Rashid Khan’s star continues to shine

Khan’s cricketing rise to prominence has been meteoric and has contributed to outstanding performances by the Afghan national men’s team. (SUPPLIED)
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Updated 03 July 2025
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Rashid Khan’s star continues to shine

  • The 26-year-old bowler’s meteoric rise to prominence has contributed to outstanding performances by the Afghan national men’s team

Rashid Khan is a cricketing superstar who will play for the Oval Invincibles in The Hundred this summer. Before joining the team, he added brand ambassadorship to his cricketing prowess — on July 3 in Dubai, he was revealed as the face of leading real estate company, MH Developers.

This exemplifies the opportunities for sponsorship and brand endorsement now available to top cricketers and is a far cry from some 70 years ago when the best they could hope for was their signature on the face of a bat.  

Khan’s cricketing rise to prominence has been meteoric and has contributed to outstanding performances by the Afghan national men’s team, which included reaching the 2024 T20 World Cup semi-final.

This is even more remarkable given that the team is effectively in exile. At least it gets to play, unlike the women’s team; most of those players fled the country in fear of their lives and many are now in Australia, desperate to play cricket. They have lobbied the International Cricket Council about their plight, but the ICC, along with much of the international cricketing community, has been tight-lipped about expressing support or making proposals to alleviate the situation.

Their male counterparts have been more fortunate. A contributory factor has been the UAE, with Khan quick to recognize that it “has been like a spiritual home for Afghan cricket for many years, providing a safe haven and platform amid the challenges back home.”

Hence, the collaboration with MH Developers holds tremendous significance for him personally and professionally, having experienced an itinerant lifestyle shuttling between the eastern border of Afghanistan and Pakistan. 

In the early 2000s, Khan’s family, which owned a tire business, left war-torn Afghanistan for Pakistan. Rashid was the sixth of 11 brothers and competed with them in tape-ball cricket — a tennis ball wrapped in electrical tape — which is played on concrete strips in corridors. In order to achieve greater zip off the surface, he developed his characteristic fast-arm action and ability to flip the ball out of his fingers to spin and flight his leg breaks sharply.

This, coupled with his batting abilities, marked him out to experienced observers, including coaches at the Islamia College in Peshawar where he studied computer science until 2013. When the Afghan team toured Pakistan in 2014 he performed outstandingly in Peshawar. It was on Dec. 7, 2016, that he made his debut for Afghanistan against the England Lions in Abu Dhabi, taking 4 for 48 and 8 for 74, along with 25 not out and 52, a rich return for one so young. The path was set.

Currently, Khan captains Afghanistan’s T20 men’s team. He has also captained the Test and One Day International teams. In March 2018, aged 19 years and 165 days, he became the youngest player to captain an international side. Then in September 2019, aged 20 years and 350 days, he became the youngest person to captain a Test match team, leading Afghanistan against Bangladesh. He also played in Afghanistan's first Test match against India in June 2018.

Prior to that, in February 2018, he became the youngest player to top the ICC Player rankings for bowlers in ODIs. He immediately followed that by topping the ICC T20I bowler rankings, where he is currently number nine; he is also number five in the ODI bowler rankings and seventh in the ODI all-rounder rankings, having once been number one.

Along the way, he became the fastest and youngest bowler to take 100 wickets in ODIs, needing only 44 matches; the previous record was 52. In June 2018, he reached 50 wickets in T20Is in two years and 220 days, the fastest bowler to achieve this feat. This was followed in October 2021 when he became the fastest bowler in terms of matches, his 53rd, to claim 100 wickets in T20Is. Currently he has taken 161 T20I wickets, the second highest number, and is likely to regain top place.

It is therefore no surprise he has been in demand around the franchise circuit. His teams have included the Sunrisers Hyderabad and the Gujarat Titans in the Indian Premier League, Adelaide Strikers in Australia’s Big Bash League, MI New York in the USA’s Major League Cricket, Quetta Gladiators and Lahore Qalanders in the Pakistan Super League, the Guyana Amazon Warriors and the Barbados Tridents, for whom he took the first hat-trick in the history of the Caribbean Premier League. Khan did play in the only edition so far of the Afghanistan Premier League, in 2018. This was for Kabul Zwanan, who were beaten by Balkh Legends in the final at Sharjah. Despite this, Rashid Khan was the player of the tournament.

