval. The first Test of the 2008–09 series against Sri Lanka saw Pakistan set their highest innings total of 765/5d, the fifth-highest score in Test cricket.[23]
Rank | Score | Opposition | Venue | Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 765–6d | National Stadium, Karachi | ||
align=center | 2 | 708 | Kennington Oval, London | ||
align=center | 3 | 699–5 | Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore | ||
align=center | 4 | 679–7d | |||
align=center | 5 | 674–6 | Iqbal Stadium, Faisalabad | ||
Last updated: 30 August 2017[24] |
Pakistan's highest fourth innings total is 450 all out in an unsuccessful run chase against Australia at Brisbane in December 2016. Australia had set a target of 490. Pakistan's second highest fourth innings total of 443/7 also came against Australia at Karachi in 2022. [25]
scope=col | Rank | scope=col | Score | scope=col | Target | scope=col | Opposition | scope=col | Venue | scope=col | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | align=center | 377 | Pallekele International Cricket Stadium, Pallekele, Sri Lanka | ||||||
align=center | 2 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | align=center | 344 | Galle International Stadium, Galle, Sri Lanka | ||||||
align=center | 3 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | align=center | 314 | National Stadium, Karachi, Pakistan | ||||||
align=center | 4 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | align=center | 302 | Sharjah Cricket Stadium, Sharjah, UAE | ||||||
align=center | 5 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | align=center | 274 | Basin Reserve, Wellington, New Zealand | ||||||
Last updated: 20 June 2020[26] |
scope=col | Rank | scope=col | Score | scope=col | Opposition | scope=col | Venue | scope=col | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | 49 | New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg, South Africa | |||||
align=center | 2 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | 53 | Sharjah Cricket Stadium, Sharjah, UAE | |||||
align=center | 3 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | 59 | ||||||
align=center | 4 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | 62 | WACA Ground, Perth, Australia | |||||
align=center rowspan=2 | 5 | scope=row style=text-align:center; rowspan=2 | 72 | Edgbaston Cricket Ground, Birmingham, England | |||||
WACA Ground, Perth, Australia | |||||||||
Last updated: 20 June 2020[27] |
The highest innings total scored against Pakistan is by West Indies when they scored 790/3d in the third Test of the Pakistan's tour of West Indies in 1958 at Sabina Park.
scope=col | Rank | scope=col | Score | scope=col | Opposition | scope=col | Venue | scope=col | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | Sabina Park, Kingston, Jamaica | ||||||
align=center | 2 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | Sharjah Cricket Stadium, Sharjah, UAE | ||||||
align=center | 3 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | Multan Cricket Stadium, Multan, Pakistan | ||||||
align=center | 4 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | Hagley Oval, Christchurch, New Zealand | ||||||
align=center | 5 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium, Rawalpindi, Pakistan | ||||||
Last updated: 6 January 2021[28] |
The lowest innings total scored against Pakistan is 53 in the first test of West Indies tour of Pakistan in 1986
scope=col | Rank | scope=col | Score | scope=col | Opposition | scope=col | Venue | scope=col | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | 53 | Iqbal Stadium, Faisalabad, Pakistan | |||||
align=center | 2 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | 70 | Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka, Bangladesh | |||||
align=center | 3 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | 71 | Asgiriya Stadium, Kandy, Sri Lanka | |||||
align=center | 4 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | 72 | Sheikh Zayed Cricket Stadium, Abu Dhabi, UAE | |||||
align=center rowspan=2 | 5 | scope=row style=text-align:center; rowspan=2 | 73 | Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore, Pakistan | |||||
Asgiriya Stadium, Kandy, Sri Lanka | |||||||||
Last updated: 3 December 2017[29] |
A Test match is won when one side has scored more runs than the total runs scored by the opposing side during their two innings. If both sides have completed both their allocated innings and the side that fielded last has the higher aggregate of runs, it is known as a win by runs. This indicates the number of runs that they had scored more than the opposing side. If one side scores more runs in a single innings than the total runs scored by the other side in both their innings, it is known as a win by innings and runs. If the side batting last wins the match, it is known as a win by wickets, indicating the number of wickets that were still to fall.[30]
The fifth Test of the 1938 Ashes series at The Oval saw England win by an innings and 579 runs, the largest victory by an innings in Test cricket history. The fifth-largest victory was Pakistan's win against New Zealand in the first Test of the 2002 tour at the Gaddafi Stadium, where the hosts won by an innings and 324 runs.[31]
Rank | Margin | Opposition | Venue | Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | Innings and 324 runs | Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore | ||
align=center | 2 | Innings and 264 runs | Multan Cricket Stadium, Multan | ||
align=center | 3 | Innings and 222 runs | Singhalese Sports Club Cricket Ground, Colombo | ||
align=center | 4 | Innings and 188 runs | National Stadium, Karachi | ||
align=center | 5 | Innings and 184 runs | Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, Chittagong | ||
Last updated: 30 August 2017[32] |
The greatest winning margin by runs in Test cricket was England's victory over Australia by 675 runs in the first Test of the 1928–29 Ashes series. Pakistan's largest victory by runs was recorded in the second Test of the 2018–19 series where they defeated Australia by 373 runs.[33]
Rank | Margin | Opposition | Venue | Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 373 runs | Zayed Sports City Stadium, Abu Dhabi | ||
align=center | 2 | 356 runs | |||
align=center | 3 | 341 runs | National Stadium, Karachi | ||
align=center | 4 | 328 runs | Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, Dhaka | ||
align=center | 5 | 301 runs | Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu Stadium, Colombo | ||
Last updated: 19 October 2018 |
Pakistan have won a Test match by a margin of 10 wickets on 13 occasions, rank fourth in the list after Australia (28), West Indies (25) and England (20).[34] [35] [36]
Rank | Victories | Opposition | Most recent venue | Date | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | align=center | 4 | The Oval, London, England | ||
align=center rowspan=4 | 2 | align=center rowspan=4 | 2 | National Stadium, Karachi | ||
Queens Sports Club, Bulawayo, Zimbabwe | ||||||
Seddon Park, Hamilton | ||||||
Galle International Stadium, Galle | ||||||
align=center | 6 | align=center | 1 | Iqbal Stadium, Faisalabad | ||
Last updated: 30 August 2017 |
Pakistan's narrowest win by runs was against India in the first Test of the 1998–99 series at M.Chinnaswamy Stadium, Chennai. Set 271 runs for victory in the final innings, India were bowled all out for 258 to give victory to Pakistan by twelve runs.[37] This was the twelfth-narrowest win in the history of Test cricket.
