Billy Ibadulla

Khalid "Billy" Ibadulla (20 December 1935 – 12 July 2024) was a Pakistani-New Zealander cricketer, cricket coach and umpire who later worked as a cricket commentator for TVNZ. He played in four Test matches for Pakistan between 1964 and 1967.

First-class career
After a few matches in Pakistan, where he made his first-class debut at the age of 16, Ibadulla played most of his cricket as a professional for Warwickshire County Cricket Club in England. He played for the side between 1954 and 1972, mostly as an opening batsman, and made over 400 top-level appearances for the county. He made 1,000 runs in a county championship season six times, with a highest tally of 2,098 runs in 1962. His top score of 171 was made against Oxford University in 1961. He was also a useful and economical medium-pace bowler, with a best analysis of seven for 22 against Derbyshire in 1967.

On a flat Oval pitch in 1960 Ibadulla scored an unbeaten 170 for Warwickshire against Surrey, and put on 377 with Norman Horner for the first wicket on the first day, then the highest unbroken opening partnership in cricket history. He played for Otago from 1964–65 to 1966–67, and moved to New Zealand in 1976, living in Dunedin and working as a cricket coach.

Test career
Although he had not played domestic first-class cricket in Pakistan for more than 10 years, Ibadulla was selected to play in the single Test against the visiting Australians in Karachi in 1964–65. Opening the batting, he batted throughout the first day's play, dismissed on stumps for 166 in five and a half hours. The opening partnership of 249 with Abdul Kadir (95) is the highest in Test cricket for any wicket to involve two Test debutants and set a new record for Pakistan's highest Test match opening wicket partnership.

He declined an invitation to go on the subsequent tour of Australia and New Zealand, as the Pakistan authorities were unable to offer him the professional rates he was accustomed to, and he and coaching. He made 43 and 102 not out and took four wickets for Otago when they played the Pakistanis, and was later called up by Pakistan for the.

He was also called into the Pakistan side for two Tests during the tour to England in 1967 after dismissing the captain, Hanif Mohammad for a duck while playing for Warwickshire against the touring side. He made only 47 runs in four innings and took one wicket in the first two Tests, and was not selected in the Test team again.

Ibadulla holds the record of playing most first-class games (217) before making a Test debut for Pakistan.

Later career
Ibadulla coached some of New Zealand's top cricketers, including Glenn Turner, Ken Rutherford and Chris Cairns. He also taught briefly at St Dunstan's College in London, as a Physical Education teacher in the early 1970s.

He umpired first-class cricket in England in 1982 and 1983.

In the 2004 Queen's Birthday Honours, Ibadulla was appointed a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services to cricket.

Ibadulla was the subject of a long-running error in the Wisden records section. He was out handled the ball at Courtaulds, Coventry in 1963 when playing for Warwickshire against Hampshire and not obstructing the field as reported in the 1964 Wisden's report of the game.

Personal life
Ibadulla, a Christian, met his German-born wife, Gertrud Delfs, in Birmingham and they married there in 1959. They had two daughters and a son, Kassem.

In the 1993 general election, he stood in the Dunedin West for New Zealand First and came fourth out of six candidates. He died on 12 July 2024, at the age of 88.