It is easy to forget that Khan is still only 26, having made his full international debut on Oct. 18, 2015, in an ODI match against Zimbabwe in the UAE. His T20I international debut followed a week later. He has crammed a lot of professional cricket into the past 10 years.

Khan, who graciously gave a “big thank you to Trent Rockets for the three seasons I spent at Trent Bridge,” says he is “really excited to be joining Oval Invincibles and calling the Kia Oval my home this August. It’s great to be joining the back-to-back champions; hopefully, I can contribute to more success this season.”

The first match at the Oval will be on Aug. 9 against the Manchester Originals. Khan’s move is also an indication of the reality of global franchises — he has played in New York for the Mumbai Indians, who now own 49 percent of the Invincibles.

Khan’s cricket career has been on a consistently upwards path. His brand ambassadorship coincides with a time when Dubai’s real estate market is witnessing a significant upward trend. First-half 2025 figures show a 15 percent year-on-year increase in average property prices and a 20 percent surge in transaction volumes. MH Developers is looking to engage with a wider audience and strengthen their foothold in this thriving market. The global sporting reputation of Rashid Khan, the focus, commitment and talent identified by his first coaches, will be an integral part of this strategy.

Rashid Khan’s legacy in international cricket is already assured but there should be more chapters for him to write.

After The Hundred, there is the prospect of the six-team Asia Cup. Since the recent hostilities between India and Pakistan, the tournament has been in doubt. There is now renewed optimism for it taking place, though the location is uncertain.

It was originally due to be hosted by India. Under new arrangements, whenever it is India or Pakistan’s turn to host the tournament, a neutral venue will be chosen. Afghanistan is a non-starter, which leaves Bangladesh, Sri Lanka — where the monsoon season is due — and the UAE.

If the latter is chosen, there could be some instant returns on Rashid Khan’s brand ambassadorship.


‘This league is going places’: DP World ILT20 now firmly established on cricket’s franchise landscape

Updated 08 January 2026
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‘This league is going places’: DP World ILT20 now firmly established on cricket’s franchise landscape

  • Season 4, which saw Desert Vipers crowned champions, provided fireworks on and off the pitch

At 6:25 p.m. on Sunday Jan. 4, the Dubai International Stadium was full and expectant, but the start of the DP World ILT 20 final was not to be until 25 minutes later because of a surprise drone show.

This lit up the sky above the stadium with a succession of colorful images. These ranged from welcomes to symbols of the UAE and the tournament, culminating in the trophy itself.

A salvo of fireworks rounded off the spectacular introduction. Such entrees have become de rigueur in cricketing events, but this must be on a par with the best. Without saying it openly, everyone hoped for cricket as spectacular.

The Mumbai Indian Emirates, champions in 2024, won the toss and asked the Desert Vipers to bat, probably in the knowledge that they preferred to chase down a target. This was a repeat of the situation in qualifier one on Dec. 30, when the Vipers scored 233 and won by 45 runs, propelling them straight into the final.

In the final, the MIE did not start well — bowling wides and misfielding. Although both the Vipers’ openers fell, a crucial partnership was built by the Englishmen Sam Curran and Max Holden, both leading the league’s run-scoring charts.

The wily West Indians Kieron Pollard and Romario Shepherd tried to slow the game down but the batters stayed calm to post a total of 182. In reply, the MIE were off to a flying start, scoring 40 for the loss of one wicket after four overs.

In the post-match press conference, I asked the MIE’s coach, Robin Singh, if he felt that his team were ever in control of the match. In reply, he felt that it was at the end of the fourth over when they had a chance of taking control, but then lost two quick and crucial wickets, after which their task became increasingly difficult.

Curran agreed that was a tipping point. Otherwise, he felt his team had been in control, although what might have happened had his partnership with Holden not prospered, no one will ever know.

What we do know is that the Vipers were superior in the field and caught superbly. We also know that their Pakistani contingent contributed magnificently to the Vipers’ success, by 46 runs. Twice losing finalists, in seasons one and three, they were, by common acclaim, deserving winners.

There has been much talk during the tournament about standards and whether they have risen. This is a very subjective issue and depends on what objective criteria are available.

