He is a brother-in-law of former Pakistan international cricketer and captain Saleem Malik.[2]
Career
Cricket career
Ahmed scored six Test centuries against the world's top-ranked side, Australia – a record number of centuries by a Pakistani against Australia, shared with Javed Miandad. However, 33 of his 92 innings yielded single-figure scores, 54 of them yielded scores below 20.
Ijaz Ahmed came into the national side at the height of the Imran Khan era, and remained on the fringes for nearly a decade, despite several good scores. Dropped after the 1992 World Cup, he came back strongly the following season and established himself at the pivotal "one down" position. He performed poorly at the 1999 World Cup, and the arrival of Younis Khan brought an end to his international career. He formally retired from cricket in 2003.
A powerful hitter of the ball, Ahmed became the second Pakistani batsman to score 10 ODI centuries. At Lahore, in 1997, Ahmed collapsed the Indian bowling attack by making a quick century off just 68 balls including 9 sixes, remaining not out for 139*; his highest ODI score.
In Test cricket, Ahmed scored 12 Test centuries, including his first and only double century against Sri Lanka, when he scored 211. Ahmed is the top scorer for Pakistan side against South Africa.
On 21 April 1997, in a Test match against Sri Lanka, Ahmed was at the crease on 97, when a run-out attempt brought ambiguity in the decision. However, replays declared Salim Malik as dismissed, and Ahmad was called back to the crease. This was the first time for a batsman to return from the pavilion to the crease since 1987.[4]
Coaching career
The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) named fielding coach of that time Ijaz as the national side's batting consultant for the upcoming tour of Zimbabwe.[5] He was later appointed assistant coach of the national team before the upcoming tour of Zimbabwe on request of team management.[6]
Ahmed was appointed as the coach of Pakistan's Under-19 cricket team on 20 October 2019.[7]
Ijaz Ahmed made 22 centuries in international cricket – 12 in Test cricket and 10 in One Day Internationals. He scored his first Test century against Australia at Faisalabad in September 1988, scoring 122.[9] He scored his final Test century, also against Australia at the Perth on in November 1999,[10] scoring 115. His highest Test score is 211, scored against Sri Lanka at Dhaka in 1999.[11]
He scored his first ODI century against Bangladesh at Chittagong, scoring 124*.[12] He scored his final ODI century against England at Sharjah in 1999,[13] scoring 137. His highest ODI score of 139 not out came against India in 1997 at Lahore.[14]
In 2009, he was jailed for fake issuance of bank cheques.[2][33] He was remanded for six weeks in jail and later received a bail.[34][35] In 2012, a local court charged him with forgery.[36]
Racism against Pashtuns
Ijaz Ahmed was heavily criticized by a large number of former cricket players, and journalists after he made racist remarks about the number of Pashtun players in the Pakistan cricket team, calling them illiterate and accusing them of not being able to handle pressure because of their upbringing on a talk show in ARY channel.[37][38]
^Inzamam-ul-Haq, 28 May 1997, Outlook India. Archived from the original on 13 June 2024. "Teammate Ijaz Ahmed nods along. Contrary to media reports, he too could not meet cousins in Jalandhar for the same reason."