Mohammed Siraj Family Tree: The Story Behind India's Auto-Driver's Son Who Made It Big

Mohammed Siraj, born 13 March 1994 in Hyderabad, Telangana, India, is India's leading fast bowler — central to India's 2020–21 Border-Gavaskar Trophy win in Brisbane (his father died days before the Sydney Test; Siraj played anyway and took the title); IPL Royal Challengers Bangalore mainstay (2018–24); Punjab Kings (2025).

The Family's Roots: A Humble Hyderabad Family

The family is from First Lancer area of Hyderabad.

His Parents

Father: Mohammed Ghaus — Hyderabad auto-rickshaw driver; died of lung-related complications on 20 November 2020 while Siraj was in Australia for the Border-Gavaskar series — Siraj chose to stay and play rather than fly home.

Mother: Shabana Bibi — homemaker; the central figure of Siraj's life after his father's death.

His Brother

Mohammed Ismail — Siraj's elder brother; software engineer.

His Personal Life

Mohammed Siraj is unmarried.

The Siraj Family Tree at a Glance

Father: Mohammed Ghaus — auto-rickshaw driver; died 20 November 2020.

Mother: Shabana Bibi.

Brother: Mohammed Ismail — software engineer.

Mohammed Siraj:

  • Born 13 March 1994, Hyderabad
  • Hyderabad Ranji debut: 2015–16
  • India debut: T20I 4 November 2017; Test 26 December 2020 (Boxing Day Test, MCG); ODI 15 January 2019
  • 2020–21 Border-Gavaskar Trophy (Australia): India champion; Siraj took 13 wickets in 3 Tests, including 5/73 in the 4th-innings at the Gabba
  • Father died during the tour (20 November 2020) — Siraj stayed in Australia
  • 2023 Asia Cup: India champion; Siraj took 6/21 vs Sri Lanka in the final (best ODI figures in a final)
  • 2023 ODI World Cup: runner-up; Siraj took 9 wickets in the tournament
  • IPL: Royal Challengers Bangalore (2018–24); Punjab Kings (2025) — IPL Champion 2025 (PBKS)

What the Siraj Family Story Teaches Us

An auto-rickshaw-driver father who died during Siraj's first Test tour to Australia. A homemaker mother. A software-engineer brother. A career that included staying in Australia after his father's death and winning the Border-Gavaskar Trophy.

For every family — large or small, famous or otherwise — the Siraj story carries the same lesson. Some careers carry profound loss alongside national glory. Ghaus's November 2020 death and India's January 2021 Brisbane win are 8 weeks apart on the Siraj family record.


👉 Start building your family legacy today with Family Root App


📜 Disclaimer The family tree and biographical information provided in this article are based on publicly available sources and records. While we strive for accuracy, we do not guarantee the completeness or authenticity of all data. This content is intended for educational and informational purposes only and does not aim to infringe on any individual's privacy or personal rights. If you believe any information is incorrect or wish to request edits or removal, please contact us at Info@familyrootapp.com.