
Younis Khan: Pakistan's greatest Test batsman

A Pakistan Test series is never complete without a post on Younis Khan. Younis has been an instrumental figure in Test matches for his team, and, with every series, he stamps his authority and grows in stature as one of the best batsmen to ever play the game.
Like Michael Clarke, everyone is caught surprised when they hear that the 36-year-old has played only 92 Tests in his 14 year career thus far. There are so many batsmen around the world who began their careers well after Younis and have gone past a 100 Tests: Clarke himself, Alastair Cook, and Kevin Pietersen, to name a few.
I have always wondered where Younis would have been had Pakistan played as much Test cricket as Australia, England or India. His figures in Test cricket are comparable to those of the modern day greats, and, just because Pakistan does not play as much Test cricket, his runs tally is far behind.
However, that alone cannot take anything away from the phenomenal batsman that Younis has been. He stands far above his Pakistani compatriots as well as his international peers.
Prior to this Test series against Australia in the United Arab Emirates, Younis Khan was a distraught man. Having been dropped from the ODI squad (and rightly so), Younis spoke out against the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB), declared himself unavailable from all forms of cricket, and challenged the board to build a team without him.
That could have very easily ended his career. Thank god for some sane heads in the PCB, sense prevailed, Younis was cajoled into representing Pakistan in Tests, again. Not only will he play, but he will play with the aim to become the first Pakistani to score a century against all other 9 Test playing nations, to overtake Inzamam-ul-Haq as the leading centurion for Pakistan, to overtake Javed Miandad as the leading run-scorer in Tests for Pakistan, and to become the first Pakistani batsman to reach the 10,000 run landmark in the longer format of the game.
He made his aims public prior to the Test series against Australia and how he has appeared as a man on a mission.
In the first innings of the series, he achieved the feat of becoming the first Pakistani to score a century against all other 9 Test playing nations, and, in the second, he surpassed Inzamam’s Pakistan record of 25 centuries.
Not only did Younis Khan achieve those two feats, he also became the first Pakistani to score two centuries in a Test against Australia and the first batsman in the world to achieve the feat of twin centuries against Australia in the past 40 years!
I don't think I have the words that will do justice to Younis Khan's greatness, so I will just let his numbers speak for themselves.
Pakistan's Leading Test Centurion

Pakistan's Leading Run Scorer in Tests
Younis surpassed Mohammad Yousuf's tally in the previous Test series, against Sri Lanka, and is currently third on the list behind Inzamam and Miandad. He needs a 1,000 odd runs to become the highest run-scorer for Pakistan, which – in his current form – should take him another 8-10 Test matches or so.Master of all Oppositions
One of the Best of the Past Decade

King of the 4th Innings

One of the Best Converters in History

Younis Khan converts 48% of all his fifties into centuries in Test cricket. That is a better conversion rate than the likes of Kallis (44%), Sachin (42%), Ponting (40%), Lara (41.5%), Dravid (36%), and many other batsmen who have scored at least 20 Test centuries.
It goes without saying that he has the best conversion rates among all Pakistani batsmen to ever play the game. Only 4 batsmen have a better conversion rate than the right-hander in Test cricket.