It was instructive to listen to Ian Bishop, former West Indian fast bowler between 1989 and 1998, now a leading commentator, who is of little doubt that standards have risen.

His evidence is based on the heightened performances of UAE players, how these have been achieved by exposure to international players, coaches, training and assessment regimes.

He cites Junaid Siddique, bought at auction for $170,000 by the Sharjah Warriorz; Muhammad Waseem, who “we don’t talk about anymore (as promising) because he is an established player;” and Khuzaima Tanvir, who broke through with the Desert Vipers in season four, claiming 17 wickets, one behind the two leading wicket-takers.

Bishop says that the next developmental stage is for Saudi Arabia and Kuwait players to follow the same pathway. Although only one of the 12 players from these countries made it onto the team sheet — Mohamed Shafeeq for the MIE — others were close.

Jonathan Trott, coach of the Gulf Giants, provided an insight when answering my question about what he had learnt most in his first experience with the ILT20. He responded by saying that it had proved difficult to fit everyone in.

Each playing 11 must have two UAE players and one from an associate member country. This one player must be selected from four and it is probable that the two non-Saudi or Kuwaiti associate players have greater experience of cricket at this level.

Two other experienced commentators, who have been involved since the inception of the ILT20, have reinforced Bishop’s view concerning the strides made by the league.

Wasim Akram, a great of the game for Pakistan between 1992 and 2003, noted the improvement in local talent, especially among the bowlers. He specified Tanvir and Ajay Kumar, who claimed 18 wickets, equal with Afghanistan’s Waqar Salamkheil, the winner of the best bowler award.

Akram also noted the continuing excellence of Muhammad Waseem, who finished narrowly second behind Curran in runs scored. Waseem was fourth in the rating for most-valuable player and first in the UAE player ratings. In Akram’s view, “this league is going places.”

Simon Doull, the former New Zealand bowler turned commentator, echoed the comments of Bishop and Akram, adding a mention for the role of spinners. He said “we once thought that T20 cricket might be the death of spin, but that hasn’t been the case. Every franchise wants a quality wrist spinner.”

This was in response to my question relating to the irony of seeing quality spinners in the ILT20 on a day when Australia and England entered the Sydney Test match without a spinner in their teams — the first time since 1888. Doull also welcomed the league’s expanding regional footprint and the year-on-year improvement in standards.

One vital aspect of standards is, of course, the quality of players and their performances. Several issues are impacting these. One is the competition for the same players with other leagues being played at the same time.

Three franchise tournaments overlapped with the ILT20’s season four. Each has different mandates for the number of overseas players per playing 11 and squad.

In Australia’s Big Bash League, it is three and seven. In the SA20, it is four and seven, whilst in the Bangladesh Premier League, it is four and eight. All three leagues allow franchises to sign replacements to cover player injury and unavailability for other reasons.

Injuries are inevitable. The Desert Vipers, for example, lost their captain, Lockie Ferguson, halfway through the ILT20 schedule. Curran stepped in with great success, whilst the Vipers signed the Pakistan spinner, Usman Tariq, as Ferguson’s replacement.

Tariq made a major contribution to the Vipers’ winning cause. Other players appear to disappear, literally overnight, only to reappear shortly afterwards in the BBL or SA20.

The MIE’s captain, Pollard, was asked at a press conference about the significance of losing both Nicholas Pooran and Rashid Khan to the SA20 around Dec. 20. His reply was very sanguine.

Pooran had been recruited as a wildcard player and Khan had replaced a player injured before the tournament started. Both players are part of the MI franchise stable and it was known that they would join MI Cape Town in the SA20 when it opened.

It seems that these comings and goings are an inherent feature of franchise cricket. Players who are part of serial franchise owners are likely to find themselves shunted between leagues.

This can only be minimized if there is no overlap. It is not confirmed when the fifth edition of the ILT20 will be held — whether it will be between similar dates to season four or revert to January/February.

The BBL’s dates are unlikely to vary greatly, but the SA20 may start in January 2027 because South Africa will have Test matches against England starting on Boxing Day 2026 and New Year 2026-27.

Whatever the case, the well-organized DP World ILT20 has established itself on cricket’s franchise landscape. Now, one is left to ponder what spectacular backdrops may be devised to illuminate the next edition or what changes may be made in its evolution.