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Mohammad Haris Jersy
Mohammad Haris
Team flagPAK24 yrs
batting styleWicketKeeper Batter

Mohammad Haris Profile, Career & Stats

Batting
Bowling

Mohammad Haris Recent Form

Batting

PAK vs AFG, T20I1 (4)
PAK vs UAE, T20I1 (2)
PAK vs AFG, T20I15 (13)
PAK vs WI, T20I2 (2)
PAK vs WI, T20I4 (6)
PAK vs WI, T20I6 (1) *
PAK vs BAN, T20I5 (14)
PAK vs BAN, T20I0 (1)
PAK vs BAN, T20I4 (3)
PAK vs BAN, T20I107 (46) *
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Mohammad Haris Career Stats

Batting

FormatMatInnR100s50sHSSRAvgFoursSixesDuckRank
ODI6530001785.717.5021----
T20I262640810107141.1817.003522----
BPL14142310044137.5016.502214----
PSL37369050487164.5526.629642----
First class1014332026265.2323.71336----
LIST A5044116618100107.6629.8911927----
T208887202601381141.8825.0119996----

Bowling

FormatMatInnWEconAvgBest3W5WSRMaidenRank
ODI6000.000.000000.00----
T20I26000.000.000000.00----
BPL14000.000.000000.00----
PSL37000.000.000000.00----
First class10000.000.000000.00----
LIST A50000.000.000000.00----
T2088000.000.000000.00----

Career Debut Information

ODI Debut
Pakistan v West Indies Multan Cricket Stadium, Multan, 8-6-2022
T20I Debut
Pakistan v England Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore, 30-9-2022
BPL Debut
Comilla Victorians v Sylhet Strikers Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium Mirpur,Dhaka, 9-1-2023
First class Debut
Northern v Khyber Pakhtunkhwa National Bank of Pakistan Sports Complex Karachi, 24-11-2021
LIST A Debut
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa v Central Punjab Iqbal Stadium, Faisalabad, 2-3-2022

Teams played for

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 2nd XI Pakistan Under-19s

About Mohammad Haris

NameMohammad Haris
GenderMale
Birth30 Mar 2001
Birth PlacePeshawar
Height5 ft 4 in
NationalityPakistani
RoleWicket-keeper
Batsright handed . middle order
Bowlsright-arm offbreak . Spinner

On a winter’s evening in Lahore in 2022, under the bright floodlights of the Gaddafi Stadium, a young man with unflinching eyes walked out to bat in green. The crowd did not yet roar for him the way it did for Babar Azam or Mohammad Rizwan, but there was a murmur, a sense that something raw, unpolished, and powerful was about to unfold. Mohammad Haris did not walk like a debutant. He walked like a boy who had rehearsed this moment in his head a thousand times. And when his bat came down for that first thunderous pull shot, Pakistan realised they were watching a cricketer cut from a very different cloth.... continue reading

Player Bio

On a winter’s evening in Lahore in 2022, under the bright floodlights of the Gaddafi Stadium, a young man with unflinching eyes walked out to bat in green. The crowd did not yet roar for him the way it did for Babar Azam or Mohammad Rizwan, but there was a murmur, a sense that something raw, unpolished, and powerful was about to unfold. Mohammad Haris did not walk like a debutant. He walked like a boy who had rehearsed this moment in his head a thousand times. And when his bat came down for that first thunderous pull shot, Pakistan realised they were watching a cricketer cut from a very different cloth.

Born on 30 March 2001 in Peshawar, Haris grew up in a city that has gifted Pakistan several rugged cricketers, men who often carried with them the defiance and pride of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. From the dusty streets of Peshawar to the modern academies, his climb was not instant. He was not a prodigy who burst into age-group headlines overnight. Instead, Haris worked his way up, learning to hit hard without losing his balance, and to play with fearlessness without letting it drift into recklessness.

His early promise showed in the 2019 Under-19 World Cup, where he kept wickets and played cameos with the bat. He wasn’t the biggest name in that squad, but he left the impression of someone who played cricket with a street-fighter’s instinct, resourceful, scrappy, and exciting. By 2020, he was representing Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in domestic cricket. Those who saw him up close often said the same thing: Haris was different. He wasn’t content with nudging singles; he wanted to dominate bowlers, even if it was the first ball he faced.

That approach soon found its biggest stage in the Pakistan Super League. Picked by Peshawar Zalmi, Haris had to wait for his chances, but when they came, he turned heads immediately. In the 2022 PSL, his explosive batting at the top of the order became one of the defining stories. Against Karachi Kings, he smashed a 27-ball 49, a knock stitched with audacious pulls and fearless lofted drives. In another game against Islamabad, he tore into bowlers with a 32-ball 70. His strike rate across that season soared beyond 180, numbers that made analysts sit up. Here was a Pakistani batter who did not bat with fear of failure, a batter who could change games in three overs.

Haris’s ability to wicket-keep added another layer to his value. In a country where Rizwan had established himself as the primary keeper across formats, Haris wasn’t going to walk in as first-choice gloveman. But his athleticism and quick hands made him a useful backup. More importantly, it allowed selectors to view him as a multi-dimensional cricketer, a potential top-order dasher who could also slot in behind the stumps.

What sets Haris apart is not just the statistics, but the attitude. In interviews, he has repeatedly said, “I don’t play to survive, I play to win.” It is a line that reflects not arrogance, but belief. Pakistan cricket has often been accused of being too cautious in white-ball cricket, anchored around safety-first approaches. Haris represents the antithesis: a generation unafraid to fail, unafraid to take risks for rewards.

His 2022 T20 World Cup appearance cemented his place in the public imagination. Drafted late into the squad, he didn’t play every game, but his cameos against South Africa and New Zealand gave Pakistan an injection of momentum in the middle overs. Against South Africa, his 28 off 11 balls turned the tide of the game. Against New Zealand in the semi-final, his fearless approach rattled experienced bowlers. Even though he didn’t play the final against England, fans remembered his spark as one of the reasons Pakistan reached that far.

Of course, the journey hasn’t been flawless. Like many attacking batters, Haris has faced criticism for inconsistency. There have been innings where his aggression has led to soft dismissals — mistimed slogs, risky upper cuts, audacious sweeps too early in the innings. His average, particularly in ODIs, shows that he hasn’t yet translated his domestic dominance into sustained international runs. But coaches argue that this is the cost of investing in a high-impact player. Saqlain Mushtaq, Pakistan’s former coach, once remarked: “If you ask Haris to slow down, you lose Haris. He’s not here to block. He’s here to change games.”

And therein lies the intrigue of Mohammad Haris. He is not built to be a traditionalist. He is part of Pakistan’s future vision, a team that wants to match the firepower of England, India, and Australia in white-ball formats. His role is not just to score runs, but to change the pace of games, to alter psychology, to inject belief.

Haris’s fielding, too, has become a feature of his game. Athletic, sharp in the ring, and brave on the boundary, he saves runs that don’t show up in his batting numbers. Pakistan, long criticised for poor fielding standards, sees in Haris the energy of a younger generation determined to change that narrative.

For now, Mohammad Haris represents hope. Hope of a Pakistan batting line-up unshackled, daring, and dynamic. Hope of a team that no longer fears collapse but believes in counter-attack. In his swagger, his audacity, and his unflinching pulls, Pakistan fans see not just a cricketer, but a possibility that the future could belong to a fearless generation.

From Peshawar’s dusty nets to the grand stages of World Cups, Haris’s journey has only just begun. And if the early signs are anything to go by, his story might not just be about runs and averages, but about how one player helped shift the culture of a team.

(As of August 2025)