adil rashid Profile - ICC Profile, Age, Career Info & Stats.
adil rashid is a cricketer(sportsman) from England. His ICC profile, age, career info & stats are given below.
Full Name
Adil Usman Rashid
Born
February 17, 1988, Bradford, Yorkshire
Age
35 years old
Nicknames
Dilly, Hoover
Batting Style
Right hand Bat
Bowling Style
Legbreak
Playing Role
Bowler
Height
5ft 8in
Batting Stats
Test | ODI | T20I | IPL | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mat | 19 | 135 | 99 | 3 |
Inn | 33 | 68 | 31 | 2 |
Runs | 540 | 826 | 100 | 22 |
Avg | 19.29 | 18.36 | 6.67 | 11.0 |
SR | 42.52 | 98.45 | 86.21 | 137.5 |
HS | 61 | 69 | 22 | 18 |
NO | 5 | 23 | 16 | 0 |
100s | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
50s | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
4s | 62 | 80 | 7 | 2 |
6s | 4 | 12 | 0 | 1 |
Bowling Stats
Test | ODI | T20I | IPL | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mat | 19 | 135 | 99 | 3 |
Inn | 34 | 129 | 95 | 3 |
Balls | 3816 | 6789 | 2072 | 60 |
Runs | 2390 | 6377 | 2574 | 91 |
Wkt | 60 | 199 | 98 | 2 |
BBI | 49 / 5 | 27 / 5 | 2 / 4 | 23 / 4 |
BBM | 178 / 7 | 27 / 5 | 2 / 4 | 23 / 4 |
Eco | 3.76 | 5.64 | 7.45 | 9.1 |
Avg | 39.83 | 32.05 | 26.27 | 45.5 |
5W | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
10W | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Teams he has played for:
- H Rashid
- A Rashid
- England
- Adelaide Strikers
- Azeem Rafiq's XI
- Bangla Tigers
- Dhaka Dynamites
- England Development Programme Under-19s
- England Lions
- England Performance Programme
- England Under-19s
- ICC World XI
- Marylebone Cricket Club
- Middlesex Cricket Board
- Multan Sultans
- Northern Superchargers (Men)
- Pretoria Capitals
- Punjab Kings
- Punjabi Legends
- South Australia
- Sunrisers Hyderabad
- Team James Vince
- Team Morgan
- Yorkshire
- Yorkshire 2nd XI
Heres what CricBuzz says about him.
Rashid's Test selection came on the back of two back-to-back county championship wins for Yorkshire - his long loved club. Rashid had a very slow and painful start to his Test sojourn - getting smashed for almost 5 runs per over on his debut against Pakistan in Abu Dhabi. One of the major complaints about Rashid was his inability to string together quiet overs - he had the ability to take wickets - and he showed that aspect as well in the same Test - grabbing his maiden five-wicket haul.
While the series against Pakistan was an educative experience, Rashid was expected to deliver the goods when he was chosen as the main spinner during England's arduous 7-Test tour of the sub-continent - with two Tests lined up against Bangladesh and a further five against India in 2016. Albeit against tough opposition, this was Rashid's chance to shine.
Rashid featured in all the seven Tests and finished with a haul of 30 wickets - not bad for a leg-spinner against the mighty sub-continental batsmen. But his consistency was sorely missing, there were as many as five four-wicket hauls, but none of them were converted into five-wicket hauls. The wickets came at a cost as well - not even once in his 12 bowling innings did he concede less than 3 RPO. England only managed one win out of seven, losing five and drawing one and Rashid was sent down the pecking order.
Rashid didn't play a Test since the India tour for some time and his chances of gaining another 'Three Lions' cap looked bleak. While his Test future didn't look good, Rashid became a vital part in the scheme of things in the new-look England ODI squad. He became a valuable asset for the Morgan led side as England brought about a bit of a renaissance in ODI cricket after the 2015 World Cup.
