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| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| Current Form | Outstanding — 97 (82 balls) vs South Africa, 1 March 2026 at Kingsmead; consistent performer in 2025–2026 cycle |
| Role | Right-handed opening/top-order batter; right-arm medium-pace bowler (useful domestic all-rounder) |
| Key Achievement | 97 off 82 balls vs South Africa in 3rd ODI (March 2026) — highest international score; Player of the Match |
| Status | Active international; PCB Challengers domestic player; part of Pakistan Women’s ICC Women’s Championship 2026–28 squad |
Sadaf Shamas is Pakistan’s most exciting top-order batter to emerge in the post-2022 era of women’s cricket. Born on 30 December 1998 in Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan, Sadaf Shamas made her ODI debut on 4 November 2022 against Ireland at Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore — and within just over three years has developed into one of Pakistan Women’s most relied-upon run-scorers in the 50-over format. Her defining moment arrived on 1 March 2026 at Hollywoodbets Kingsmead in Durban, where she produced an extraordinary 97 off 82 balls against South Africa — her international career-high — earning the Player of the Match award and driving Pakistan to a commanding 119-run victory. Sadaf Shamas is not merely a promising talent anymore; she is becoming the face of Pakistan Women’s batting ambition.
| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Sadaf Shamas |
| Date of Birth | 30 December 1998 |
| Age (2026) | 27 years |
| Birthplace | Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan |
| Nationality | Pakistani |
| Religion | Islam |
| Role | Top-order batter / right-arm medium-pace bowler |
| Batting Style | Right-handed |
| Bowling Style | Right-arm medium |
| Jersey Number | 18 |
| ODI Debut | 4 November 2022 vs Ireland, Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore |
| T20I Debut | 24 January 2023 vs Australia, North Sydney Oval, Sydney |
| Teams | Pakistan Women, Challengers Women, Stars Women, Blasters Women, Strikers Women, Dynamites Women, Lahore Women, HEC Women, Multan Women, Pakistan A Women |
| @sadafshamas18 | |
| Net Worth (2026) | [MISSING DATA — not publicly disclosed] |



Sadaf Shamas was born and raised in Lahore, Pakistan’s cultural capital and a city with one of the country’s deepest cricket traditions. She began playing cricket at a young age and developed her craft through Lahore’s domestic cricket system, eventually representing Lahore Women at the regional level.
Sadaf progressed through Pakistan’s club and regional cricket pathway, representing the Higher Education Commission (HEC) Women’s team — a programme that has traditionally served as a key developmental pipeline for Pakistani women’s cricketers. Her consistent performances at the domestic level, including List-A outings for HEC and later Multan Women, drew attention from the national selectors.

In May 2022, Sadaf Shamas was first named in a senior Pakistan Women squad — for the ODI series against Sri Lanka — making her one of the first beneficiaries of the PCB’s expanded scouting net following the introduction of the Women’s National T20 Tournament and the Women’s One Day Cup. Her personal background, including details about her parents and family, is not publicly documented. No verified information about a husband or marital status is available as of 2026, and Sadaf has not publicly commented on her personal life.
Sadaf Shamas made her Women’s ODI debut on 4 November 2022 against Ireland at Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore — the same iconic venue where Pakistan’s men’s team has played so many landmark internationals. She appeared as a top-order batter and showed early signs of technical solidity against an Ireland attack that had troubled Pakistan’s middle order.
Her ODI career developed steadily through 2023 and 2024. By the time the 2025 ICC Women’s Cricket World Cup in Sri Lanka arrived, Sadaf was firmly established as a key batting option. At the World Cup, representing Pakistan in Group Stage fixtures played at venues including R. Premadasa Stadium in Colombo, she was part of an innings that saw Pakistan defeat Bangladesh in their opening fixture. She returned competitive scores throughout the tournament, reinforcing her reputation as a composed, technically sound batter in pressure situations.
