Legendary Pakistan leg spinner Abdul  Qadir:


The unbelievable Pakistan leg spinner Abdul Qadir has passed on after a heart failure. 

The 63-year-old passed on in Lahore, his family affirmed on Friday. Qadir played 67 Tests from 1977 to 1990, taking 236 wickets including nine for 56 against England at Lahore in 1987. He likewise included in 104 one-day internationals, asserting 132 casualties. 

He was a vital colleague the 1980s and turned into a guide to the up and coming age of leg spinners like Shane Warne and Mushtaq Ahmed. 

Remarking on Sky Sports during the fourth Ashes Test, Warne said Qadir was "a splendid, splendid bowler". 

"I think for a many individuals that bowled leg turn as I did, he was the person that we gazed upward to during the 1980s," said Warne. "Bowling leg turn, he tricked a many individuals." 

The Pakistan Cricket Board reported the demise of on its authority Twitter account, considering him a "maestro". Qadir's previous partner Wasim Akram tweeted: "They considered him the entertainer for some reasons yet when he looked at me without flinching and disclosed to me I planned to play for Pakistan for the following 20 years, I trusted him. A Magician, totally. 

"A leg spinner and a pioneer of his time. You will be remembered fondly Abdul Qadir yet always remembered." 

David Gower, introducing on Sky Sports added: "He would consistently find out if you had picked the googly. 'Have you picked it?' he would prod. 

"A flawless person, with a tremendous range of abilities. Our sympathies to all near him."