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| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| Current Form | Active at international level; featured in 2025 ICC Women’s World Cup in Sri Lanka |
| Role | Left-handed opening batter & primary wicket-keeper for Pakistan Women |
| Key Achievement | First-ever Pakistani woman to score a T20I century (102 vs Ireland, Feb 2023) |
| Status | Central contract holder (Category B, PCB); first-choice opener and keeper |
Muneeba Ali Siddiqui is Pakistan’s premier women’s wicket-keeper batter and a name that carries genuine historical weight in world cricket. Born on 8 August 1997 in Karachi, Pakistan, Muneeba Ali became the first-ever Pakistani woman — and only the sixth batter in cricket history — to score a century at the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup, when she smashed 102 off 68 balls against Ireland in February 2023 at Cape Town, South Africa. That milestone alone makes her one of the most significant names in Pakistan women’s cricket, but Muneeba’s story spans over a decade of domestic grind, international setbacks, and hard-earned consistency that makes her far more than a single viral innings.
| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Muneeba Ali Siddiqui (منیبہ علی صدیقی) |
| Date of Birth | 8 August 1997 |
| Age (2026) | 28 years |
| Birthplace | Karachi, Pakistan |
| Nationality | Pakistani |
| Religion | Islam |
| Zodiac Sign | Leo |
| Height | 5’4″ (163 cm) |
| Role | Wicket-keeper batter |
| Batting Style | Left-handed |
| Jersey Number | #17 |
| T20I Debut | 16 March 2016 vs West Indies at Chennai |
| ODI Debut | 20 March 2018 vs Sri Lanka at Dambulla |
| Teams | Pakistan Women, Karachi, PCB Strikers, Balochistan, State Bank of Pakistan, Zarai Taraqiati Bank Limited |
| @muneeba_siddiqui | |
| Net Worth (2026) | [MISSING DATA — not publicly disclosed] |



Muneeba Ali was born and raised in Karachi, Pakistan’s financial capital and a city with a rich cricket culture. She grew up playing multiple sports but developed a singular passion for cricket while playing in the streets of Karachi — a classic origin story that resonates deeply with the sport’s grassroots tradition in Pakistan.
Muneeba made her first-class debut for Balochistan at just 15 years old, an early indicator of her talent and ambition. Her List-A debut came in 2014 when she represented Omar Associates in the Mohtarma Fatima Jinnah Women’s Cricket Championship. These formative years in domestic cricket — representing Balochistan, Karachi, the State Bank of Pakistan, and Zarai Taraqiati Bank Limited — gave her the technical foundation and match temperament that would eventually define her international career.
In 2016, Muneeba received her first PCB central contract, placed in the ‘D’ category, signalling that the national selectors had identified her as a prospect worth nurturing. Her parents’ support was instrumental in her cricketing journey, though specific details about their names and professions are not publicly documented.

Muneeba Ali’s personal life remains largely private. As of 2026, she has not publicly confirmed any marriage, and no verified information about a husband is available. Multiple searches indicate she has not publicly discussed a spouse or marital status.
Muneeba Ali’s T20I career began at the 2016 ICC Women’s World Twenty20 in India, where she made her debut against West Indies in Chennai on 16 March 2016 at the age of 18. However, it was not until 2021 that she truly solidified her place as a first-choice opener in the T20 format.
The watershed moment arrived on 15 February 2023 at Newlands, Cape Town. Facing Ireland in Pakistan’s second match of the 2023 ICC Women’s T20 World Cup, Muneeba Ali walked out to open and produced an innings for the ages — 102 runs off 68 balls, making her the first-ever Pakistani cricketer (male or female) to score a century at a T20 World Cup, and only the sixth batter globally to achieve a century at the Women’s T20 World Cup. The knock included aggressive stroke play across all formats of her game and instantly elevated her to icon status within Pakistan cricket.
She was selected for the 2018 ICC Women’s World T20 in the West Indies, the 2020 ICC Women’s T20 World Cup in Australia, the 2024 ICC Women’s T20 World Cup, and served as a key figure in each squad. In the 2024 edition, she made her captaincy debut, further underlining her growing leadership profile within the side.



Muneeba Ali’s ODI debut came on 20 March 2018 against Sri Lanka at Dambulla. Her early ODI years were inconsistent, but in 2022 she produced her maiden ODI century — 107 runs against Ireland — in a match at which she and Sidra Amin built a colossal 221-run partnership, propelling Pakistan to their then-highest ODI score of 335 runs. It remains the highest individual score of her ODI career.
She was named in Pakistan’s squad for the 2022 Women’s Cricket World Cup in New Zealand and the 2022 Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, England. She was also part of the squad at the 2025 ICC Women’s World Cup in Sri Lanka (played in September–October 2025), where Pakistan’s games were hosted at neutral venues per an ICC-PCB-BCCI agreement.
Muneeba Ali is a left-handed top-order batter who opens the innings in both ODI and T20I cricket. Her value to Pakistan extends well beyond the bat — she is also the team’s primary wicket-keeper, making her a dual-threat player whose presence consolidates two key roles.
