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Ex- Pakistan skipper Sarfaraz retires from int’l cricket

Monday, 16 March 2026


Former Pakistan captain Sarfaraz Ahmed has announced his retirement from international cricket, bringing the curtain down on a career that spanned nearly two decades and included one of Pakistan's most memorable white-ball triumphs, according to Cricbuzz.
The Karachi-born wicketkeeper-batter, who made his international debut in an ODI against India at Jaipur in November 2007, played 54 Tests, 117 ODIs and 61 T20Is, amassing a total of 6164 runs, including six centuries and 35 half-centuries. Behind the stumps, Sarfaraz finished with 315 catches and 56 stumpings.
Sarfaraz also captained Pakistan in 100 international matches across formats: 50 ODIs, 37 T20Is and 13 Tests. Under his leadership, Pakistan rose to the No. 1 ranking in T20I cricket and went on a world-record streak of 11 consecutive T20I series victories.
His captaincy era is most remembered for Pakistan's triumph at the 2017 Champions Trophy in England, where they beat India in the final by 180 runs ending an eight-year drought without an ICC title. With that win, Sarfaraz became the only captain to have led Pakistan to ICC titles at both junior and senior levels, having earlier captained the side to the ICC U19 World Cup triumph in 2006 in Sri Lanka - another tournament that ended with a win over India in the final.
Sarfaraz also backed several cricketers early in their international careers, including Babar Azam, Shaheen Shah Afridi, Hasan Ali, Imam-ul-Haq, Faheem Ashraf, Fakhar Zaman and Shadab Khan.
In recognition of his services, he was awarded Pakistan's Pride of Performance in 2018, becoming the youngest Pakistan captain to receive the honour. Sarfaraz's appearances dwindled across formats following the emergence of Mohammad Rizwan. He last featured in Pakistan colour in the Perth Test in December 2023.