he conquered the trials and everyone was amazed at his bowling,” said Khan. “But... I couldn’t keep paying him. Luckily Ali got a job in the Karachi Electric team and from there he never looked back.”
Ali said: “My late father was against my playing cricket but his opinion changed once I made my mark and started earning from it.”
Ali was later picked for the Pakistan Under-19 team which won the Junior World Cup in Sri Lanka in 2006.
It was his banana-swing bowling which turned the tables on arch-rivals India in the final at the Premadasa stadium in Colombo.
Defending a paltry target 109, Ali made the ball turn corners as he finished with figures 5-35, shooting India out for 71.
His victims included Rohit Sharma, Cheteshwar Pujara and Ravindar Jadeja — all of whom have made their mark for India in international cricket.
Two years later Ali made an inauspicious international senior debut, in a Twenty20 match against Zimbabwe in Canada. Figures of 0-19 in two overs meant he was instantly discarded from the team which had Abdul Razzaq as its main all-rounder.
Cast into the wilderness for the next five years, he made it his goal to lift his family from poverty and build them a modest house.
He set about playing in England’s Lancashire league and all but gave up on his international goals. But finally, his hard work paid off.
“I worked on my bowling, on my batting and, above all, my fielding and that brought me back in the Pakistan team in 2013,” he said.
Ali and Bilawal Bhatti, another promising all-rounder, made their one-day debuts memorable by helping Pakistan record a history-making series win in South Africa in November 2013.
But it was the recent tour of Sri Lanka that established Ali’s place in the Pakistan team after years of inconsistency saw his bowling average balloon to 58.
“It would not be wrong to say that Ali has finally come of age on this Sri Lanka tour,” said coach Waqar Younis. “His fielding is extraordinary and he has improved as batsman as well as bowler. If he keeps working hard he will be our main all-rounder.” For his part, Ali hopes that he can continue to knock the socks off every opponent.