Thanks to the revelations made by former Pakistan captain Shahid Afridi in his autobiography, the mystery around his age has finally ended. According to Afridi's autobiography, the star all-rounder was born in 1975 and not 1980 as the official records state.
The revelation also makes it clear that Afridi was not 16 when he smashed a record-breaking 37-ball hundred against Sri Lanka in Nairobi in 1996.
“I was just nineteen, and not sixteen like they claim. I was born in 1975. So yes, the authorities stated my age incorrectly,” Afridi has written in book titled ‘Game Changer’. Afridi’s claim that was he was 19 at that time is confusing as he would be 21 if he was born in 1975 like he has written. He played 27 Tests, 398 ODIs and 99 T20 Internationals.
The former captain, who retired from international cricket after the 2016 World T20 , also slammed bowling great Waqar Younis in his book. Younis was the team’s coach in the 2016 World T20 held in India.
“Unfortunately, he hadn’t let go of the past. Waqar and I had a history, dating all the way back to his tiff with Wasim over the captaincy crown. He was a mediocre captain but a terrible coach, always micro-managing and getting in the way, trying to tell the captain – me – what to do… It was a natural clash and it was bound to happen,” he wrote.
Afridi finally reveals his real age, slams bowling great Waqar Younis
ABP News Bureau
Updated at:
03 May 2019 03:10 AM (IST)
Shahid Afridi's autobiography reveals that he was born in 1975 as the official records state which means that Afridi was not 16 when he smashed a record-breaking 37-ball hundred against Sri Lanka in Nairobi in 1996
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