sport.wikisort.org - AthleteMansoor Ahmed Batt (7 January 1968 – 12 May 2018) is a hockey player.[1][2][3]
Pakistani field hockey player
Mansoor Ahmed
 |
|
Nationality | Pakistani |
---|
Born | (1968-01-07)7 January 1968 Karachi |
---|
Died | 12 May 2018(2018-05-12) (aged 50) Karachi |
---|
|
Sport | field hockey |
---|
|
Career
Ahmed played as a goalkeeper and Captain for the Pakistan national hockey team from 1986 to 2000. He played 338 International matches and participated in three Olympic Games. He became the recipient of a bronze medal in 1992 Olympic Games. Ahmed played three consecutive World Cups and won 1994 World Cup Hockey Championship (World Cup). Also won silver medal in 1990 world Cup Hockey Championship. He played 10 Champions Trophy games and won gold medal in 1994. He played three Asian Games and won a gold medal in 1990 at Beijing, China. In his career, he earned 12 gold, 12 silver and 8 bronze medals in international hockey tournaments.[2][1][3]
He was declared All Asian Stars Hockey Team member in 1996 and also declared World Eleven Hockey team member in 1994. Ahmed was declared four times as the best goalkeeper of the tournament in his lifetime career. He was also the flag carrier of the Pakistani contingent in the 1996 Atlanta Olympics in Atlanta, US.[2]
In his outstanding performance in the field of hockey Government of Pakistan awarded him the President Award in 1988. He was also awarded the Pride of Performance award by the President of Pakistan in 1994.[4][3]
Ahmed was also involved in hockey as a coach. He was the National hockey coach of Pakistan junior hockey team in 2000 and was appointed as specialist goalkeeper coach of Bangladesh national hockey team in 2014. He also was appointed director of Pakistan Hockey Federation's hockey academies in 2010. Besides a player, Ahmed was a social activist and worked as an ambassador with different organizations like "Right to Play" and "Athlete Ambassador". He was also appointed as an ambassador for 'No Smoking Campaign' by the Government of Pakistan. He had the honour to be announced as speaker for FIFA World Cup 2022, Qatar. He was also invited as a guest for Special Olympics, Los Angeles, US in 2015.[citation needed]
Illness and death
On 22 April 2018, Ahmed revealed that he needed a heart transplant and was seeking a medical visa from the Government of India.[1] He was under treatment at the National Institute of Cardiovascular Diseases in Karachi.[2]
Mansoor Ahmed died on 12 May 2018, in Karachi, Pakistan.[5][4] In the last three years of his life, he had been suffering from a heart ailment.[2] A few weeks before his death, Ahmed had complications originating from a pacemaker and stents implanted in his heart.[1] On 13 May 2018, he was laid to rest in Karachi.[3]
See also
- Pakistan Hockey Federation
References
External links
Pride of Performance for Sports |
---|
1950s | |
---|
1960s |
- Syed Abdus Samad (1960)
- Major Abdul Hamid (1960)
- Roshan Khan (1960)
- Brojen Das (1960)
- Khawaja Iftikhar Ahmed (1960)
- The Great Gama (1960)
- Captain Raja Javed Akhtar Khan (1961)
- Azam Khan (1961)
- Bholu Pahalwan (1962)
- Naseer Bunda(1962)
- Hafiz Rashid (1962)
- Saeed Ahmed (1962)
- Brigadier M.A. Baig (1962)
- Abbas Mirza (1963)
- Manzoor Hussain Aatif (1963)
- Mushtaq Muhammad (1963)
- Dafadar Mubarak Shah (1963)
- Khundker Nasim Ahmed (1964)
- Jamadar Ghulam Raziq (1964)
- Subedar Muhammad Nawaz (1966)
- Imtiaz Ahmad (1966)
- Shahab Ali (1966)
- Aslam Pahalwan (1967)
- Asif Iqbal (1968)
- Muhammad Bashir (1968)
- Khalid Mahmood Hussain (1968)
- Tariq Aziz (1968)
- Muhammad Asad Malik (1969)
- Flight Sergeant Moideen Kutty (1969)
- Mohammad Akhtar (1969)
|
---|
1970s | |
---|
1980s | |
---|
1990s |
- Honorary Lieutenant Mohammad Younis (1990)
- Arif Khan (1990)
- Nazo Anwar Miandad (1990)
- Mohammad Shehnaz Sheikh (1990)
- Wasim Akram (1992)
- Shahbaz Ahmed (1992)
- Ghulam Abbas (1992)
- Taimur Hasan (1992)
- Shahid Ali Khan (1992)
- Qazi Muhibur Rehman (1993)
- Rajab Shah (1993)
- Mohammad Yousuf (1994)
- Mohibullah Khan Junior (1994)
- Khwaja Mohammad Junaid (1994)
- Abdul Rashid (1994)
- Muhammad Saeed Khan (1994)
- Mansoor Ahmed (1994)
- Ahmed Alam (1994)
- Tahir Zaman (1994)
- Muhammad Shahbaz (1994)
- Muhammad Shafqat (1994)
- Irfan Mehmood (1994)
- Naveed Alam (1994)
- Asif Bajwa (1994)
- Muhammad Danish Kaleem (1994)
- Muhammad Usman (1994)
- Kamran Ashraf (1994)
- Rahim Khan (1994)
- Rana Mujahid Ali (1994)
- Waseem Feroze (1994)
- Aliya Rasheed (1995)
- Fareed Sehrai (1995)
- Waqar Younis (1995)
- Ali Nawaz Baloch (1995)
- Mohammad Sarwar (1995)
- Asghar Ali Changezi (1996)
- Sardar Azmarai Javaid Hissam el-Effendi (1996)* Ghulam Noorani Khan (1996)
- Munawwar uz Zaman (1997)
|
---|
2000s |
- Saeed Anwar (2000)
- Haider Ali (2003)
- Rozi Ali (2003)
- Mohammad Irfan Islam (2003)
- Grand Master Muhammad Ashraf Tai (2004)
- Zakir Hussain Syed (2004)
- Mehrullah Lassi (2004)
- Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi (2005)
- Nida Waseem (2008)
- Zubair Ahmed Hundal (2008)
- Shahid Rehman (2008)
- Umer Khan Achakzai (2009)
|
---|
2010s | |
---|
Pakistan squad – 1992 Summer Olympics – Bronze medal |
---|
| |
На других языках
- [en] Mansoor Ahmed
[fr] Mansoor Ahmed
Mansoor Ahmed, né le 7 janvier 1968 à Rawalpindi (Pendjab, Pakistan) et mort le 12 mai 2018[1] à Karachi[2], est un joueur pakistanais de hockey sur gazon.
[ru] Ахмед, Мансур
Мансур Ахмед (араб. منظور احمد; 7 января 1968, Равалпинди, Пакистан — 12 мая 2018) — пакистанский хоккеист на траве, выступавший на позиции вратаря. Бронзовый призёр летних Олимпийских игр 1992.
Текст в блоке "Читать" взят с сайта "Википедия" и доступен по лицензии Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike; в отдельных случаях могут действовать дополнительные условия.
Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.
2019-2025
WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии