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Majid Khan - Most talented Pakistani batsman ever?

Harsh Thakor

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Today Majid Khan turns75.I wish a book was written about this legend.

There could be few more majestic sights than witnessing Majid in full flow.His batting blended the agression of a tiger with the grace of a poet .On a bad wicket he was arguably the best batsman in the world,resembling a surgeon curing patient considered incurable.Majid took batting artistry ,wizardry or domination to depths rarely traversed ,,resembling a magician at his best.After Viv Richards,Noone was a better exponent of the hook shot.Majid's driving was also classical,treating even good balls with contempt.The sheer beauty in his batting was like a lotus in full bloom.Few cricketers gave more justice to batting aesthetics.Majid looked like performing a combing operation with surgical precision ,but still retaining the grace of a priest bowing before a pulpit.

Majid's 167 at Georgetown against the great Caribbean pace battery,ranks amongst the best ever innings against genuine pace ,or to avert a defeat.He simply resurrected Pakistan from the grave in a classic partnership with Zaheer Abbas,for the 3rd wicket.In it's own right his 98 at the Oval in 1974 and 158 at Melbourne in 1972-73 were classics ,or even his 88 ball century n the 1974 Prudential Trophy.In 1st class cricket his 156 versus Glamorgan in 1969 ,compared with the best innings of all time on bad wickets,in the Victor Trumper class.

I recommend every reader to refer to Tony Lewis's description of Majid Khan's 156 at Wourcester.It gives vibrations of an epic.

Zaheer Abbas may have been more elegant or technically correct but in a crisis Majid outscored him.Arguably in the 1970's it was Majid who challenged the likes of Viv or Barry Richards,the Chappell brothers and Gavaskar for the title of the best batsman .I simply cannot seperate Majid from Gundappa Vishwanath.Against pure pace n the 1970's I only rank Viv Richards or Ian Chappell ahead.I would have chosen Majid to open the innings for a test world XI in the lat 1970's.

What may have gone agaisnt Majid was his lack of footwork,which he earlier compensated with his razor sharp reflexes.


Statistics hardly did him justice averaging around 39,but in his peak Majid was in the very top bracket.Sadly he retired on a sour note against India in 1982-83,completely losing his touch.After a loss in form,he revived hi sold touch in 1980 when scoring 110 not out and 89 in a home series against Australia and scoring 74 at Melbourne in 1981-82.

Facing pure pace I rank Majid,with Inzamam Ul Haq and Gundappa Vishwanath as the best pamongst Asian batsmen.On bad wickets with Vishwanath or Rahul Dravid,the best Asian batsman.In term sof pure talent I would rate Majid just a whisker ahead of Inzamam Ul Haq and Javed Miandad.


Where would Majid ranks amongst the greats?To me maybe just a notch below the likes of David Gower, Martin Crowe,Ted Dexter,Kevin Pieterson etc.and on par with Gundappa Vishwanath,Mark Waugh or Aravinda De Silva.

Majid may miss out in pace amongst the 100 best cricketers of all,because of inconsistency in patches. Arguably Kerry Packer cricket and dissension within Pakistan cricket politics,curtailed his career.

I praise his efforts to ressurect Pakistani cricket as a manager in 1994 in New Zealand,getting the bests out the pace duo of Wasim-Waqar.

Umpire Dicky Bird classes Majid in the highest bracket and so did Bishen Bedi.Sadly he was hardly praised enough by the likes of Dennis Lillee or Gary Sobers.
 
Today Majid Khan turns75.I wish a book was written about this legend.

There could be few more majestic sights than witnessing Majid in full flow.His batting blended the agression of a tiger with the grace of a poet .On a bad wicket he was arguably the best batsman in the world,resembling a surgeon curing patient considered incurable.Majid took batting artistry ,wizardry or domination to depths rarely traversed ,,resembling a magician at his best.After Viv Richards,Noone was a better exponent of the hook shot.Majid's driving was also classical,treating even good balls with contempt.The sheer beauty in his batting was like a lotus in full bloom.Few cricketers gave more justice to batting aesthetics.Majid looked like performing a combing operation with surgical precision ,but still retaining the grace of a priest bowing before a pulpit.