Rank | Margin | Opposition | Venue | Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chennai | |||
align=center | 2 | M.Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore | |||
align=center | 3 | Multan Cricket Stadium, Multan | |||
align=center | 4 | Kennington Oval, London | |||
align=center | 5 | Kingsmead Cricket Ground, Durban | |||
Last updated: 30 August 2017[38] |
Out of twelve occasions, Pakistan have achieved their narrowest win of one-wicket victory twice. Their first-narrowest win by wickets came in the first Test of the Australia tour of Pakistan in 1994–95. Played at the National Stadium in Karachi, the hosts won the match by a margin of one wicket. Pakistan repeated the feat against Bangladesh at Multan Cricket Stadium in 2003.[39]
Rank | Margin | Opposition | Venue | Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center rowspan=2 | 1 | 1 wicket | National Stadium, Karachi | ||
Multan Cricket Stadium, Multan | |||||
align=center | 3 | 2 wicket | Lord's, London | ||
align=center rowspan=4 | 4 | 3 wickets | National Stadium, Karachi | ||
Iqbal Stadium, Faisalabad | |||||
Harare Sports Club, Harare | |||||
Headingley Cricket Ground, Leeds | |||||
Last updated: 30 August 2017 |
Lord's in London played host Pakistan's greatest defeat by an innings in Test cricket.[31] The final Test of the 2010 series saw England defeat the tourists by an innings and 225 runs, to win the series 2–0.[40]
Rank | Margin | Opposition | Venue | Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | Innings and 225 runs | Lord's, London | ||
align=center | 2 | Innings and 198 runs | Sharjah Cricket Stadium, Sharjah | ||
align=center | 3 | Innings and 185 runs | Seddon Park, Hamilton | ||
align=center | 4 | Innings and 176 runs | Hagley Oval, Christchurch | ||
align=center | 5 | Innings and 174 runs | Sabina Park, Kingston | ||
Last updated: 6 January 2021[41] |
The first Test of the 2004–05 series saw Pakistan defeated by Australia by 491 runs, fourth greatest losing margin by runs in Test cricket.[33]
Rank | Margin | Opposition | Venue | Date | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 491 runs | WACA Ground, Perth | |||
align=center | 2 | 360 runs | Perth Stadium, Perth | |||
align=center | 3 | 354 runs | Trent Bridge, Nottingham | |||
align=center | 4 | 348 runs | Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne | |||
align=center | 5 | 330 runs | Old Trafford Cricket Ground, Manchester | |||
- class=sortbottom | Last updated: 17 December 2023 |
Pakistan have lost a Test match by a margin of 10 wickets on nine occasions.
Rank | Number of Defeats | Opposition | Most Recent Venue | Date | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | align=center | 3 | The Gabba, Brisbane | ||
align=center rowspan=2 | 2 | align=center rowspan=2 | 2 | Trent Bridge, Nottingham | ||
MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chennai | ||||||
align=center rowspan=2 | 4 | align=center rowspan=2 | 1 | Kensington Oval, Bridgetown | ||
Kingsmead Cricket Ground, Durban | ||||||
Last updated: 30 August 2017 |
Rank | Margin | Opposition | Venue | Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 4 runs | Sheikh Zayed Cricket Stadium, Abu Dhabi | |||
2 | 21 runs | ||||
3 | 24 runs | Harare Sports Club, Harare | |||
4 | 25 runs | Headingley Cricket Stadium, Leeds | |||
5 | 32 runs | University Oval, Dunedin | |||
Last updated: 18 April 2021[42] |
Test cricket has seen fifteen matches been decided by a margin of one wicket, with Pakistan being defeated twice, both coming against West Indies.[39] The first was the final Test of the 1999–2000 series at Antigua Recreation Ground where the West Indies ran down the target of 216 runs in the final inning and the second happened in the opening test of the 2021 series at Sabina Park where the last wicket pair scored the last 17 runs to chase down 168.[43] [44]
Rank | Margin | Opposition | Venue | Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center rowspan=2 | 1 | 1 wicket | Antigua Recreation Ground, St. John's | ||
Sabina Park, Kingston, Jamaica | |||||
align=center rowspan=3 | 3 | 2 wickets | University Oval, Dunedin | ||
Kensington Oval, Bridgetown | |||||
Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium, Rawalpindi | |||||
Last updated: 15 August 2021 |
A run is the basic means of scoring in cricket. A run is scored when the batsman hits the ball with his bat and with his partner runs the length of 22yards of the pitch.[45]
India's Sachin Tendulkar has scored the most runs in Test cricket with 15,921. Second is Ricky Ponting of Australia with 13,378 ahead of Jacques Kallis from South Africa in third with 13,289. Younis Khan is the only Pakistani batsman who has scored more than 10,000 runs in Test cricket.[46]
Rank | Runs | Player | Matches | Innings | Period | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 10,099 | 118 | 213 | 2000–2017 | |
align=center | 2 | 8,832 | 124 | 189 | 1976–1993 | |
align=center | 3 | 8,829 | Inzamam-ul-Haq | 119 | 198 | 1992–2007 |
align=center | 4 | 7,530 | 90 | 156 | 1998–2010 | |
align=center | 5 | 7,142 | 97 | 180 | 2010–2022 | |
6 | 5,768 | Saleem Malik | 103 | 154 | 1982-1999 | |
7 | 5,222 | Misbah-ul-Haq | 75 | 132 | 2001-2017 | |
8 | 5,062 | Zaheer Abbas | 78 | 124 | 1969-1985 | |
9 | 4,660 | Asad Shafiq | 77 | 128 | 2010-2020 | |
10 | 4,114 | Mudassar Nazar | 76 | 116 | 1976-1989 | |
Last updated: 20 December 2022[47] |
Runs | Batsman | Match | Innings | Record Date | Reference | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1000 | 11 | 20 | 4 December 1959 | [48] | ||
2000 | 24 | 42 | 16 December 1979 | [49] | ||
3000 | 39 | 67 | 14 March 1982 | [50] | ||
4000 | 53 | 84 | 14 September 1983 | [51] | ||
5000 | 59 | 106 | 21 February 2009 | [52] | ||
6000 | 72 | 120 | 19 November 2006 | [53] | ||
7000 | 82 | 139 | 20 July 2009 | [54] | ||
8000 | 107 | 162 | 26 October 1990 | [55] | ||
9000 | 103 | 184 | 22 October 2015 | [56] | ||
10000 | 116 | 208 | 21 April 2017 | [57] | ||
Last updated: 20 June 2020 |
Batting position | Batsman | Innings | Runs | Average | Test Career Span | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opener | Saeed Anwar | 86 | 3,957 | 47.11 | 1990–2001 | [58] | |
Number 3 | Azhar Ali | 121 | 4,921 | 43.16 | 2010–2022 | [59] | |
Number 4 | Javed Miandad | 140 | 6,925 | 54.10 | 1976–1993 | [60] | |
Number 5 | Misbah-ul-Haq | 110 | 4,643 | 50.47 | 2001–2017 | [61] | |
Number 6 | Asad Shafiq | 76 | 3,011 | 41.82 | 2010–2020 | [62] | |
Number 7 | 65 | 2,047 | 35.91 | 2010-2019 | [63] | ||
Number 8 | Wasim Akram | 63 | 1,353 | 23.74 | 1985-2002 | [64] | |
Number 9 | 31 | 657 | 21.90 | 1985-2002 | [65] | ||
Number 10 | Waqar Younis | 48 | 496 | 11.81 | 1989-2003 | [66] | |
Number 11 | Danish Kaneria | 58 | 197 | 6.79 | 2000–2010 | [67] | |
Last updated: 8 December 2021. Qualification: Batted 20 Innings at the position |
scope=col | Opposition | scope=col | Runs | scope=col | Player | scope=col | Matches | scope=col | Innings | scope=col | Period | scope=col | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
scope=row style="text-align:center;" colspan=6 | YTP | ||||||||||||
scope=row style="text-align:center;" | 1,797 | align=center | 25 | align=center | 40 | 1976–1990 | [68] | ||||||
scope=row style="text-align:center;" | 650 | align=center | 7 | align=center | 12 | 2003–2015 | [69] | ||||||
scope=row style="text-align:center;" | 1,584 | align=center | 19 | align=center | 32 | 1992–2006 | [70] | ||||||
