It was Azharuddin whose grace and fluidity of his wrist had once prompted John Woodcock, a noted cricket writer, to say, "It's no use asking an Englishman to bat like Mohammed Azharuddin. For, it would be like expecting a greyhound to win the London Derby!" Indeed those who saw him could never forget his leg-side play which was reminiscent of Zaheer Abbas and Greg Chappell.
Mohammad Azharuddin is an Indian politician and former cricketer. He was an accomplished batsman and captained the Indian cricket team for much of the 1990s, until being banned for his involvement in a match-fixing scandal in 2000. The lifetime ban for his alleged match fixing was later found illegal by Andhra Pradesh High Court.
Mohammad Azharuddin was born on February 8, 1963 in Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh. His grandfather was the first to spot the youngster's passion for cricket, and at the All Saints missionary school, Brother Joseph inculcated in him a love of the game. It was as a seam bowler, who could make the ball swing that the young Azharuddin began playing for All Saints, but he progressed quickly to bat at No. 3, besides being the third seamer, for Hyderabad Schools. In 1981-82, at the age of eighteen, he made his first-class début in the Ranji Trophy. Such exposure was rather easily attained in a Hyderabad side which was going through a transition, but the experience shaped his batting even as it toughened him mentally.