Majid's 167 at Georgetown against the great Caribbean pace battery,ranks amongst the best ever innings against genuine pace ,or to avert a defeat.He simply resurrected Pakistan from the grave in a classic partnership with Zaheer Abbas,for the 3rd wicket.In it's own right his 98 at the Oval in 1974 and 158 at Melbourne in 1972-73 were classics ,or even his 88 ball century n the 1974 Prudential Trophy.In 1st class cricket his 156 versus Glamorgan in 1969 ,compared with the best innings of all time on bad wickets,in the Victor Trumper class.

I recommend every reader to refer to Tony Lewis's description of Majid Khan's 156 at Wourcester.It gives vibrations of an epic.

Zaheer Abbas may have been more elegant or technically correct but in a crisis Majid outscored him.Arguably in the 1970's it was Majid who challenged the likes of Viv or Barry Richards,the Chappell brothers and Gavaskar for the title of the best batsman .I simply cannot seperate Majid from Gundappa Vishwanath.Against pure pace n the 1970's I only rank Viv Richards or Ian Chappell ahead.I would have chosen Majid to open the innings for a test world XI in the lat 1970's.

What may have gone agaisnt Majid was his lack of footwork,which he earlier compensated with his razor sharp reflexes.


Statistics hardly did him justice averaging around 39,but in his peak Majid was in the very top bracket.Sadly he retired on a sour note against India in 1982-83,completely losing his touch.After a loss in form,he revived hi sold touch in 1980 when scoring 110 not out and 89 in a home series against Australia and scoring 74 at Melbourne in 1981-82.

Facing pure pace I rank Majid,with Inzamam Ul Haq and Gundappa Vishwanath as the best pamongst Asian batsmen.On bad wickets with Vishwanath or Rahul Dravid,the best Asian batsman.In term sof pure talent I would rate Majid just a whisker ahead of Inzamam Ul Haq and Javed Miandad.


Where would Majid ranks amongst the greats?To me maybe just a notch below the likes of David Gower, Martin Crowe,Ted Dexter,Kevin Pieterson etc.and on par with Gundappa Vishwanath,Mark Waugh or Aravinda De Silva.

Majid may miss out in pace amongst the 100 best cricketers of all,because of inconsistency in patches. Arguably Kerry Packer cricket and dissension within Pakistan cricket politics,curtailed his career.

I praise his efforts to ressurect Pakistani cricket as a manager in 1994 in New Zealand,getting the bests out the pace duo of Wasim-Waqar.

Umpire Dicky Bird classes Majid in the highest bracket and so did Bishen Bedi.Sadly he was hardly praised enough by the likes of Dennis Lillee or Gary Sobers.

Great post Harsh.

I think we can make a strong case for him being in an all time Pak test XI. Anwar and Majid would make a very good opening duo.

Majid was probably one of the best players of pace bowling Pak has ever produced.

http://www.howstat.com/cricket/statistics/Matches/MatchScorecard.asp?MatchCode=0800

I think he had a pretty good record vs WI. I would love to find footage of the above match.