scope=row style="text-align:center;" | 2,228 | align=center | 28 | align=center | 39 | 1978–1989 | [71] | ||||||
scope=row style="text-align:center;" | 83 | align=center | 1 | align=center | 1 | 2018–2018 | [72] | ||||||
scope=row style="text-align:center;" | 1,919 | align=center | 18 | align=center | 29 | 1976–1993 | [73] | ||||||
scope=row style="text-align:center;" | 990 | align=center | 14 | align=center | 28 | 2002–2013 | [74] | ||||||
scope=row style="text-align:center;" | 2,286 | align=center | 29 | align=center | 48 | 2000–2015 | [75] | ||||||
scope=row style="text-align:center;" | 1,214 | align=center | 8 | align=center | 14 | 2000–2006 | [76] | ||||||
scope=row style="text-align:center;" | 772 | align=center | 11 | align=center | 19 | 1993–2002 | [77] | ||||||
Last updated: 12 January 2021. |
Hanif Mohammad set the highest Test score for Pakistan with 337, surpassing Imtiaz Ahmed's 209 scored against New Zealand in October 1955 at Bagh-e-Jinnah. Inzamam-ul-Haq (329), Younis Khan (313) and Azhar Ali (302*) are the only others to sore a triple century for Pakistan.[9]
Rank | Runs | Player | Opposition | Venue | Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 337 | Kensington Oval, Bridgetown | |||
align=center | 2 | 329 | Inzamam-ul-Haq | Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore | ||
align=center | 3 | 313 | National Stadium, Karachi | |||
align=center | 4 | 302* | Dubai International Stadium, Dubai | |||
align=center | 5 | 280* | Niaz Stadium, Hyderabad | |||
Last updated: 4 January 2023[78] |
scope=col | Runs | scope=col | Player | scope=col | Opponent | scope=col | Venue | scope=col | Season |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
51 | Arun Jaitley Stadium, Delhi, India | 1952–53 | |||||||
124* | University Ground, Lucknow, India | ||||||||
142 | Bahawal Stadium, Bahawalpur, Pakistan | 1954–55 | |||||||
209 | Bagh-e-Jinnah, Lahore, Pakistan | 1955–56 | |||||||
337 | Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados | 1957-58 | |||||||
Last updated: 20 June 2020 |
scope=col | Opposition | scope=col | Runs | scope=col | Player | scope=col | Venue | scope=col | Date | scope=col | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
scope=row style=text-align:center; colspan=5 | YTP | ||||||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 237 | Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium, Rawalpindi | [79] | ||||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 226 | Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur | [80] | ||||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 274 | Edgbaston Cricket Ground, Birmingham | [81] | ||||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 280* | Niaz Stadium, Hyderabad | [82] | ||||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 83 | Dublin (Malahide), Malahide | |||||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 329 | Inzamam-ul-Haq | Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore | [83] | |||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 146 | Sheikh Zayed Cricket Stadium, Abu Dhabi | [84] | ||||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 313 | National Stadium, Karachi | [85] | ||||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 337 | Kensington Oval, Bridgetown | [86] | ||||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 257* | Sheikhupura Stadium, Sheikhupura | [87] | ||||||||
Last updated: 12 January 2021. |
A batsman's batting average is the total number of runs they have scored divided by the number of times they have been dismissed.[88]
Pakistan's Javed Miandad, finished his Test career with an average of 52.57. The next closest Pakistani to him is Mohammad Yousuf who retired in 2012 with an average of 52.29.[89]
Rank | Average | Player | Runs | Innings | Period | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 52.57 | 8,832 | 189 | 1976–1993 | |
align=center | 2 | 52.29 | 7,530 | 156 | 1998–2010 | |
align=center | 3 | 52.05 | 10,099 | 207 | 2000–2017 | |
align=center | 4 | 50.16 | 8,829 | 198 | 1992–2007 | |
align=center | 5 | 49.16 | 1,180 | 26 | 2019–2021 | |
Qualification: 20 innings. Last updated: 8 December 2021 |
Batting position | Batsman | Innings | Runs | Average | Career Span | Ref | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opener | Abid Ali | 26 | 1,180 | 49.16 | 2019–2021 | [90] | |
Number 3 | Younis Khan | 83 | 4,055 | 51.32 | 2000–2017 | [91] | |
Number 4 | Mohammad Yousuf | 63 | 3,416 | 56.93 | 1998-2010 | [92] | |
Number 5 | Javed Miandad | 33 | 1,468 | 54.37 | 1976-1993 | [93] | |
Number 6 | Imran Khan | 23 | 928 | 61.86 | 1974-1992 | [94] | |
Number 7 | Wasim Raja | 31 | 1,127 | 43.34 | 1973-1985 | [95] | |
Number 8 | Kamran Akmal | 28 | 874 | 33.61 | 2002-1910 | [96] | |
Number 9 | Wasim Akram | 31 | 657 | 21.90 | 1985-2002 | [97] | |
Number 10 | Sarfraz Nawaz | 23 | 352 | 17.60 | 1969-1984 | [98] | |
Number 11 | Danish Kaneria | 20 | 92 | 9.20 | 1989–2003 | [99] | |
Last updated: 8 December 2021. Qualification: Min 20 innings batted at position |
A half-century is a score of between 50 and 99 runs. Statistically, once a batsman's score reaches 100, it is no longer considered a half-century but a century.
Sachin Tendulkar of India has scored the most half-centuries in Test cricket with 68. He is followed by the West Indies' Shivnarine Chanderpaul on 66, Pakistan's Inzamam-ul-Haq has 46 fifties to his name.[100]
Rank | Half centuries | Player | Innings | Runs | Period | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 46 | Inzamam-ul-Haq | 198 | 8,829 | 1992–2007 |
align=center | 2 | 43 | 189 | 8,832 | 1976–1993 | |
align=center | 3 | 39 | Misbah-ul-Haq | 132 | 5,222 | 2001–2017 |
align=center | 4 | 35 | 180 | 7,142 | 2010–2022 | |
align=center rowspan=2 | 5 | 33 | 156 | 7,530 | 1998–2010 | |
213 | 10,099 | 2000–2017 | ||||
Last updated: 4 January 2023[101] |
A century is a score of 100 or more runs in a single innings.
Tendulkar has also scored the most centuries in Test cricket with 51. South Africa's Jacques Kallis is next on 45 and Ponting with 41 hundreds is in third. Younis Khan is the highest century-maker for Pakistan.[102]
Rank | Centuries | Player | scope=@col@ | Innings | Runs | Period |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 34 | 213 | 10,099 | 2000–2017 | |
align=center | 2 | 25 | Inzamam-ul-Haq | 198 | 8,829 | 1992–2007 |
align=center | 3 | 24 | 156 | 7,530 | 1998–2010 | |
align=center | 4 | 23 | 189 | 8,832 | 1976–1993 | |
align=center | 5 | 19 | 180 | 7,142 | 2010–2022 | |
Last updated: 4 January 2023[103] |
A double century is a score of 200 or more runs in a single innings.
Dona Bradman holds the Test record scored with twelve for the most double centuries, one ahead of Sri Lanka's Kumar Sangakkara who finished his career with eleven. In third is Brian Lara of the West Indies with nine. England's Wally Hammond and Mahela Jayawardene of Sri Lanka both scored seven, and Miandad and Younis Khan are two of six cricketers who reached the mark on six occasions.[104]
Rank | Double centuries | Player | Innings | Runs | Period | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 6 | Younis Khan | 213 | 10,099 | 2000–2017 | |
189 | 8,832 | 1976–1993 | ||||
3 | 4 | 124 | 5,062 | 1969–1985 | ||
156 | 7,530 | 1998–2010 | ||||
align=center | 5 | 3 | 180 | 7,142 | 2010–2022 | |
Last updated: 4 January 2023[105] |
A triple century is a score of 300 or more runs in a single innings.
