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This category is for footballers who have appeared for the senior Pakistan national football team (but not players who have only been capped at Under-21 or other junior levels). Players in this category should also be left in category:Pakistani footballers
Pakistan men's youth international footballers (20 P) Pakistani footballers by populated place (15 C) ... This page was last edited on 16 April 2020, at 21:20 (UTC).
The era also saw one of the finest players to ever grace the field in Pakistan football history, such as Abdul Ghafoor, nicknamed the "Pakistani Pelé" and "Black Pearl of Pakistan", [21] Moosa Ghazi, Abid Ghazi, Muhammad Umer Baloch, Turab Ali, Murad Bakhsh, Qadir Bakhsh, Maula Bakhsh, Ayub Dar, Ghulam Rabbani, Mohammad Amin, Ali Nawaz Baloch ...
Pakistan has never qualified for any major tournament outside the South Asian region, although on regional level the team has won the 1952 Asian Quadrangular Football Tournament, and has achieved gold at the South Asian Games in 1989 and 1991. Pakistan had a brief period of emergence in the 1950s and early 1960s, but as the global popularity of ...
This is a list of Pakistan's women's international footballers – association football players who have played for the Pakistan women's national football team in officially recognised international matches. The women's national team is governed by the Pakistan Football Federation. [1] [2]
Raúl is the player with the most appearances, with 741 matches, while more than 100 players have played only one match. In terms of minutes played, Iker Casillas has the most with 64,920 minutes, while the player with the fewest minutes is Pedro Mosquera , who played just one minute.
List of Portsmouth F.C. players at Post War English & Scottish Football League A–Z Player's Transfer Database; Soccerbase stats (use Search for...on left menu and select 'Players' drop down) Joyce, Michael (2004). Football League Players' Records 1888 to 1939. Soccerdata. ISBN 1-899468-67-6
Sir Chaudhry Muhammad Zafarullah Khan (27 December 1947—24 October 1954); Aziz Ahmed (30 March 1977—5 July 1977); Agha Shahi (14 January 1978—9 March 1982); Sahabzada Yaqub Khan (21 March 1982—1 November 1987)