The Pakistan Women’s tour of South Africa (February–March 2026) was where Sadaf Shamas announced herself to the world. In a three-match ICC Women’s Championship ODI series at venues across South Africa — including SuperSport Park (Centurion) and Hollywoodbets Kingsmead (Durban) — she delivered two major innings:
Sadaf Shamas made her WT20I debut on 24 January 2023 against Australia at North Sydney Oval in Sydney — one of cricket’s most storied venues. She was added to Pakistan’s squad for the 2023 ICC Women’s T20 World Cup in South Africa as a replacement for the injured Diana Baig, making a World Cup appearance within just weeks of her T20I debut. She was also named in the 2024 ICC Women’s T20 World Cup squad, with Pakistan’s last T20I listed in October 2024 (vs New Zealand).
Her T20I numbers remain modest — 48 runs in 10 matches with a highest score of 35 — but her T20I career is still young and her recent ODI form suggests her longer format game is where she is most dangerous.
Sadaf Shamas’s domestic form through the National Women’s T20 Tournament 2025 (May, National Bank Stadium, Karachi) was arguably her most complete set of performances in any competition. Playing for PCB Challengers Women, she demonstrated her value as a genuine all-rounder:
In the 2025 National Women’s T20 Tournament, Sadaf Shamas was arguably Challengers’ most impactful all-round player, contributing decisive performances with both bat and ball to see them through to the Qualifier round.
Sadaf Shamas is a right-handed top-order batter who operates as an opener or first-drop in ODI cricket. Her value to Pakistan’s batting structure goes beyond statistics — she provides the rare combination of aggressive early intent with the technical resilience to build a long innings.
Batting Technique: Sadaf plays with a notably upright stance and drives cleanly through the covers and extra-cover region. Her 97 against South Africa at Kingsmead featured a ruthless exploitation of any width offered — she struck 16 boundaries, overwhelmingly through the off-side arc, suggesting a dominant cover-drive and cut shot. The fact that she reached 50 off just 40 balls while the team was under early pressure (opener Gull Feroza departed for 13) shows exceptional composure and proactive intent.
Strength vs Pace: Sadaf’s dismissal pattern in ODIs (bowled twice, caught off medium-pace bowlers primarily) suggests she is technically more settled against spin bowling. She has been dismissed by right-arm medium-pacers most often in international cricket, indicating that quality away-movement from right-arm seamers remains her primary technical challenge.
All-round Value: Sadaf’s 5/17 in the 2025 National T20 is not a statistical anomaly — it reflects a genuine medium-pace ability that Pakistan selectors have noted as an additional option. She is not yet used as a bowling option at international level in a sustained way, but this remains an untapped asset.
Match Temperament: The South Africa 2026 series confirmed Sadaf’s mental strength under scoreboard pressure. In the 2nd ODI, she walked in with Pakistan’s top three gone early and proceeded to build partnerships; in the 3rd ODI, she played one of the most fluent innings by a Pakistan batter in years on South African soil. The ability to convert starts into 60s and 90s — though she fell three short of a maiden century — signals a batter with strong innings architecture.
One Unique Insight — The 97 Dismissal Pattern: Sadaf was caught and bowled by Sune Luus for 97, a dismissal that came in a mistimed drive. This is worth noting as she has shown vulnerability to bowlers who invite the lofted off-drive. In a World Cup or high-stakes final, opposition analysts will likely set traps with this knowledge.



| Stat | Figure |
|---|---|
| Matches | 15+ |
| Innings | 14 |
| Not Outs | 1 |
| Runs | 262+ (pre-South Africa 2026) |
| Additional runs (SA 2026 series) | 61 + 97 = 158 runs |
| Estimated Total ODI Runs | ~420+ |
| Highest Score | 97 (vs South Africa, 1 March 2026) |
| Average | 30.50 (per CREX, post SA series 2026) |
| Strike Rate | 66.2 (ODI) / 95.31 (recent series) |
| Centuries | 0 |
| Half-Centuries | 2 (inc. 72 and 61+) |
| Fours | 17+ |
| Sixes | 1 |
Note: Full cumulative stats post-SA 2026 tour not yet consolidated on major databases. CREX shows 30.50 average from 2 innings in PAKW vs SAW 2026 series.
