Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Raees Mohammad

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Batting style
  
Right-hand batsman

Role
  
Cricket Player

Name
  
Raees Mohammad

1959/60
  
Peshawar

1953/54 – 1961/62
  
Karachi


Born
  
25 December 1932 (age 91) (
1932-12-25
)
Junagadh, Gujarat, British India (now India)

Bowling style
  
Right-arm Legbreak googly

Relations
  
Wazir Mohammad (brother) Hanif Mohammad (brother) Mushtaq Mohammad (brother) Sadiq Mohammad (brother) Shoaib Mohammad (nephew) Asif Mohammad (son)

Raees Mohammad (Urdu: رئيس محمد‎; born 25 December 1932) is a former first-class Pakistani cricketer who played in 30 first-class matches from 1948 to 1963. A right-handed batsman and a leg-spinner; he scored 1,344 runs with the help of two centuries, and took 33 wickets. He was one of the five Mohammad brothers, four of whom played Test cricket for Pakistan. Former Test cricketer Shoaib Mohammad is his nephew.

Contents

Family

Raees comes from a large and famous Pakistani cricketing family. His brothers, Wazir Mohammad, Hanif Mohammad, Mushtaq Mohammad and Sadiq Mohammad played Test cricket for Pakistan. His nephew, Shoaib Mohammad, also represented Pakistan at Test level, as well as playing One Day International cricket. His son, Asif Mohammad, played first-class and List A cricket.

Career

Raees started his first-class career for Karachi and Sind against Commonwealth XI in December 1949 at Karachi Gymkhana Ground. He played his next match against The Rest in March 1953 in which he scored 8 and 66 runs. In the next two seasons, Raees played eight matches aggregating 603 runs including his career best 118 not out against Sind. He also took 15 wickets in the 1954–55 season. In the final match of 1954–55 Quaid-i-Azam Trophy, he made his second century, 110 not out, against the Combined Services. He also achieved his best bowling performance in the match, taking 4 wickets for 82. From 1955 to 1958, he played nine matches, scored 341 runs averaged under 25 and took 10 catches.

During Raees' next three seasons—1959–60, 1960–61 and 1961–62—he played in two, one and three matches scoring 68, 12 and 117 runs respectively; his highest score remained 73 against Karachi Blues, in the Semi-final of 1961–62 Quaid-i-Azam Trophy. He played last time in the 1962–63 Pakistani domestic seasons; he played five matches, scored 192 runs at the average of above 27 including a half century. In all, Raees played 30 first-class matches and scored 1,344 runs at the average of 32.78 including two centuries and eight half centuries. He also took 33 wickets and 21 catches.

References

Raees Mohammad Wikipedia