Virender Sehwag of India Sehwag along with Australia's Don Bradman and West Indians Chris Gayle and Brian Lara holds the equal Test record for the most triple centuries scored with two.[106] 4 Pakistani batsmen have scored a single Test triple century .
scope=col | Rank | scope=col | Triple centuries | scope=col | Player | scope=col | Innings | scope=col | Runs | scope=col | Period |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center rowspan=4 | 1 | scope=row style="text-align:center;" rowspan=4 | 97 | 3,915 | 1952–1969 | ||||||
Inzamam-ul-Haq | 198 | 8,829 | 1992–2007 | ||||||||
213 | 10,099 | 2000–2017 | |||||||||
180 | 7,142 | 2010–2022 | |||||||||
Last updated: 4 January 2023[107] |
scope=col | Rank | scope=col | Sixes | scope=col | Player | scope=col | Innings | scope=col | Runs | scope=col | Period |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | scope=row style="text-align:center;" | 81 | Misbah-ul-Haq | align=center | 132 | align=center | 5,222 | 2001–2017 | ||
align=center | 2 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | 70 | align=center | 213 | align=center | 10,099 | 2000–2017 | |||
align=center | 3 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | 57 | align=center | 147 | align=center | 2,898 | 1985–2002 | |||
align=center | 4 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | 55 | align=center | 126 | align=center | 3,807 | 1971–1992 | |||
align=center | 5 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | 52 | align=center | 48 | align=center | 1,716 | 1998–2010 | |||
Last updated: 20 June 2020[108] |
scope=col | Rank | scope=col | Fours | scope=col | Player | scope=col | Innings | scope=col | Runs | scope=col | Period |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | scope=row style="text-align:center;" | 1105 | Inzamam-ul-Haq | align=center | 198 | align=center | 8,829 | 1992–2007 | ||
align=center | 2 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | 1082 | align=center | 213 | align=center | 10,099 | 2000–2017 | |||
align=center | 3 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | 957 | align=center | 156 | align=center | 7,530 | 1998–2010 | |||
align=center | 4 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | 809 | align=center | 189 | align=center | 8,832 | 1976–1993 | |||
align=center | 5 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | 678 | align=center | 154 | align=center | 5,768 | 1982–1999 | |||
Last updated: 20 June 2020[109] |
Test cricket is the oldest form of cricket played at international level. The 1930 Ashes series in England saw Bradman set the record for the most runs scored in a single series, falling just 26 short of 1,000 runs. He is followed by Wally Hammond with 905 runs scored in the 1928–29 Ashes series. Mark Taylor with 839 in the 1989 Ashes and Neil Harvey with 834 in 1952–53 South Africa series are third and fourth on the list, respectively. Pakistani cricketer Mudassar Nazar is seventeenth in the list with 761.[110]
Rank | Runs | Player | Matches | Innings | Series | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 761 | align=center | 6 | align=center | 8 | Indian cricket team in Pakistan in 1982–83 | |
align=center | 2 | 665 | align=center | 3 | align=center | 5 | West Indian cricket team in Pakistan in 2006–07 | |
align=center | 3 | 650 | align=center | 6 | align=center | 6 | Indian cricket team in Pakistan in 1982–83 | |
align=center | 4 | 631 | align=center | 4 | align=center | 7 | Pakistani cricket team in England in 2006 | |
align=center | 5 | 628 | align=center | 5 | align=center | 9 | Pakistani cricket team in the West Indies in 1957–58 | |
Last updated: 31 August 2017 |
A duck refers to a batsman dismissed without scoring a run.[111] West Indian Courtney Walsh has the most ducks to his name with 43. Pakistan's Danish Kaneria has scored the ninth-highest number of ducks in Test cricket along with Indian cricketer Ishant Sharma with 25.[112]
Rank | Ducks | Player | Matches | Innings | Period | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 25 | 61 | 84 | 2000–2010 | |
align=center | 2 | 21 | 87 | 120 | 1989–2003 | |
align=center | 3 | 19 | 81 | 112 | 1967–1984 | |
align=center | 4 | 118 | 213 | 2000–2017 | ||
align=center | 5 | 97 | 180 | 2010–2022 | ||
Last updated: 4 January 2023[113] |
A bowler takes the wicket of a batsman when the form of dismissal is bowled, caught, leg before wicket, stumped or hit wicket. If the batsman is dismissed by run out, obstructing the field, handling the ball, hitting the ball twice or timed out the bowler does not receive credit.
Shane Warne held the record for the most Test wickets with 708 until December 2007 when Sri Lankan bowler Muttiah Muralitharan passed Warne's milestone.[114] Muralitharan, who continued to play until 2010, finished with 800 wickets to his name. James Anderson of England is third on the list taking 632 wickets holds the record for most wickets by a fast bowler in Test cricket. Wasim Akram is the highest wicket taker for Pakistan with 414.[115] [116]
Rank | Wickets | Player | Matches | Innings | Period | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 414 | 104 | 181 | 1985–2002 | |
align=center | 2 | 373 | 87 | 154 | 1989–2003 | |
align=center | 3 | 362 | 88 | 142 | 1971–1992 | |
align=center | 4 | 261 | 61 | 112 | 2000–2010 | |
align=center | 5 | 244 | 48 | 89 | 2014–2022 | |
6 | 236 | Abdul Qadir | 67 | 111 | 1977-1990 | |
7 | 208 | Saqlain Mushtaq | 49 | 86 | 1995-2004 | |
8 | 185 | Mushtaq Ahmed | 52 | 89 | 1990-2003 | |
9 | 178 | Shoaib Akhtar | 46 | 82 | 1997-2007 | |
10 | Saeed Ajmal | 35 | 67 | 2009-2014 | ||
Last updated: 9 December 2022 |
scope=col | Opposition | scope=col | Wickets | scope=col | Player | scope=col | Matches | scope=col | Innings | scope=col | Runs | scope=col | Period | scope=col | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
scope=row style=text-align:center; colspan=7 | YTP | ||||||||||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 64 | align=center | 18 | align=center | 29 | align=center | 1,598 | 1976–1990 | [117] | ||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 34 | align=center | 5 | align=center | 10 | align=center | 558 | 2001–2003 | [118] | ||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 97 | align=center | 16 | align=center | 28 | align=center | 2,049 | 1977–1987 | [119] | ||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 94 | align=center | 23 | align=center | 38 | align=center | 2,260 | 1978–1989 | [120] | ||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 9 | align=center | 1 | align=center | 2 | align=center | 110 | 2018-2018 | [121] | ||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 70 | align=center | 13 | align=center | 25 | align=center | 1,372 | 1990–2002 | [122] | ||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 36 | align=center | 7 | align=center | 14 | align=center | 1,096 | 2003–2007 | [123] | ||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 66 | align=center | 14 | align=center | 28 | align=center | 2,170 | 2009–2014 | [124] | ||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 80 | align=center | 18 | align=center | 29 | align=center | 1,695 | 1977–1990 | [125] | ||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 62 | align=center | 11 | align=center | 20 | align=center | 1,233 | 1993–2002 | [126] | ||||||
Last updated: 12 January 2021 |
Wickets | Bowler | Match | Record Date | Reference | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
scope=row style="text-align:center;" | 50 | 9 | 25 June 2015 | [127] | |
scope=row style="text-align:center;" | 100 | 17 | 13 October 2016 | [128] | |
scope=row style="text-align:center;" | 150 | 27 | 10 February 1994 | [129] | |
scope=row style="background:#cee0f2; text-align:center;" | 200 | 33 ♠ | 3 December 2018 | [130] | |
scope=row style="text-align:center;" | 250 | 51 | 6 March 1998 | [131] | |
scope=row style="text-align:center;" | 300 | 65 | 14 June 2000 | [132] | |
scope=row style="text-align:center;" | 350 | 78 | 3 February 2002 | [133] | |
400 | 96 | 14 June 2000 | [134] | ||
Last updated: 20 June 2020 |
Bowling figures refers to the number of the wickets a bowler has taken and the number of runs conceded.[135]
There has been two occasions in Test cricket where a bowler has taken all ten wickets in a single innings – Jim Laker of England took 10/53 against Australia in 1956 and India's Anil Kumble in 1999 returned figures of 10/74 against Pakistan. Abdul Qadir is one of 15 bowlers who has taken nine wickets in a Test match innings.[136]
Rank | Figures | Player | Opposition | Venue | Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore | ||||
align=center | 2 | Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne | ||||
align=center | 3 | Yasir Shah | Dubai International Stadium, Dubai | |||
align=center | 4 | Sajid Khan | Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, Mirpur | |||
5 | Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore | |||||
Last updated: 8 December 2021[137] |
A bowler's bowling figures in a match is sum of the wickets taken and the runs conceded in two innings.
