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Mohammad Azharuddin is a former Indian cricketer and politician, widely regarded as one of the finest middle-order batsmen of his generation. He represented India in international cricket from 1984 to 2000 and served as captain of the Indian national team for much of the 1990s, leading the side in a then-record number of Test matches. After retiring from cricket, he entered politics and was elected to the Lok Sabha from Moradabad in 2009 on an Indian National Congress ticket.
| Full name | Mohammad Azharuddin |
|---|---|
| Born | 8 February 1963, Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh (now Telangana) |
| Batting style | Right-handed |
| Bowling style | Right-arm medium |
| Role | Middle-order batsman, occasional bowler, slip fielder |
| Test debut | December 1984, vs England, Kolkata |
| ODI debut | January 1985, vs England |
| Domestic team | Hyderabad |
| Captain of India | 1990–1996, 1998–1999 |
| Political party | Indian National Congress |
| Lok Sabha | Moradabad (2009–2014) |
Azharuddin was born in Hyderabad and educated at All Saints High School and later Nizam College, Osmania University. He developed his cricket through Hyderabad's school and university circuit and made his first-class debut for Hyderabad in the Ranji Trophy in the early 1980s, quickly attracting national selectors with consistent run-scoring.
Azharuddin made a remarkable Test debut against David Gower's England side in 1984–85, becoming the only batsman to score centuries in each of his first three Test matches — at Kolkata, Chennai and Kanpur. The feat established him as a prodigy with wristy, unorthodox stroke play, particularly strong on the leg side.
He was appointed captain of India in 1990 following the brief tenure of Krishnamachari Srikkanth. Under his leadership, India recorded notable Test series wins at home, including against England (1992–93) and against South Africa, Sri Lanka and other touring sides. He led India in three ICC Cricket World Cups — 1992 in Australia and New Zealand, 1996 in the subcontinent, and 1999 in England.
Azharuddin played 99 Test matches and over 300 One Day Internationals for India, scoring 22 Test centuries and seven ODI centuries. He was particularly prolific at Eden Gardens, Kolkata, where he scored multiple Test hundreds. He was known for his quicksilver fielding in the slips and at point, and is regarded as among the finest Indian fielders of his era.
In 2000, following investigations by the Central Bureau of Investigation into match-fixing in international cricket, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) imposed a life ban on Azharuddin. He consistently denied the allegations and challenged the ban in court. In November 2012, the Andhra Pradesh High Court set aside the BCCI's life ban, holding it to be unsustainable.
Azharuddin joined the Indian National Congress in February 2009 and contested the 2009 general election from the Moradabad constituency in Uttar Pradesh, which he won, entering the 15th Lok Sabha. He contested unsuccessfully from Tonk-Sawai Madhopur in Rajasthan in 2014. He has subsequently held organisational positions within the Congress in Telangana.
Azharuddin served as president of the Hyderabad Cricket Association (HCA) after being elected to the post in 2019, and remained involved in state-level cricket administration in Telangana, though his tenure was marked by various administrative disputes.
Azharuddin's first marriage was to Naureen, with whom he has two sons. He later married actress Sangeeta Bijlani; the couple subsequently separated. His elder son, Mohammed Asaduddin, has played first-class cricket for Hyderabad.
Azharuddin is remembered as one of India's most successful Test captains by matches won at the time of his retirement, and as a stylist whose flicks and on-side play remain a reference point for Indian batting. His career also became a defining chapter in cricket's confrontation with corruption, prompting reforms in the way the BCCI and the ICC monitor player conduct.