|
|   |
South African
|
|   |
South Africa
|
|   |
RSA
|
|   |
Ali Bacher
|
|   |
Cricket_no_picpng
|
|   |
Right-hand bat
|
|   |
Legbreak
|
|   |
12
|
|   |
679
|
|   |
3233
|
|   |
-/6
|
|   |
73
|
|   |
-
|
|   |
-
|
|   |
-
|
|   |
-
|
|   |
-
|
|   |
-
|
|   |
10/-
|
|   |
120
|
|   |
7894
|
|   |
3907
|
|   |
18/45
|
|   |
235
|
|   |
-
|
|   |
2
|
|   |
4350
|
|   |
-
|
|   |
-
|
|   |
1/8
|
|   |
110/1
|
|   |
22 July
|
|   |
1965
|
|   |
5 March
|
|   |
1970
|
(b.
24 May ,
1942 ) is an administrator of the
United Cricket Board Of South Africa . He was born to
Lithuania n-
Jew ish parents who emigrated to
South Africa and got his nickname "Ali" at the age of seven from
Ali Baba . Ali married Shira Teeger, and they have two daughters and one son.
Ali started /
70 against Australia at home in which the South Africans won all the Tests in the four match series.
He studied at the
University Of The Witwatersrand and became a
General Practitioner . In
1981 he had heart bypass surgery.
His greatest legacy is that of a cricket administrator who organised the International rebel tours in the early
1980s while South Africa was isolated from the rest of the cricketing world due to sanctions imposed due to the
Apartheid regime. He was also the chief organiser of the
2003 Cricket World Cup .