No bowler in the history of Test cricket has taken all 20 wickets in a match. The closest to do so was English spin bowler Jim Laker. During the fourth Test of the 1956 Ashes series, Laker took 9/37 in the first innings and 10/53 in the second to finish with match figures of 19/90. Imran Khan's figures of 14/119, taken in final match of the 1981–82 Test series against Sri Lanka, is the sixteenth-best in Test cricket history.[138]
Rank | Figures | Player | Opposition | Venue | Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore | ||||
align=center | 2 | Dubai Cricket Stadium, Dubai | ||||
3 | Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore | |||||
4 | National Stadium, Karachi | |||||
5 | ||||||
Last updated: 29 December 2018[139] |
scope=col | Opposition | scope=col | Figures | scope=col | Player | scope=col | Venue | scope=col | Date | scope=col | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
scope=row style=text-align:center; colspan=5 | YTP | ||||||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 9/86 | Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne | [140] | ||||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 8/42 | Shere Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur | [141] | ||||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 9/56 | Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore | [142] | ||||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 8/60 | National Stadium, Karachi | [143] | ||||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 5/66 | Dublin (Malahide), Malahide | [144] | ||||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 8/41 | Yasir Shah | Dubai International Stadium, Dubai | [145] | |||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 6/78 | Kingsmead, Durban | [146] | ||||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 8/58 | Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore | [147] | ||||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 7/80 | Bourda, Georgetown | [148] | ||||||||
scope=row style=text-align:center; | 7/66 | Queens Sports Club, Bulawayo | [149] | ||||||||
Last updated: 8 December 2021 |
A bowler's bowling average is the total number of runs they have conceded divided by the number of wickets they have taken.
Nineteenth century English medium pacer George Lohmann holds the record for the best career average in Test cricket with 10.75. J. J. Ferris, one of fourteen cricketers to play Test cricket for more than one team,[150] is second behind Lohmann with an overall career average of 12.70 runs per wicket. Hasan Ali's bowling average of 22.09 are the best figures for Pakistan.[151]
Rank | Average | Player | Wickets | Runs | Balls | Period | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 21.59 | 72 | 1,555 | 3,012 | 2017–2021 | ||
2 | 22.81 | 362 | 8,258 | 19,458 | 1971–1992 | ||
3 | 23.02 | 90 | 2,072 | 5,134 | 2017–2021 | ||
4 | 23.03 | 51 | 1,175 | 2,576 | 2003–2005 | ||
5 | 23.56 | 373 | 8,788 | 16,224 | 1989–2003 | ||
Qualification: 2,000 balls. Last updated: 8 December 2021 |
A bowler's economy rate is the total number of runs they have conceded divided by the number of overs they have bowled.[111]
English bowler William Attewell, who played 10 matches for England between 1884 and 1892, holds the Test record for the best career economy rate with 1.31.[152] Pervez Sajjad, with a rate of 2.04 runs per over conceded over his 19-match Test career, is the best for Pakistan.[153]
Rank | Economy rate | Player | Runs | Balls | Wickets | Period | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 2.04 | align=center | 1,410 | align=center | 4,145 | align=center | 59 | 1964–1973 | |
align=center | 2 | 2.06 | align=center | 1,124 | align=center | 3,262 | align=center | 34 | 1969–1983 | |
align=center | 3 | 2.07 | align=center | 801 | align=center | 2,313 | align=center | 20 | 1954–1962 | |
align=center | 4 | 2.09 | align=center | 3,434 | align=center | 9,834 | align=center | 139 | 1952–1962 | |
align=center | 5 | 2.11 | align=center | 954 | align=center | 2,712 | align=center | 21 | 1952–1958 | |
Qualification: 2,000 balls. Last updated: 4 September 2017 |
A bowler's strike rate is the total number of balls they have bowled divided by the number of wickets they have taken.[111]
English George Lohmann has best Test career strike rate with 34.1; Waqar Younis of Pakistan with an overall career strike rate of 43.4 balls per wicket, is eighth in the list.[154]
Rank | Strike rate | Player | Wickets | Balls | Runs | Period | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 41.8 | 72 | 1,555 | 3,012 | 2017–2021 | |||||
align=center | 2 | 43.4 | align=center | 373 | align=center | 16,224 | align=center | 8,788 | 1989–2003 | |
align=center | 3 | 45.7 | align=center | 178 | align=center | 8,143 | align=center | 4,574 | 1997–2007 | |
align=center | 4 | 47.7 | 86 | 4,107 | 2,055 | 2018–2021 | ||||
5 | 48.7 | 106 | 5,171 | 2,583 | 2005–2010 | |||||
Qualification: 2,000 balls. Last updated: 8 December 2021[155] |
A five-wicket haul refers to a bowler taking five wickets in a single innings.[156]
Sri Lanka's Muttiah Muralitharan has taken the most number five-wicket hauls in Test cricket with 67 throughout his career. former Pakistani captain Wasim Akram is tenth on the list and leading the equivalent list for Pakistan.[157]
Rank | Five-wicket hauls | Player | Wickets | Innings | Balls | Period | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 25 | align=center | 414 | align=center | 181 | align=center | 22,627 | 1985–2002 | |
align=center | 2 | 23 | align=center | 362 | align=center | 142 | align=center | 19,458 | 1971–1992 | |
align=center | 3 | 22 | align=center | 373 | align=center | 154 | align=center | 16,224 | 1989–2003 | |
align=center | 4 | 16 | align=center | 235 | align=center | 85 | align=center | 13,697 | 2014–2021 | |
align=center rowspan=2 | 5 | 15 | align=center | 236 | align=center | 111 | align=center | 17,126 | 1977–1990 | |
align=center | 261 | align=center | 112 | align=center | 17,697 | 2000–2010 | ||||
Last updated: 15 August 2021[158] |
A ten-wicket haul refers to a bowler taking ten or more wickets in a match over two innings.[159]
Muttiah Muralitharan of Sri Lanka has taken the most ten-wicket hauls in Test cricket with 22. Imran Khan, jointly tenth with Derek Underwood of England, leads the equivalent list for Pakistan with 6 ten-wicket hauls.[160]
Rank | Ten-wicket hauls | Player | Matches | Balls | Wickets | Period | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 6 | align=center | 88 | align=center | 19,458 | align=center | 362 | 1971–1992 | |
align=center rowspan=3 | 2 | 5 | align=center | 87 | align=center | 16,224 | align=center | 373 | 1989–2003 | |
align=center | 67 | align=center | 17,126 | align=center | 236 | 1977–1990 | ||||
align=center | 104 | align=center | 22,627 | align=center | 414 | 1985–2002 | ||||
align=center | 5 | 4 | align=center | 34 | align=center | 9,834 | align=center | 139 | 1952–1962 | |
Last updated: 4 September 2017[161] |
The worst figures in a single innings in Test cricket came in the third Test between the West Indies at home to Pakistan in 1958. Pakistan's Khan Mohammad returned figures of 0/259 from his 54 overs in the second innings of the match.[162] [163]
