Born to a Konkani family who migrated to Pakistan from the west coast of Maharashtra,[2] Faqih was a relative of the Pakistani Test cricketer Ebbu Ghazali: his mother-in-law was Ghazali's sister.[1]
A middle-order batsman and off-spin bowler, Faqih played first-class cricket for a number of teams in Pakistan from 1973 to 1991.[3] His highest score was 183 in the quarter-final of the Patron's Trophy in February 1978, when he captainedMuslim Commercial Bank to a 609-run victory over Water and Power Development Authority; he also took eight wickets.[4] His best bowling figures of 8 for 51 came seven months later in the BCCP Invitation Tournament, when he captained Muslim Commercial Bank to victory over Sind.[5] In 1985–86 he set a Pakistan record by taking 107 wickets in a season; his teams Karachi Whites and Karachi won the Patron's Trophy and Quaid-e-Azam Trophy respectively.[6]
The high point of Faqih's brief Test career was his century in the Fourth Test against India in the 1986–87 series in India. Flown in as a late replacement for Tauseef Ahmed, who was ill, Faqih scored 105 batting at number eight, adding 154 for the seventh wicket with Imran Khan. He won the player of the match award in the drawn match, but was replaced by Tauseef Ahmed for the fifth and final match of the series, which Pakistan won.[7][8]
^Ahmed, Qamar (January 30, 2020). "Former Pakistan fast bowler Munaf passes away". DAWN.COM. Tall and handsome, Munaf was born in Bombay in 1935 in a Kokan family. He was one of the three Kokans from West coast of Maharashtra to represent Pakistan besides M E Z.Ghazali and Ejaz Faqih.