Abdul Qadir was also a famous leg break bowler in this format.
Paula Abdul | Kareem Abdul-Jabbar | Maumoon Abdul Gayoom | Sultan Abdul Aziz Shah Airport | Abdul Hamid II | Tunku Abdul Rahman | A. P. J. Abdul Kalam | Abdul Rasul Sayyaf | Abdul Qadeer Khan | Shah Abdul Latif Bhittai | Muhammad Abdul Qadeer Siddiqi Qadri | Abd al-Qadir al-Jaza'iri | Sahibzada Abdul Qayyum | Head over Heels (Paula Abdul album) | Abdul Rashid Dostum | Abdul-Qadir Gilani | Abdul Hadi Awang | Shah Abdul Aziz | Abdul Taib Mahmud | Abdul Rahman Al Ghafiqi | Abdul Hadi Abdul Hamid | Slamet Abdul Sjukur | Mustafa Abdul Jalil | Muhammad Abdul Bari | Mohammad Abdul Ghafoor Hazarvi | Khan Abdul Wali Khan | Abdul-Wahab Abu Al-Hail | Abdul Sattar Edhi | Abdul Malik Pahlawan | Abdul Majeed Abdul Bari |
It includes a conversation with Intikhab Alam, the former Pakistani cricket captain, and interviews with Danish Kaneria, the Pakistani leg spinner, Sabih Azhar, Shoaib Akhtar’s first coach, Aaqib Javed, the former Pakistani fast bowler, Andy Atkinson, the English pitch consultant who had been hired by the Pakistan Cricket Board, Abdul Qadir, the former Pakistani leg spinner, and Sourav Ganguly, the Indian captain on the tour.
Modelled after parent western militant leftist/urban guerrilla organizations, the LARF was made of left-wing Christian activists who had previously fought with the PLO, led by the Maronite Georges Ibrahim Abdallah (noms de guerre “Salih al-Masri”, “Abdul-Qadir Sa’adi”), a former school teacher; after being arrested by the French authorities in 1984, he was replaced by a collective leadership trio formed by his younger brothers’ Robert, Maurice, and Emile.