Rank | Figures | Player | Overs | Opposition | Venue | Date | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | ♠ | align=center | 54 | Sabina Park, Jamaica | |||
align=center | 2 | align=center | 32 | Adelaide Oval, Adelaide | ||||
align=center | 3 | align=center | 47 | Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore | ||||
align=center | 4 | align=center | 32 | Basin Reserve, Christchurch | ||||
align=center | 5 | align=center | 56 | Iqbal Stadium, Faisalabad | ||||
Last updated: 8 February 2021[164] |
The worst figures in a match in Test cricket were taken by South Africa's Imran Tahir in the 2006 Boxing Day Test match against Australia. He returned figures of 0/180 from his 23 overs in the first innings and 0/80 off 14 in the third innings for a total 0/260 from 37 overs.[165] He claimed the record in his final over when two runs came from it—enough for him to pass the previous record of 0/259, set 48 years prior by Pakistan's Khan Mohammad.[166] [167] [168]
Rank | Figures | Player | Overs | Opposition | Venue | Date | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | align=center | 54 | Sabina Park, Jamaica | ||||
align=center | 2 | align=center | 32 | Adelaide Oval, Adelaide | ||||
align=center | 3 | align=center | 47 | Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore | ||||
align=center | 4 | align=center | 27 | National Stadium, Karachi | ||||
align=center | 5 | align=center | 47 | Basin Reserve, Wellington | ||||
Last updated: 8 February 2021[169] |
South Africa's seventh Test tour of England in 1913–14 saw the record set for the most wickets taken by a bowler in a Test series. English paceman Sydney Barnes played in four of the five matches and achieved a total of 49 wickets to his name. Jim Laker sits second on the list with 46 wickets taken during the 1956 Ashes series. Pakistan's Imran Khan is seventh with his 40 wickets taken against India during the 1982–83 tour.[170]
Rank | Wickets | Player | Matches | Series | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 40 | align=center | 6 | Indian cricket team in Pakistan in 1982–83 | |
align=center | 2 | 30 | align=center rowspan=4 | 3 | English cricket team in Pakistan in 1987–88 | |
align=center rowspan=2 | 3 | 29 | New Zealand cricket team in Pakistan in 1990–91 | |||
New Zealand cricket team in UAE in 2018–19 | ||||||
align=center | 5 | 27 | Zimbabwean cricket team in Pakistan in 1993–94 | |||
Last updated: 29 December 2018[171] |
In cricket, a hat-trick occurs when a bowler takes three wickets with consecutive deliveries. The deliveries may be interrupted by an over bowled by another bowler from the other end of the pitch or the other team's innings, but must be three consecutive deliveries by the individual bowler in the same match. Only wickets attributed to the bowler count towards a hat-trick; run outs do not count.In Test cricket history there have been just 44 hat-tricks, the first achieved by Fred Spofforth for Australia against England in 1879. In 1912, Australian Jimmy Matthews achieved the feat twice in one game against South Africa. The only other players to achieve two hat-tricks are Australia's Hugh Trumble, against England in 1902 and 1904, Pakistan's Wasim Akram, in separate games against Sri Lanka in 1999, and England's Stuart Broad.
No. | Bowler | Against | Inn. | Test | Dismissals | Venue | Date | Ref. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Wasim Akram | 1 | 3/4 | 6 March 1999 | [172] | ||||
2 | 2 | 4/4 | 14 March 1999 | [173] | |||||
3 | Abdul Razzaq | 1 | 2/3 | 21 June 2000 | [174] | ||||
4 | Mohammad Sami | 1 | 3/3 | 8 March 2002 | [175] | ||||
5 | 2 | 2/2 | 9 February 2020 | [176] |
The wicket-keeper is a specialist fielder who stands behind the stumps being guarded by the batsman on strike and is the only member of the fielding side permitted to wear gloves and external leg guards.[177]
A wicket-keeper can be credited with the dismissal of batsman in two ways, caught or stumped. A fair catch is a taken when the ball is caught fully within the field of play without it bouncing when the ball has touched the striker's bat or glove holding the bat,[178] while a stumping occurs when the wicket-keeper puts down the wicket while the batsman out of his ground and not attempting a run.[179]
Pakistan's Wasim Bari is eleventh in taking most dismissals in Test cricket as a designated wicket-keeper with 228.[19]
Rank | Dismissals | Player | Matches | Period | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 228 | align=center | 81 | 1967–1984 | |
align=center | 2 | 206 | align=center | 53 | 2002–2010 | |
align=center | 3 | 147 | align=center | 69 | 1990–2004 | |
align=center | 4 | 130 | align=center | 37 | 1992–2003 | |
align=center | 5 | 121 | align=center | 38 | 2010–2019 | |
Last updated: 6 September 2017[180] |
Bari leads in the list of most catches taken as a designated wicket-keeper in Test cricket for Pakistan, with 201.[181]
Rank | Dismissals | Player | Matches | Period | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 201 | align=center | 81 | 1967–1984 | |
align=center | 2 | 184 | align=center | 53 | 2002–2010 | |
align=center | 3 | 127 | align=center | 69 | 1990–2004 | |
align=center | 4 | 119 | align=center | 37 | 1992–2003 | |
align=center | 5 | 103 | align=center | 38 | 2010–2019 | |
Last updated: 6 September 2017 |
Bert Oldfield, Australia's fifth-most capped wicket-keeper, holds the record for most stumpings in Test cricket with 52. He is followed by England's Godfrey Evans with 46 to his name. Indian glovemen Syed Kirmani and MS Dhoni are both equal third on 38 and Bari is eighth in the list with 27.[182]
Rank | Stumpings | Player | Matches | Period | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 27 | align=center | 81 | 1967–1984 | |
align=center | 2 | 22 | align=center | 53 | 2002–2010 | |
align=center | 3 | 20 | align=center | 69 | 1990–2004 | |
align=center | 5 | 18 | align=center | 38 | 2010–2019 | |
align=center | 5 | 16 | align=center | 38 | 1952–1962 | |
Last updated: 6 September 2017[183] |
Four wicket-keepers have taken seven wickets in a single innings in a Test match—Wasim Bari of Pakistan in 1979, Englishman Bob Taylor in 1980, New Zealand's Ian Smith in 1991 and most recently West Indian gloveman Ridley Jacobs against Australia in 2000.[184]
The feat of taking 6 wickets in an innings has been achieved by 22 wicket-keepers on 30 occasions including two Pakistanis.[185]
Rank | Dismissals | Player | Opposition | Venue | Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 7 | Eden Park, Auckland | |||
2 | 6 | Queens Sports Club, Bulawayo | ||||
Basin Reserve, Wellington | ||||||
Last updated: 6 September 2017[186] |
Three wicket-keepers have made 11 dismissals in a Test match, Englishman Jack Russell in 1995, South African AB de Villiers in 2013 and most recently India's Rishabh Pant against Australia in 2018.[187]
The feat of making 10 dismissals in a match has been achieved by 4 wicket-keepers on 4 occasions with Sarfaraz Ahmed being the only Pakistani wicket-keeper.[188]
scope=col | Rank | scope=col | Dismissals | scope=col | Player | scope=col | Opposition | scope=col | Venue | scope=col | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | 10 | New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg, South Africa | ||||||||