Rashid's bowling average or even his economy of 5.5 isn't staggering for a leg spinner in today's modern era. However, it's his knack of picking up wickets that has made him stand apart. While he appeared tensed in Test cricket due to the attacking fields that was given, thereby increasing the pressure on him to be accurate, it seems like Rashid loves the in-out fields that are in use for the shorter formats.
Rashid, who had decided not to play red-ball cricket with his county, in a surprised/controversial move was recalled for the Test squad against the home Test series against India in 2018 following his performances against the same opponents in the 50-over format. Later that year, he was a key member of the England squad that whitewashed the Island nation in a 3-match Test series in Sri Lanka.
Rashid was a crucial cog in England's famous World Cup victorious campaign and although he didn't take a truckload of wickets, he did ensure that England had a dominating presence, especially during the crucial middle-overs phase of the game. This after he enjoyed a rich vein of form in 2018 with 42 wickets to his name from 24 ODIs.
Having missed the bus for the 2010 T20 World Cup triumph, Rashid made amends by ensuring he remained a pivotal part when England won the T20 World Cup in 2022 under Jos Buttler. Rashid might not have featured in a lot of the ODIs post the pandemic but expect another string showing from the leggie in the 2023 World Cup as the conditions would certainly favour him.
By Hariprasad Sadanandan
Heres what ESPNcricinfo says about him.
Adil Rashid did much to set right English cricket's troubled relationship with legspin when he established himself as the country's leading white-ball spinner in 2015 and four years later was a key part of their World Cup-winning side. At the time of Rashid's recall to the limited-overs set-up in 2015, no legspinner had taken more than five white-ball wickets for England; over the next six years, Rashid took more than 200.
His success in the limited-overs game owed much to his variation - and his wicked googly in particular - and it was no great surprise when he got his Test debut in 2015 against Pakistan. Rashid took 60 wickets in 19 Tests, but often struggled for control and a long-standing shoulder complaint meant his focus returned to the shorter formats after the 2019 tour of the Caribbean.
Born in Bradford, he became the third Yorkshire-born player of Asian extraction to represent the county in 2006, and his 6 for 67 on debut against Warwickshire at Scarborough felt like a breakthrough moment. In 2008, he earned call-ups as a back-up player on Test tours to India and the Caribbean after taking 62 Championship wickets.
He made his England debut in 2009 during the World T20, playing in all four of England's games, but had a chastening time on the tour to South Africa the following winter: his only over in the T20I series cost 25 runs and his three overs in an ODI in Centurion were taken for 27.
Rashid's county progress was mixed over the next few years but as he reached his mid-20s, he became a more prolific run-scorer, and he thrived with Jason Gillespie as his head coach at Yorkshire, who later took him to the Big Bash with Adelaide Strikers, with whom he won titles in 2014 and 2015. For England, he was part of the side that reached the final of the 2016 World T20 and the semi-final of the 2017 Champions Trophy, and took 11 wickets in the 2019 World Cup.
His introduction to Test cricket was brutal as he returned 0 for 163 against Pakistan in Abu Dhabi in 2015, but his 5 for 64 in the second innings demonstrated why England had been so keen to turn him into a red-ball bowler. He was their leading wicket-taker in India in 2016-17 with 23 - 13 more than anyone else - but averaged the wrong side of 35 and leaked 3.70 runs an over.
Controversy reared its head in 2018, when, months after signing a white-ball-only contract with Yorkshire, Rashid was handed a Test recall for the home series against India by Ed Smith, a selector keen to think outside the box. He took ten wickets in the series before forming part of a spin trio with Moeen Ali and Jack Leach during England's 3-0 win in Sri Lanka, but after an expensive Test in the Caribbean in early 2019, he was left out once more.
However, he remained arguably the pre-eminent asset in England's rebooted white-ball team, and despite despite a long-standing shoulder issue that has required constant monitoring, in 2022 he added the T20 World Cup crown to the 50-over title from 2019. His displays at the sharp end of that competition in Australia epitomised his value - a combined return of 4 for 58 in his final 12 overs of the tournament, including 2 for 22 in the final against Pakistan.