This is my favourite footage of Majid

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ot4yH9_sGFs
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/OnThisDay?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#OnThisDay</a> in 1946. The brilliant, graceful and stylish Majid Khan was born in Ludhiana. Majid made nearly 4000 runs in Tests and was the first Pakistani to make a Test hundred before lunch. He went on to become an ICC match referee & later chief executive of the PCB <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Cricket?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Cricket</a> <a href="https://t.co/TaR8daWxlt">pic.twitter.com/TaR8daWxlt</a></p>— Saj Sadiq (@SajSadiqCricket) <a href="https://twitter.com/SajSadiqCricket/status/1442757945977098253?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 28, 2021</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Pakistan's test batsman record as opener
[table=class: grid, align: center]
[tr][td]Player [/td][td]Span [/td][td]Mat [/td][td]Runs [/td][td]HS [/td][td]Avg [/td][td]100 [/td][td]50 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Saeed Anwar [/td][td]1990-2001 [/td][td]54 [/td][td]3957 [/td][td]188* [/td][td]47.1 [/td][td]11 [/td][td]25 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Azhar Ali [/td][td]2013-2019 [/td][td]20 [/td][td]1556 [/td][td]302* [/td][td]45.76 [/td][td]4 [/td][td]6 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Majid Khan [/td][td]1973-1979 [/td][td]26 [/td][td]1985 [/td][td]167 [/td][td]42.23 [/td][td]5 [/td][td]7 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Hanif Mohammad [/td][td]1952-1969 [/td][td]39 [/td][td]2638 [/td][td]337 [/td][td]41.87 [/td][td]7 [/td][td]12 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Shoaib Mohammad [/td][td]1983-1995 [/td][td]27 [/td][td]1423 [/td][td]203* [/td][td]40.65 [/td][td]4 [/td][td]5 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Taufeeq Umar [/td][td]2001-2014 [/td][td]44 [/td][td]2963 [/td][td]236 [/td][td]37.98 [/td][td]7 [/td][td]14 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Mohsin Khan [/td][td]1979-1986 [/td][td]43 [/td][td]2455 [/td][td]200 [/td][td]37.76 [/td][td]7 [/td][td]9 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Mohammad Hafeez [/td][td]2003-2018 [/td][td]53 [/td][td]3539 [/td][td]224 [/td][td]37.64 [/td][td]10 [/td][td]11 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Mudassar Nazar [/td][td]1976-1989 [/td][td]70 [/td][td]3787 [/td][td]231 [/td][td]36.76 [/td][td]9 [/td][td]15 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Aamer Sohail [/td][td]1992-2000 [/td][td]46 [/td][td]2630 [/td][td]205 [/td][td]36.02 [/td][td]4 [/td][td]13 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Sadiq Mohammad [/td][td]1969-1981 [/td][td]41 [/td][td]2480 [/td][td]166 [/td][td]34.92 [/td][td]5 [/td][td]9 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Ramiz Raja [/td][td]1987-1997 [/td][td]43 [/td][td]2103 [/td][td]114 [/td][td]32.85 [/td][td]1 [/td][td]17 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Imran Farhat [/td][td]2001-2013 [/td][td]40 [/td][td]2357 [/td][td]128 [/td][td]31.85 [/td][td]3 [/td][td]14 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Salman Butt [/td][td]2003-2010 [/td][td]31 [/td][td]1742 [/td][td]122 [/td][td]31.1 [/td][td]3 [/td][td]10 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Shan Masood [/td][td]2013-2021 [/td][td]24 [/td][td]1250 [/td][td]156 [/td][td]28.4 [/td][td]4 [/td][td]5 [/td][/tr]
[/table]
 
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Was Majid a better player of genuine pace than any batsman after Viv Richards in the 1970's?Also best on bad wickets in his era?Would he make the world test XI in 1977?
 
A player of unusual class and brilliance.

Thinking back to that area you realise how poor the standard of Pakistani batting is now. Even in the 1990s there were many fine batsmen on the domestic scene like Ghulam Ali and Zahoor Ilahi who should have played more for Pakistan. Things are very poor now.

Majid was so quick and light on his feet and knew where his off stump was. I remember seeing him live and being moved by the beauty and class of his cricket.
 
A player of unusual class and brilliance.

Thinking back to that area you realise how poor the standard of Pakistani batting is now. Even in the 1990s there were many fine batsmen on the domestic scene like Ghulam Ali and Zahoor Ilahi who should have played more for Pakistan. Things are very poor now.

Majid was so quick and light on his feet and knew where his off stump was. I remember seeing him live and being moved by the beauty and class of his cricket.

why was he inconsistent at times and did not average around 45 with his great talent?Place him in Greg Chappell class?
 