align=center rowspan=2 | 2 | scope=row style=text-align:center; rowspan=2 | 9 | Eden Park, Auckland, New Zealand | |||||||
Sabina Park, Kingston, Jamaica | |||||||||||
align=center rowspan=5 | 4 | scope=row style=text-align:center; rowspan=5 | 8 | Headingley, Leeds, England | |||||||
Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney, Australia | |||||||||||
Galle International Stadium, Galle, Sri Lanka | |||||||||||
The Oval, London, England | |||||||||||
Basin Reserve, Wellington, New Zealand | |||||||||||
Last updated: 23 August 2020[189] |
Brad Haddin holds the Test cricket record for the most dismissals taken by a wicket-keeper in a series. He took 29 catches during the 2013 Ashes series which broke the previous record held by fellow Australian Rod Marsh where he took 28 catches in the 1982–83 Ashes series.[190] Rashid Latif has the most dismissals for Pakistan in a Test series.[191]
Rank | Dismissals | Player | Matches | Series | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 18 | align=center rowspan=2 | 3 | Bangladeshi cricket team in Pakistan in 2003 | |
2 | 17 | Pakistani cricket team in England in 2010 | ||||
align=center | 6 | Indian cricket team in Pakistan in 1982–83 | ||||
4 | 16 | align=center | 2 | Pakistani cricket team in the West Indies in 2005 | ||
align=center | 4 | Pakistani cricket team in England in 2006 | ||||
align=center | 5 | Pakistani cricket team in the West Indies in 1976–77 | ||||
align=center | 6 | Pakistani cricket team in India in 1979–80 | ||||
Last updated: 6 September 2017 |
Caught is one of the ten methods a batsman can be dismissed in cricket. A fair catch is defined as a fielder catches the ball, from a legal delivery, fully within the field of play without it bouncing when the ball has touched the striker's bat or glove holding the bat.[178] The majority of catches are caught in the slips, located behind the batsman, next to the wicket-keeper, on the off side of the field. Most slip fielders are top order batsmen.[192]
India's Rahul Dravid holds the record for the most catches in Test cricket by a non-wicket-keeper with 210, followed by Mahela Jayawardene of Sri Lanka on 205 and South African Jacques Kallis with 200. Younis Khan is the highest-ranked Pakistani and twelfth overall, securing 139 catches in his Test career.[193]
Rank | Catches | Player | Matches | Period | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 139 | align=center | 118 | 2000–2017 | |
align=center | 2 | 93 | align=center | 124 | 1976–1996 | |
align=center | 3 | 81 | align=center | 119 | 1992–1999 | |
align=center | 4 | 77 | align=center | 77 | 2010-2020 | |
align=center rowspan=4 | 5 | 65 | align=center | 63 | 1964–1983 | |
align=center | 90 | 1998–2010 | ||||
align=center | 103 | 1998–2010 | ||||
align=center | 91 | 2010–2021 | ||||
Last updated: 8 December 2021[194] |
The 1920–21 Ashes series, in which Australia whitewashed England 5–0 for the first time, saw the record set for the most catches taken by non-wicket-keeper in a Test series. Australian all-rounder Jack Gregory took 15 catches in the series as well as 23 wickets.[195] Greg Chappell, a fellow Australian all-rounder, is second behind Gregory with 14 catches taken during the 1974–75 Ashes series. Three players have taken 13 catches in a series on five occasions with both Bob Simpson and Brian Lara having done so twice and Rahul Dravid once. Younis Khan has taken 10 catches, the most by a Pakistani.[196]
Rank | Catches | Player | Matches | Series | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 10 | align=center | 3 | Pakistan in West Indies in 2017 | |
2 | 9 | align=center | 2 | South Africa in Pakistan in 2003 | ||
align=center | 3 | Pakistan in South Africa in 2007 | ||||
align=center | 5 | Pakistan in the West Indies in 1958 | ||||
5 | 8 | align=center | 6 | Pakistan in India in 1979-80 | ||
align=center | 3 | England in Pakistan in 2000 | ||||
Last updated: 14 October 2017[197] |
A total of 71 players have achieved the double of 1000 runs and 100 wickets in their Test career.[198]
scope=col | Rank | scope=col | Player | scope=col | Average Difference | scope=col | Period | scope=col | Matches | scope=col | Runs | scope=col | Bat Avg | scope=col | Wickets | scope=col | Bowl Avg |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | 14.88 | 1971-1992 | align=center | 88 | align=center | 3807 | align=center | 37.69 | align=center | 362 | align=center | 22.81 | |||
align=center | 2 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | -0.98 | 1985-2002 | align=center | 104 | align=center | 2898 | align=center | 22.64 | align=center | 414 | align=center | 23.62 | |||
align=center | 3 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | -8.32 | 1999-2006 | align=center | 46 | align=center | 1946 | align=center | 28.61 | align=center | 100 | align=center | 36.94 | |||
align=center | 4 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | -13.35 | 1989-2003 | align=center | 87 | align=center | 1010 | align=center | 10.2 | align=center | 373 | align=center | 23.56 | |||
align=center | 5 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | -13.66 | 1959-1977 | align=center | 47 | align=center | 1493 | align=center | 22.28 | align=center | 125 | align=center | 35.95 | |||
align=center | 6 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | -15.04 | 1969-1984 | align=center | 55 | align=center | 1045 | align=center | 17.71 | align=center | 177 | align=center | 32.75 | |||
align=center | 7 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | -17.21 | 1977-1990 | align=center | 67 | align=center | 1029 | align=center | 15.59 | align=center | 236 | align=center | 32.8 | |||
Last updated: 22 August 2020[199] |
See also: List of cricketers who have played 100 Tests. India's Sachin Tendulkar holds the record for the most Test matches played with 200 with former captains in Ricky Ponting and Steve Waugh being joint second with each having represented Australia on 168 occasions. Javed Miandad played for Pakistan in 124 matches.[200]
Rank | Matches | Player | Period | |
---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 124 | 1976–1996 | |
align=center | 2 | 119 | 1992–2007 | |
align=center | 3 | 118 | 2000–2017 | |
align=center | 4 | 104 | 1985–2002 | |
align=center | 5 | 103 | 1982–1999 | |
Last updated: 15 October 2017[201] |
Former English captain Alastair Cook holds the record for the most consecutive Test matches played with 159. He broke Allan Border's long standing record of 153 matches in June 2018.[202] Asad Shafiq, the Pakistan batsmen has played in 72 consecutive Test matches.[203]
scope=col | Rank | scope=col | Matches | scope=col | Player | scope=col | Period |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | 72 | 2011-2020 | |||
align=center | 2 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | 53 | 1977-1984 | |||
Last updated: 25 August 2020 |
See also: List of Pakistan national cricket captains. Graeme Smith, who led the South African cricket team from 2003 to 2014, holds the record for the most matches played as captain in Test cricket with 109. Allan Border, the man who skippered Australia from 1984 to 1994 is second with 93 matches. New Zealand's captain from 1997 to 2006, Stephen Fleming, is third on the list with 80 and in fourth on 77 is Australia's Ricky Ponting who led the side for six years from 2004 to 2010. Pakistan's Misbah-ul-Haq is ninth in the list along with Sri Lankan Arjuna Ranatunga.[204]
