Quetta Gladiators Captain || Coach || Assistant coach || Manager
The franchise was established in 2015 The team’s home ground is Bugti Stadium. The team captain is Sarfaraz Ahmed and coached by former Pakistani goalkeeper Moin Khan and Azam
Khan is the team’s manager. Abdul Razzaq is the assistant coach.

Sarfaraz Ahmed Career || Biography
Sarfraz Ahmed is a keeper hitter who may have lost importance, as is the case with many capable cricketers on the Pakistani national track. Instead, he became the first Pakistan captain since the great Imran Khan to win the 50-year-old world title. Sarfraz took over the reins of ODI in February 2017, providing his team with rare direction and focus.
In June of that year, Pakistan entered the Champions Trophy as the lowest ranked team and lost heavily to India at the beginning but then launched a fiery race to beat South Africa, Sri Lanka and the host nation. home, and finally India to win the prize.
A mid-level right-handed pitcher, Sarfraz was not always a light-hearted lead in the 2014 Sharjah Test – when Pakistan chased 302 in the 57.3 lap to level the series.

In fact, from 2007 – when he first made his debut – and 2014, Sarfraz played only four Tests, four T20Is and 26 ODIs. He is far from being a regular on one of the Pakistani teams, and not good enough to qualify as a professional pitcher; he hasn’t scored in half a century internationally during that time. It was a time when the Akmals – no less than three – rented the back of the trees.
Sarfraz had initially appeared in Pakistan’s sights as he led Pakistan’s U19s to the 2006 World Cup, scoring for half a century in his third and fourth games.Quetta Gladiators Captain || Coach || Assistant coach || Manager. He was in domestic cricket, with 523 runs in 10 matches as well as 28 stumps that landed him on a tour with Australia’s A-team in 2007. He was later disqualified. left in the desert.

It took seven long years for the spotlight to return to Sarfraz, as he scored 74 of Pakistan’s 359 goals in the second leg against Sri Lanka in Dubai. The innings were lost, but this made him the team’s first-choice catcher. He averaged 71.20 over the next 18 months and during that time he also made the ODI team midway through the 2015 World Cup campaign with a 49-foot run against South Africa.
Since then, Sarfraz has been a man of all kinds, steady on the gloves, aggressive with batman and street smart as captain in every form. At the age of 30, with the Championship Cup in hand, he is arguably Pakistan’s most respected cricketer since Misbah-ul-Haq and Younis Khan. It would continue to do so until October 2019, when a prolonged loss of personal form caused him to be abruptly stripped of the captaincy in all three competitions and given up altogether.
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