Batting Technique: Muneeba’s left-handedness creates natural match-up challenges for bowlers, particularly right-arm seam bowlers who must adjust their lines. She has a compact, upright stance and drives well through the covers and on the off-side. Her T20I century against Ireland featured controlled aggression — she did not slog indiscriminately but instead placed the ball with precision, alternating between boundary-hitting and rotation of strike.
Shot Selection: Muneeba is especially effective in the cover-drive region; ICC highlight reels from the 2025 Women’s World Cup specifically showcase her “cracking cover drive” as a defining technical attribute. She has the ability to play the pull shot against short-pitched bowling but has been caught out of her ground in high-pressure moments, as the 2025 World Cup incident demonstrated.
Match Temperament & Pressure Handling: Muneeba has shown the capacity to deliver in knockout and high-pressure tournaments. Her T20 World Cup century was scored in a group-stage fixture with World Cup qualification implications — not a dead rubber. However, her ODI average of ~24 suggests she still converts starts to fifties and hundreds less consistently than elite openers at the global level.
Wicket-keeping: Muneeba serves as Pakistan’s primary glove-woman in white-ball cricket. Her fitness — she is known to maintain rigorous gym routines — has helped her sustain the demanding dual role of opener and keeper over an extended international career.
Weakness vs Short-pitched Bowling: The 2025 World Cup match against New Zealand showed Muneeba (22 runs) being dismissed pulling off Suzie Bates’ short-pitched delivery, a pattern worth noting for opposition analysts.
| Stat | Figure |
|---|---|
| Matches | 32 |
| Innings | 32 |
| Not Outs | 1 |
| Runs | 754 |
| Highest Score | 107 |
| Average | 24.32 |
| Strike Rate | 61.5 |
| Centuries | 1 |
| Half-Centuries | 2 |
| Fours | 91 |
| Sixes | 3 |
| Stat | Figure |
|---|---|
| Matches | 50 |
| Innings | 48 |
| Not Outs | 4 |
| Runs | 716 |
| Highest Score | 102 |
| Average | 16.27 |
| Strike Rate | 85.33 |
| Centuries | 1 |
| Half-Centuries | 2 |
| Fours | 79 |
| Sixes | 4 |



Muneeba Ali has not featured in Women’s Test cricket as of 2026. [MISSING DATA — no Test caps recorded]
Source: CricketTimes, ESPN Cricinfo (career data as of late 2025)
Muneeba Ali was a key figure in Pakistan’s squad at the 2025 ICC Women’s World Cup, with Pakistan’s matches based in Sri Lanka at the R. Premadasa Stadium in Colombo under the ICC neutral venue arrangement.
vs India (5 October 2025, Colombo): Muneeba’s tournament was marked by a deeply controversial dismissal in Pakistan’s high-profile clash with India. During the fourth over of Pakistan’s chase of 248 runs, she survived an LBW appeal off Kranti Goud, but as Deepti Sharma’s direct throw struck the stumps, Muneeba had briefly grounded and then lifted her bat while stationary outside the crease. The third umpire reversed the initial not-out call, giving her out for just 2 runs. The MCC subsequently backed the decision as “entirely correct” under Law 30.1.2, clarifying that the protective provision for batters losing contact while running or diving did not apply as Muneeba was stationary. Pakistan were bowled out for 159, losing by 88 runs.
vs New Zealand (18 October 2025, Colombo): Muneeba produced a more positive display, scoring 22 runs with four boundaries and looking in “fine form” before being dismissed pulling off a Suzie Bates short-pitched delivery. Pakistan reached 95/2 before rain abandoned the match.
vs Bangladesh (2 October 2025): Muneeba contributed to Pakistan’s batting effort in their opening World Cup game.
vs Australia (8 October 2025): Featured in Pakistan’s line-up against the defending champions.
Pakistan Women toured South Africa in early 2026. Muneeba Ali remained part of the touring squad, though the standout batting performance in the series came from Sadaf Shamas (97 runs in the third ODI) as Pakistan won the final match by 119 runs.
Two of Pakistan Women’s most prominent batting names represent different stages of the team’s evolution. Here is how they compare:
| Parameter | Muneeba Ali | Sadaf Shamas |
|---|---|---|
| Date of Birth | 8 August 1997 | 30 December 1998 |
| Role | WK-Batter (Opener) | Top-order batter |
| Batting Style | Left-handed | Right-handed |
| ODI Debut | March 2018 | November 2022 |
| ODI Runs | 754 (32 matches) | 262+ (14+ innings) |
| ODI Highest Score | 107 | 72 (pre-2026), 97 (March 2026) |
| T20I Debut | March 2016 | January 2023 |
| T20I Runs | 716 (50 matches) | [MISSING DATA] |
| T20I Highest Score | 102* | [MISSING DATA] |
| World Cup Centuries | 1 (T20 WC 2023) | None yet |
| PCB Contract | Category B | [MISSING DATA] |
| Experience | 9+ years international | 3+ years international |
Tactical Comparison: Muneeba Ali is the more experienced player with a proven track record at major ICC tournaments, including the T20 World Cup, ODI World Cup, and Commonwealth Games. She provides the dual value of opening the batting and keeping wickets. Sadaf Shamas, by contrast, is a newer entrant who bats in the top order but does not keep wickets — her emergence as a consistent performer in 2025–2026, with a 97 in South Africa (March 2026) and growing ODI presence, signals she is Pakistan’s next top-order star.