Rank | Matches | Player | Period | |
---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 56 | 2010–2017 | |
align=center | 2 | 48 | 1982–1992 | |
align=center | 3 | 34 | 1980–1993 | |
align=center | 4 | 31 | 2001–2007 | |
align=center | 5 | 25 | 1993–1999 | |
Last updated: 25 May 2017[205] |
The youngest player to play in a Test match is claimed to be Hasan Raza at the age of 14 years and 227 days. Making his debut for Pakistan against Zimbabwe on 24 October 1996, there is some doubt as to the validity of Raza's age at the time. The second- and third-youngest players are also from Pakistan—Mushtaq Mohammad and Aaqib Javed at 15 years and 124 days and 16 years and 189 days, respectively.[206]
Rank | Age | Player | Opposition | Venue | Date | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | ♠ | Iqbal Stadium, Faisalabad | ||||
align=center | 2 | Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore | |||||
align=center | 3 | Basin Reserve, Wellington | |||||
align=center | 4 | Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka | |||||
align=center | 5 | Kensington Oval, Bridgetown, Barbados | |||||
Last updated: 15 October 2017[207] [208] |
At 49 years and 119 days, James Southerton of England, playing in the very first Test match in March 1877, is the oldest player to make his debut in Test cricket. Second on the list is Miran Bakhsh of Pakistan who at 47 years and 284 days made his debut against India in 1955. Australia's Don Blackie is the third-oldest player to make his debut, breaking into the side during the second Test of the 1928–29 Ashes series at the age of 46 years and 253 days.[209]
Rank | Age | Player | Opposition | Venue | Date | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | Bagh-e-Jinnah, Lahore | |||||
align=center | 2 | Harare Sports Club, Harare | |||||
align=center | 3 | Sheikh Zayed Cricket Stadium, Abu Dhabi | |||||
align=center | 4 | Trent Bridge, Nottingham | |||||
align=center | 5 | National Stadium, Karachi | |||||
Last updated: 10 May 2021[210] |
England all-rounder Wilfred Rhodes is the oldest player to appear in a Test match. Playing in the fourth Test against the West Indies in 1930 at Sabina Park, in Kingston, Jamaica, he was aged 52 years and 165 days on the final day's play. The oldest Pakistani Test player is Miran Bakhsh who was aged 47 years and 298 days when he represented Pakistan for the final time in the 1955 tour of India at the Peshawar Club Ground.[211]
scope=col | Rank | scope=col | Age | scope=col | Player | scope=col | Opposition | scope=col | Venue | scope=col | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | Peshawar Club Ground, Peshawar | |||||||||
align=center | 2 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | Eden Gardens, Kolkata | ||||||||
align=center | 3 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | Windsor Park, Roseau | ||||||||
align=center | 4 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | |||||||||
align=center | 5 | scope=row style=text-align:center; | Sardar Patel Stadium, Ahmedabad | ||||||||
Last updated: 28 January 2021[212] |
In cricket, two batsman are always present at the crease batting together in a partnership. This partnership will continue until one of them is dismissed, retires or the innings comes to a close.
A wicket partnership describes the number of runs scored before each wicket falls. The first wicket partnership is between the opening batsman and continues until the first wicket falls. The second wicket partnership then commences between the not out batsman and the number three batsman. This partnership continues until the second wicket falls. The third wicket partnership then commences between the not out batsman and the new batsman. This continues down to tenth wicket partnership. When the eleventh wicket has fallen, there is no more batsman left so the innings is closed.
Wicket | Runs | First batsman | Second batsman | Opposition | Venue | Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 298 | ||||||
align=center | 291 | ||||||
align=center | 451 | Niaz Stadium, Hyderabad, Sindh | |||||
align=center | 350 | ||||||
align=center | 281 | ||||||
align=center | 269 | ||||||
align=center | 308 | ||||||
align=center | 313 | ||||||
align=center | 190 | ||||||
align=center | 151 | Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium, Rawalpindi | |||||
Last updated: 15 October 2017[213] |
The highest Test partnership by runs for any wicket is held by the Sri Lankan pairing of Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene who put together a third wicket partnership of 624 runs during the first Test against South Africa in July 2006. This broke the record of 576 runs set by their compatriots Sanath Jayasuriya and Roshan Mahanama against India in 1997. New Zealand's Andrew Jones and Martin Crowe hold the third-highest Test partnership with 467 made in 1991 against Sri Lanka. Equal fourth on the list is Mudassar Nazar and Javed Miandad of Pakistan who together scored 451 against Pakistan in 1983 and the Australian pairing of Bill Ponsford and Don Bradman putting on the same score against England in the 1934 Ashes series.[214]
Wicket | Runs | First batsman | Second batsman | Opposition | Venue | Date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center rowspan=4 | 451 | ||||||
397 | Iqbal Stadium, Faisalabad | ||||||
363 | Headingley Stadium, Leeds | ||||||
352* | Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka | ||||||
align=center | 350 | ||||||
Last updated: 16 October 2017[215] |
Rank | Runs | Innings | Players | Highest | Average | 100/50 | T20I career span | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | scope-"row" | 3,213 | 53 | 218 | 68.36 | 15/7 | 2001-2017 | |
align=center | 2 | 3,137 | 42 | 363 | 78.42 | 9/12 | 2000-2009 | ||
align=center | 3 | 3,013 | 57 | 259 | 56.84 | 10/13 | 1998-2007 | ||
align=center | 4 | 2,628 | 48 | 250 | 54.75 | 7/9 | 2010-2017 | ||
align=center | 5 | 2,325 | 42 | 195 | 59.61 | 6/14 | 1972-1981 | ||
An asterisk (*) signifies an unbroken partnership (i.e. neither of the batsmen was dismissed before either the end of the allotted overs or the required score being reached). Last updated: 11 October 2022[216] |
An umpire in cricket is a person who officiates the match according to the laws of cricket. Two umpires adjudicate the match on the field, whilst a third umpire has access to video replays, and a fourth umpire looks after the match balls and other duties. The records below are only for on-field umpires.
Aleem Dar of Pakistan holds the record for the most Test matches umpired with 136. The current active Dar set the record in December 2019 overtaking Steve Bucknor from the West Indies mark of 128 matches.[217] They are followed by South Africa's Rudi Koertzen who officiated in 108.[218]
Rank | Matches | Umpire | Period | |
---|---|---|---|---|
align=center | 1 | 136 | 2003–2021 | |
align=center | 2 | 49 | 2005–2013 | |
align=center | 3 | 34 | 1980–1996 | |
align=center | 4 | 28 | 1975–1997 | |
align=center | 5 | 22 | 1955–1978 | |
Last updated: 10 March 2021 |