Pakistan's legendary former captain and batsman Hanif Mohammad passes away

Pakistan's legendary former captain and batsman Hanif Mohammad, who held the record for the longest innings in Test cricket, passed away on Thursday after a prolonged battle with lung cancer, says a report in the Firstpost website.

According to the report, a spokesman for the Aga Khan Hospital, where he was being treated, confirmed that Hanif had passed away at the age of 81. "He was in Intensive Care Unit and on a ventilator for respiratory problems and passed away today," he said.

Hanif, had earlier in the day, been declared clinically dead for around six minutes before he was revived back to life.

According to a report in The Indian Express, it was in a disused temple in Karachi that Hanif Mohammad developed his cricket. “The family had moved from Gujarat after partition, and had made the temple hall their new home. The constraint of the real estate has often shaped the style of batsmen in their formative years and Hanif’s case was no different. A small wall separated the garden from the road on the leg side, and if the young Hanif, and his brothers, lifted the ball over the wall, it was deemed out. “We seldom did. That was our secret,” Hanif would recall later. It was the birth of the most successful defensive technique to have emerged from Pakistan that was to leave an indelible impression in cricket grounds from Barbados to Bombay,” says the report.

Hanif was Pakistan’s first cricketing star, and became an adored figure through two stonewalling Test knocks – a 16 hours, 30 minutes knock of 337 against West Indies to save a Test, and a year later, piling up 499 in a domestic game to beat Don Bradman’s then record of 452.