Fastest Bowl of a Cricket Ball - The Name Pakistan

 Fastest Bowl of a Cricket Ball

The highest electronically measured speed for a ball bowled by any bowler is 161.3 km/h (100.23 mph); bowled by Pakistani player Shoaib Akhtar on February 22, 2003.  The game took place in Cape Town, South Africa in a World Cup match against England.

Intro of Shoaib Akhter:

Shoaib Akhtar brought into the world 13 August 1975) is a former Pakistani cricketer, who played all configurations of the diversion over a multi-year profession. He is perceived as one of the quickest bowlers ever off, conveying an authoritatively recorded the best speed of 161.3 km/h in a pool coordinate against England amid the 2003 Cricket World Cup. Akhtar was nicknamed "Rawalpindi Express" and "Tiger", as a tribute to the place where he grew up and quick bowling. He is additionally the primary bowler to break the 100 mph hindrance, doing as such twice in his vocation.

Career:

Akhtar made his Test debut in November 1997 as an opening quick bowler and played his initial One Day International three months after the fact. Akhtar has been engaged with a few discussions amid his profession, regularly blamed for unsportsmanlike conduct, in spite of his tributes for fundamentally affecting amusements to support Pakistan. Akhtar was sent home amid a Test coordinate arrangement in Australia in 2005 for supposed poor mentality. After a year, he was entangled in a medication outrage in the wake of testing positive for the execution of improving substance nandrolone. Be that as it may, the boycott forced on him was lifted on offer.

In September 2007, he got a ban. On 1 April 2008, Akhtar was prohibited for a long time for freely censuring the Pakistan Cricket Board. In October 2008, the Lahore High Court in Pakistan suspended the five-year boycott, and Akhtar was chosen in the 15-man squad for the Twenty 20 Quadrangular Tournament in Canada. Pakistani judge Rana Bhagwandas once expressed that Akhtar is a legend of Pakistan cricket. Akhtar resigned from universal cricket after the 2011 World Cup.

Read also: 10 Asian Cricketers Who turned Politician




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