| Stat | Figure |
|---|---|
| Matches | 10 |
| Innings | 8 |
| Runs | 48 |
| Highest Score | 35 |
| Average | 6.00 |
| Strike Rate | 84.2 |
| Centuries | 0 |
| Half-Centuries | 0 |
| Stat | Figure |
|---|---|
| Key Batting | 53 (Match 19 vs Strikers), 29 (Match 11 vs Strikers) |
| Key Bowling | 5/17 (Match 13 vs Stars), 3/31 (Match 11 vs Strikers) |
| Awards | Multiple Player of the Match |
| Team | PCB Challengers Women |
Source: PCB, GeoSuper, ESPN Cricinfo, CREX (as of March 2026)
Sadaf Shamas played for PCB Challengers Women at the National Bank Stadium, Karachi, delivering the most complete all-round domestic tournament of her career. She scored a half-century (53) in the final round-robin game, took 5/17 in the best bowling spell of the tournament, and won multiple Player of the Match awards. Challengers reached the Qualifier stage with Sadaf as a key driver.
Sadaf Shamas was part of Pakistan’s squad for the 2025 Women’s World Cup, with games played in Sri Lanka (neutral venue). Pakistan won their opener against Bangladesh. Specific match-by-match scores for Sadaf at this tournament are [MISSING DATA — detailed scorecard data not consolidated at time of writing], but her selection over more experienced names confirmed her rising status in the pecking order.
This was Sadaf Shamas’s career-defining series. She was the standout Pakistan batter across three ODIs at SuperSport Park (Centurion) and Kingsmead (Durban):
Despite Pakistan losing the series 2-1, Sadaf’s performances were the undisputed highlight of the tour and immediately elevated her profile in world women’s cricket.
Two of Pakistan Women’s most prominent batting names represent different stages of the team’s evolution.
| Parameter | Sadaf Shamas | Muneeba Ali |
|---|---|---|
| Date of Birth | 30 December 1998 | 8 August 1997 |
| Age (2026) | 27 | 28 |
| Role | Top-order batter | WK-Batter (Opener) |
| Batting Style | Right-handed | Left-handed |
| ODI Debut | November 2022 | March 2018 |
| ODI Highest Score | 97 (March 2026) | 107 (2022 vs Ireland) |
| T20I Highest Score | 35 | 102 (2023 T20 WC) |
| World Cup Centuries | None yet | 1 (T20 WC 2023) |
| Domestic All-round Value | High (5/17, 3/31 in 2025) | Moderate (keeper focus) |
| International Experience | 3+ years | 9+ years |
| Career Stage | Rising peak | Established veteran |
Tactical Analysis: Sadaf Shamas and Muneeba Ali serve different and complementary roles in Pakistan’s ODI structure. Muneeba’s left-handedness at the top creates natural match-up disruption for bowlers who angle into her body. Sadaf’s right-handed power game through the covers generates boundary options from the same end. When they co-exist in the same line-up, they offer Pakistan contrasting styles in the first 10 overs — a combination that is difficult for any bowling attack to plan against.
Where Muneeba’s edge lies is in World Cup experience, T20I impact (her 102 is irreplaceable), and the dual keeping role. Where Sadaf’s edge lies is in recent form, ODI current average, and an uncapped bowling dimension that adds strategic depth Muneeba cannot provide.
Sadaf Shamas’s net worth as of 2026 is not publicly disclosed. Her income derives from her PCB central or domestic contract, international match fees, and domestic tournament participation across the Women’s National T20 and Women’s One Day Cup. Her Instagram handle @sadafshamas18 has a growing follower base, though exact numbers fluctuate and have not been cited by major sources. With a defining performance in the South Africa series (March 2026) and growing visibility in ICC Women’s Championship matches, her brand value is on an upward trajectory. Potential commercial partnerships in Pakistan’s growing women’s cricket economy remain an opportunity as PCB increases its marketing around the women’s game.