Quoting Anurabha Sengupta in Cricket Country "On his day he looked the most sublime of batsmen. The elegance was unmatched, artistry unique. The eye was quick, the footwork flashy, the timing impeccable. From the pristine whites of his shirt to the flashy spotlessness of his boots, he looked the ideal cricketer. As has been pointed out sometimes, once by Peter West in the commentary box, the only inelegant feature in the entire make-up of the man was the floppy hat he preferred to wear."

"Yes, Majid was often inconsistent. Centuries of the highest order could be followed by strings of low scores that disappointed many after dashes of crisp, fluent strokes had rolled across the turf like fine wine on the palette. But, when the big scores did come they were sparkling gems that gladdened all cricket loving hearts."
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/OnThisDay?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#OnThisDay</a> in 1946. The brilliant, graceful and stylish Majid Khan was born in Ludhiana. Majid made nearly 4000 runs in Tests and was the first Pakistani to make a Test hundred before lunch. He went on to become an ICC match referee & later chief executive of the PCB <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Cricket?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Cricket</a> <a href="https://t.co/TaR8daWxlt">pic.twitter.com/TaR8daWxlt</a></p>— Saj Sadiq (@SajSadiqCricket) <a href="https://twitter.com/SajSadiqCricket/status/1442757945977098253?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 28, 2021</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Would you rate him as the best Pakistani batsman of the 1970's-ahead of Zaheer Abbas?Best batsman against pace after Viv Richards in 1970's?An all-time great?
 
Majid's best test knock on bad wicket?

[utube]lRAvQz6iALY[/utube]
 
Last edited by a moderator:
n ODI cricket.I would have backed Majid to be an all-time great.In ODI cricket.I would have backed Majid to be an all-time great..It is worth pointing out that his strike rate was a most commendable 71.42 and average a very impressive 37.41.in the shorter version of the game. Who can forget his 81 in 1979 world cup semi-final or 88 ball century in 1974 Prudential trophy in England.
 
Today Majid Khan turns75.I wish a book was written about this legend.

There could be few more majestic sights than witnessing Majid in full flow.His batting blended the agression of a tiger with the grace of a poet .On a bad wicket he was arguably the best batsman in the world,resembling a surgeon curing patient considered incurable.Majid took batting artistry ,wizardry or domination to depths rarely traversed ,,resembling a magician at his best.After Viv Richards,Noone was a better exponent of the hook shot.Majid's driving was also classical,treating even good balls with contempt.The sheer beauty in his batting was like a lotus in full bloom.Few cricketers gave more justice to batting aesthetics.Majid looked like performing a combing operation with surgical precision ,but still retaining the grace of a priest bowing before a pulpit.

Majid's 167 at Georgetown against the great Caribbean pace battery,ranks amongst the best ever innings against genuine pace ,or to avert a defeat.He simply resurrected Pakistan from the grave in a classic partnership with Zaheer Abbas,for the 3rd wicket.In it's own right his 98 at the Oval in 1974 and 158 at Melbourne in 1972-73 were classics ,or even his 88 ball century n the 1974 Prudential Trophy.In 1st class cricket his 156 versus Glamorgan in 1969 ,compared with the best innings of all time on bad wickets,in the Victor Trumper class.

I recommend every reader to refer to Tony Lewis's description of Majid Khan's 156 at Wourcester.It gives vibrations of an epic.

Zaheer Abbas may have been more elegant or technically correct but in a crisis Majid outscored him.Arguably in the 1970's it was Majid who challenged the likes of Viv or Barry Richards,the Chappell brothers and Gavaskar for the title of the best batsman .I simply cannot seperate Majid from Gundappa Vishwanath.Against pure pace n the 1970's I only rank Viv Richards or Ian Chappell ahead.I would have chosen Majid to open the innings for a test world XI in the lat 1970's.