The two are complementary rather than competitive — Muneeba sets the platform from the top with her experience and technical solidity, while Sadaf can attack in the No. 3 or No. 4 position with a higher strike rate.
Muneeba Ali’s net worth as of 2026 is not publicly disclosed. Her income sources include her PCB central contract (Category B), match fees from Pakistan Women national team engagements, and any domestic league contracts. Pakistan women’s cricketers at Category B level earn a structured salary under PCB’s women’s central contracting system, though exact figures are not publicly confirmed. Muneeba also has a modest but growing Instagram following of approximately 50,000+ followers (@muneeba_siddiqui), which represents a brand-building platform but is not at elite sponsorship levels.
Muneeba Ali is famous primarily because of a single historic innings that crystallised years of hard work into one defining moment: her 102 off 68 balls against Ireland at the 2023 ICC Women’s T20 World Cup in Cape Town. With that knock, she became the first Pakistani woman — and first Pakistani cricketer of any gender — to score a century at a T20 World Cup. Beyond that landmark, she is the anchor of Pakistan Women’s batting order, a dual-role specialist who both opens the batting and keeps wickets — a combination that is rare and invaluable in the women’s game. Her 2025 World Cup run-out controversy further embedded her name in the global cricket conversation.
Muneeba Ali’s impact extends beyond statistics. She represents the proof of concept for Pakistan Women’s cricket — that patience, domestic investment, and gradual international exposure can produce players capable of genuine world-class moments on the biggest stages.
Her T20I century at the World Cup in South Africa shattered a long-standing psychological ceiling for Pakistan batting. No Pakistani woman had ever done it before. That milestone inspired a generation of young cricketers in Karachi and beyond, demonstrating that Pakistan Women can not only compete but lead at ICC events.
Her role as a wicket-keeper batter also models an increasingly important template in modern white-ball cricket: the keeper who bats at the top of the order, freeing up a specialist batting slot lower down. Teams like Australia (Alyssa Healy) and India (Richa Ghosh) deploy the same template, and Muneeba’s presence in Pakistan’s XI shows they have embraced this modern approach.
Q: Who is Muneeba Ali?
Muneeba Ali Siddiqui is a Pakistani women’s cricketer born on 8 August 1997 in Karachi. She plays as a left-handed opening batter and wicket-keeper for Pakistan Women, and is the first Pakistani to score a T20 World Cup century.
Q: What is Muneeba Ali’s age?
Muneeba Ali is 28 years old as of 2026, having been born on 8 August 1997.
Q: Is Muneeba Ali married?
Muneeba Ali has not publicly confirmed any marriage as of 2026. Information about a husband is not available in public records or her verified social media channels.
Q: What is Muneeba Ali’s husband’s name?
There is no publicly confirmed information about Muneeba Ali’s husband or marital status as of 2026.
Q: What are Muneeba Ali’s stats?
In ODIs: 754 runs in 32 matches at an average of 24.32, with a highest score of 107. In T20Is: 716 runs in 50 matches at an average of 16.27, with a highest score of 102.
Q: What is Muneeba Ali’s highest score?
Muneeba Ali’s highest score in ODIs is 107 (vs Ireland, 2022). Her highest T20I score is 102 (vs Ireland, 2023 ICC Women’s T20 World Cup).
Q: What is the Muneeba Ali run-out controversy?
During the India vs Pakistan match at the 2025 ICC Women’s World Cup in Colombo on 5 October 2025, Muneeba Ali was given run out for 2 runs after Deepti Sharma’s throw struck the stumps while her bat was momentarily airborne. The MCC confirmed the decision was correct under Law 30.1.2.
Q: What is Muneeba Ali’s century score?
Muneeba Ali scored 102 off 68 balls against Ireland in the 2023 ICC Women’s T20 World Cup in Cape Town — the first T20I century by any Pakistani cricketer at a World Cup.
Muneeba Ali stands at the intersection of history and ongoing relevance in Pakistan women’s cricket. From the streets of Karachi to a history-making century under floodlights in Cape Town, her career encapsulates the long, patient journey that defines most elite Pakistani women cricketers. With a PCB Category B contract, an established role as opener and keeper, and a growing presence at every major ICC event since 2016, she is not simply a past milestone but a current cornerstone of the Pakistan Women’s team.
As the 2025–2026 international cycle continues with the South Africa tour behind them and more ICC events on the horizon, Muneeba Ali remains Pakistan’s most experienced top-order batter in white-ball cricket — a player capable of both anchoring an innings and producing the kind of century that changes the narrative of a nation’s cricket.