Full name Khaled Mahmud
Born July 26, 1971, Dhaka
Current age 36 years 297 days
Major teams Bangladesh,Dhaka Division,Dhaka Metropolis
Also known as Sujon
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium
Batting and fielding averages
Mat
Inns
NO
Runs
HS
Ave
BF
SR
100
50
4s
6s
Ct
St
Tests
12
23
1
266
45
12.09
455
58.46
0
0
30
3
2
0
ODIs
77
72
3
991
50
14.36
1461
67.83
0
1
90
7
17
0
First-class
46
76
6
1767
141*
25.24
1
9
21
0
List A
125
108
9
1891
145*
19.10
1
3
32
0
Bowling averages
Mat
Inns
Balls
Runs
Wkts
BBI
BBM
Ave
Econ
SR
4w
5w
10
Tests
12
17
1620
832
13
4/37
7/105
64.00
3.08
124.6
1
0
0
ODIs
77
75
3385
2865
67
4/19
4/19
42.76
5.07
50.5
1
0
0
First-class
46
6258
3064
97
5/32
31.58
2.93
64.5
2
0
List A
125
5453
4268
144
5/17
5/17
29.63
4.69
37.8
4
2
0
Career statistics
Test debut
Bangladesh v Zimbabwe at Dhaka, Nov 8-12, 2001 scorecard
Last Test
Bangladesh v England at Chittagong (MAA), Oct 29-Nov 1, 2003 scorecard
Test statistics
ODI debut
Bangladesh v India at Dhaka, Jan 10, 1998 scorecard
Last ODI
Bangladesh v Sri Lanka at Bogra, Feb 20, 2006 scorecard
ODI statistics
First-class debut
1998/99
Last First-class
Dhaka Division v Chittagong Division at Dhaka, Dec 4-7, 2005 scorecard
List A debut
1997/98
Last List A
Bangladesh v Sri Lanka at Bogra, Feb 20, 2006 scorecard
Profile
Khaled Mahmud was arguably one of the least talented cricketers ever to captain his country, but he brought an amateur's enthusiasm to one of the least palatable tasks in world cricket. Despite scoring a composed 47 on his international debut, against India at Dhaka in 1997-98, it was as a wobbly seam bowler that he made his mark on the game, for better or for worse. During the 1999 World Cup, Mahmud made the most of England's early-season conditions to take three top-order wickets for 31 runs, as Pakistan crashed to a 62-run defeat at Northampton. It was a result that all but sealed Bangladesh's elevation to Test status. A good communicator and team man, he succeeded Khaled Mashud as Bangladesh captain, following their humiliating 2003 World Cup. But it was during this period that his Test bowling average briefly ballooned above 400 - the worst mark of all time. As Bangladesh's run of failures continued, Mahmud became the target for a hostile crowd, particularly during his final series in charge, against England in late 2003. He was dropped from the squad soon afterwards, and retired, only to reverse his decision shortly afterwards. Though he hasn't played a Test since November 2003, he's been a regular in the one-day squad and took career-best figures of 4 for 19 against Zimbabwe in March 2004. Mahmud announced intentions to retire in October 2005 but made one last appearance against Sri Lanka in February 2006. Fittingly, he top-scored and left the arena to a standing ovation - but it was still not enough to save his side.
Andrew Miller