What may have gone agaisnt Majid was his lack of footwork,which he earlier compensated with his razor sharp reflexes.


Statistics hardly did him justice averaging around 39,but in his peak Majid was in the very top bracket.Sadly he retired on a sour note against India in 1982-83,completely losing his touch.After a loss in form,he revived hi sold touch in 1980 when scoring 110 not out and 89 in a home series against Australia and scoring 74 at Melbourne in 1981-82.

Facing pure pace I rank Majid,with Inzamam Ul Haq and Gundappa Vishwanath as the best pamongst Asian batsmen.On bad wickets with Vishwanath or Rahul Dravid,the best Asian batsman.In term sof pure talent I would rate Majid just a whisker ahead of Inzamam Ul Haq and Javed Miandad.


Where would Majid ranks amongst the greats?To me maybe just a notch below the likes of David Gower, Martin Crowe,Ted Dexter,Kevin Pieterson etc.and on par with Gundappa Vishwanath,Mark Waugh or Aravinda De Silva.

Majid may miss out in pace amongst the 100 best cricketers of all,because of inconsistency in patches. Arguably Kerry Packer cricket and dissension within Pakistan cricket politics,curtailed his career.

I praise his efforts to ressurect Pakistani cricket as a manager in 1994 in New Zealand,getting the bests out the pace duo of Wasim-Waqar.

Umpire Dicky Bird classes Majid in the highest bracket and so did Bishen Bedi.Sadly he was hardly praised enough by the likes of Dennis Lillee or Gary Sobers.

I've never watched him. My dad has watched him in England and said he was supremely elegant and he always had more time to play the drives. My dad also said he was a terrific runer between the wickets and a good judge of a run.


Waht footage I've watched off him is another Greg Chapell style high bat grip but more wristy, possibly Shubmaan Gill might be going that route. Does'nht seem to have a real Fwd defensive push but then scores of elegant batsmen didnt- like Zahir Abbas, Mo Azhar and again Gill etc.

Kapil Dev always rated him as his ideal batsman and praised him heaps.

Regarding hardly praised by lillee - I think on on tour of Aus they had a bet about runs and Majid told him about if lille could bounce him and if his cap fell off he could have it. I think as the story goes (and maybe the pak PP regulars can correct me if i am wrong) on the next tour (about 2-5 years later) lillee bounced, he swayed back, the cap fell on the ground. He told lillee he can have the cap at the end of the day or something similar. I saw this from some interview of lillee that he gave whilst in India , in some benefit match or so.

Am sure he'd bring backsides to seats.
 
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I've never watched him. My dad has watched him in England and said he was supremely elegant and he always had more time to play the drives. My dad also said he was a terrific runer between the wickets and a good judge of a run.


Waht footage I've watched off him is another Greg Chapell style high bat grip but more wristy, possibly Shubmaan Gill might be going that route. Does'nht seem to have a real Fwd defensive push but then scores of elegant batsmen didnt- like Zahir Abbas, Mo Azhar and again Gill etc.

Kapil Dev always rated him as his ideal batsman and praised him heaps.

Regarding hardly praised by lillee - I think on on tour of Aus they had a bet about runs and Majid told him about if lille could bounce him and if his cap fell off he could have it. I think as the story goes (and maybe the pak PP regulars can correct me if i am wrong) on the next tour (about 2-5 years later) lillee bounced, he swayed back, the cap fell on the ground. He told lillee he can have the cap at the end of the day or something similar. I saw this from some interview of lillee that he gave whilst in India , in some benefit match or so.

Am sure he'd bring backsides to seats.

Cheers mate,lovely post.Great memories expressed
 
I watched him play for Glamorgan in the mid-1970’s against the world’s best bowlers.

He was better than Javed Miandad and Zaheer Abbas. He was braver than Zaheer and technically superior to Javed.

His problem was that on the inside he was an old-fashioned English gentleman amateur. He didn’t share his cousin Imran’s hatred of defeat or his burning need to prove himself.

