Education
University of Birmingham.
University of Birmingham.
Zafar Altaf made his first-class debut in 1958-1959 as a middle-order batsman for Lahore. In his third match he made 99 in the semi-final of the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy against Combined Services, and a few days later hit 111 for Punjab University in a first-class match against Sind University. He was selected to tour India with the Pakistan team in 1960-1961, and scored 262 runs in eight first-class matches at 29.11.
Although he did not play in any of the Tests, he took a catch in the First Test in Bombay while fielding as a substitute.
His form fell away in the next two seasons: in six matches he scored only 82 runs. In 1964-1965 he hit his second first-class century, 139 not out for Lahore against Punjab University.
He had his most successful season in 1967-1968, scoring 605 runs at 37.81, and returned to the notice of the national selectors. After captaining Lahore Greens against Karachi Blues in the long-delayed final of the 1965-1966 Ayub Trophy and scoring 118 and 87, he played for The Rest against a Pakistan XI, scoring 43 in each innings.
A few weeks later he captained North Zone against the Commonwealth XI in Peshawar, top-scoring in each innings with 64 not out and 32.
He then played in the last of the three matches between Pakistan and the Commonwealth XI, scoring 13 and 5 in a drawn match. He was the only player on the Pakistan side who did not play Test cricket. He played only six more first-class matches, in 1970-1971 and 1971-1972, for Rawalpindi, three of them as captain.
Altaf served as Secretary of the Pakistan Cricket Board from 1972 to 1975.
He later served on the national selection committee from the mid-1980s, and as chairman of the committee from 1994 to 1996. He managed the Pakistan team that finished second in the 1999 World Cup.
Altaf received an Master of Arts in Psychology at the University of the Punjab in 1963, and a Doctor of Philosophy in Economics at the University of Birmingham in 1981. He taught economics at three universities in Pakistan.
Doctor Altaf worked as an economist in the Pakistan civil service, rising to the position of Federal Secretary for Agriculture, which he occupied for ten years from the early 1990s.
He chaired the Pakistan Agriculture Research Council in the 1990s, and again in 2009.