Sadaf Shamas is famous in 2026 primarily because of one innings: 97 off 82 balls against South Africa at Kingsmead, Durban, on 1 March 2026. That knock — which saw her bat throughout the powerplay under early pressure, build a 130-run partnership with Sidra Amin, reach her fifty off 40 balls, and guide Pakistan to a dominant 306/8 — instantly placed her name alongside Pakistan Women’s greatest batting performances. Her five-wicket haul in the National Women’s T20 Tournament 2025 added a layer of domestic recognition that reinforced her credentials as one of the most complete cricketers in Pakistan’s women’s game.
Sadaf Shamas represents a shift in Pakistan Women’s cricket — the arrival of a post-2022 generation of players who were identified through a restructured domestic system and fast-tracked into international cricket with specific technical profiles. She is part of what analysts have called Pakistan’s “new batting spine” — alongside Ayesha Zafar and Natalia Pervaiz — that the PCB is building for the 2026 ICC Women’s T20 World Cup in England.
Her impact on the domestic game in 2025 — winning multiple Player of the Match awards for Challengers — demonstrates that the talent pipeline is producing match-winners for the national side, not merely role-players. The 2026 Women’s T20 World Cup, with Pakistan and India confirmed for a showdown at Edgbaston, will be Sadaf’s biggest stage yet.
Q: Who is Sadaf Shamas?
Sadaf Shamas is a Pakistani women’s cricketer born on 30 December 1998 in Lahore, Punjab. She plays as a right-handed top-order batter and right-arm medium-pacer for Pakistan Women, and represents PCB Challengers Women in domestic cricket.
Q: What is Sadaf Shamas’s age?
Sadaf Shamas was born on 30 December 1998 and is 27 years old as of 2026.
Q: What is Sadaf Shamas’s highest score?
Sadaf Shamas’s highest international score is 97 off 82 balls against South Africa Women in the 3rd ODI at Hollywoodbets Kingsmead, Durban, on 1 March 2026. She hit 16 fours and one six and was named Player of the Match.
Q: What are Sadaf Shamas’s career stats?
In ODIs: approximately 420+ runs (as of March 2026), with an average of around 30.50 and a highest score of 97. In T20Is: 48 runs in 10 matches with a highest score of 35.
Q: Who is Sadaf Shamas’s husband?
Sadaf Shamas has not publicly confirmed any marriage as of 2026. No verified information about her husband is available from PCB, ICC, or her social media accounts.
Q: Is Sadaf Shamas married?
There is no publicly confirmed information about Sadaf Shamas being married as of 2026.
Q: What is Sadaf Shamas’s role in the Pakistan team?
Sadaf Shamas bats at the top of the order — as opener or No. 3 — in ODI cricket. She also bowls right-arm medium pace, making her a useful domestic all-rounder for PCB Challengers Women, although her bowling is not regularly deployed at international level.
Q: What did Sadaf Shamas do in the National Women’s T20 Tournament?
She took 5/17 for Challengers vs Stars (May 2025), the tournament’s most dominant bowling spell, and scored a half-century to guide Challengers to the Qualifier.
Sadaf Shamas is Pakistan Women’s cricket’s brightest batting story of 2026. In under four years of international cricket — beginning with a debut at Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore — she has already appeared at two ICC T20 World Cups, one ODI World Cup, the Asian Games, and delivered the individual ODI innings of Pakistan’s 2026 tour of South Africa. Her 97 at Kingsmead, combined with a 5-wicket haul in domestic cricket just months earlier, paints a picture of a player who is close to total dominance in the women’s game. If she converts that first 97 into a century in 2026 — and she is certain to get the chance — it will be one of the defining moments of Pakistan Women’s batting history. For CrickPod readers, Sadaf Shamas is the player to watch over the coming two years as Pakistan Women build toward the 2026 ICC Women’s T20 World Cup in England.