If I remember rightly, he gave up county cricket around 1976. He then abandoned any attempt at professionalism, in terms of application and training, and his performances deteriorated like an old-fashioned Maharajah.

Players like him and Farokh Engineer were from a different era in terms of wanting to have fun more than wanting to win.

He also, to be frank, was of that era of privileged Aitchison College alumni who thought that Pakistan and India were really one country with two governments, and who enjoyed their lives in England as Oxford University alumni. Mind you, so did Imran, but Imran never really fitted in in upper class England the way that Majid did.
 
Pakistan's test batsman record as opener
[table=class: grid, align: center]
[tr][td]Player [/td][td]Span [/td][td]Mat [/td][td]Runs [/td][td]HS [/td][td]Avg [/td][td]100 [/td][td]50 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Saeed Anwar [/td][td]1990-2001 [/td][td]54 [/td][td]3957 [/td][td]188* [/td][td]47.1 [/td][td]11 [/td][td]25 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Azhar Ali [/td][td]2013-2019 [/td][td]20 [/td][td]1556 [/td][td]302* [/td][td]45.76 [/td][td]4 [/td][td]6 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Majid Khan [/td][td]1973-1979 [/td][td]26 [/td][td]1985 [/td][td]167 [/td][td]42.23 [/td][td]5 [/td][td]7 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Hanif Mohammad [/td][td]1952-1969 [/td][td]39 [/td][td]2638 [/td][td]337 [/td][td]41.87 [/td][td]7 [/td][td]12 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Shoaib Mohammad [/td][td]1983-1995 [/td][td]27 [/td][td]1423 [/td][td]203* [/td][td]40.65 [/td][td]4 [/td][td]5 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Taufeeq Umar [/td][td]2001-2014 [/td][td]44 [/td][td]2963 [/td][td]236 [/td][td]37.98 [/td][td]7 [/td][td]14 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Mohsin Khan [/td][td]1979-1986 [/td][td]43 [/td][td]2455 [/td][td]200 [/td][td]37.76 [/td][td]7 [/td][td]9 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Mohammad Hafeez [/td][td]2003-2018 [/td][td]53 [/td][td]3539 [/td][td]224 [/td][td]37.64 [/td][td]10 [/td][td]11 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Mudassar Nazar [/td][td]1976-1989 [/td][td]70 [/td][td]3787 [/td][td]231 [/td][td]36.76 [/td][td]9 [/td][td]15 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Aamer Sohail [/td][td]1992-2000 [/td][td]46 [/td][td]2630 [/td][td]205 [/td][td]36.02 [/td][td]4 [/td][td]13 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Sadiq Mohammad [/td][td]1969-1981 [/td][td]41 [/td][td]2480 [/td][td]166 [/td][td]34.92 [/td][td]5 [/td][td]9 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Ramiz Raja [/td][td]1987-1997 [/td][td]43 [/td][td]2103 [/td][td]114 [/td][td]32.85 [/td][td]1 [/td][td]17 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Imran Farhat [/td][td]2001-2013 [/td][td]40 [/td][td]2357 [/td][td]128 [/td][td]31.85 [/td][td]3 [/td][td]14 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Salman Butt [/td][td]2003-2010 [/td][td]31 [/td][td]1742 [/td][td]122 [/td][td]31.1 [/td][td]3 [/td][td]10 [/td][/tr]
[tr][td]Shan Masood [/td][td]2013-2021 [/td][td]24 [/td][td]1250 [/td][td]156 [/td][td]28.4 [/td][td]4 [/td][td]5 [/td][/tr]
[/table]

That's why they say , stats don't tell the whole story. A 2nd grade batsman like Azhar Ali has better stats than the great Majid Khan .
 
Born: September 28, 1946 (age 77 years), Ludhiana, India
Happy birthday to the former Captain Pakistan cricket team Majid Khan, Nicknamed "Majestic Khan" by the British press. Grace and fluency were his traits when he was on the field.
 
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