ishant sharma Profile - ICC Profile, Age, Career Info & Stats.
ishant sharma is a cricketer(sportsman) from India. His ICC profile, age, career info & stats are given below.
Full Name
Ishant Sharma
Born
September 02, 1988, Delhi
Age
35 years old
Batting Style
Right hand Bat
Bowling Style
Right arm Fast medium
Playing Role
Bowler
Batting Stats
Test | ODI | T20I | IPL | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mat | 105 | 80 | 14 | 101 |
Inn | 142 | 28 | 3 | 26 |
Runs | 785 | 72 | 8 | 56 |
Avg | 8.26 | 4.8 | 8.0 | 9.33 |
SR | 30.57 | 35.47 | 88.89 | 90.32 |
HS | 57 | 13 | 5 | 10 |
NO | 47 | 13 | 2 | 20 |
100s | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
50s | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
4s | 88 | 6 | 1 | 4 |
6s | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
Bowling Stats
Test | ODI | T20I | IPL | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mat | 105 | 80 | 14 | 101 |
Inn | 188 | 78 | 14 | 101 |
Balls | 19160 | 3733 | 278 | 2147 |
Runs | 10078 | 3562 | 400 | 2907 |
Wkt | 311 | 115 | 8 | 82 |
BBI | 74 / 7 | 34 / 4 | 34 / 2 | 12 / 2 |
BBM | 108 / 10 | 34 / 4 | 34 / 2 | 12 / 2 |
Eco | 3.16 | 5.73 | 8.63 | 8.12 |
Avg | 32.41 | 30.97 | 50.0 | 35.45 |
5W | 11 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
10W | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Teams he has played for:
- India
- Deccan Chargers
- Delhi
- Delhi Capitals
- India A
- India Blue
- India Red
- India Under-19s
- Kings XI Punjab
- Kolkata Knight Riders
- North Zone
- Oil & Natural Gas Corporation
- Rest of India
- Rising Pune Supergiants
- Sunrisers Hyderabad
- Sussex
Heres what CricBuzz says about him.
Ishant, has a lovely high-arm action and is able to bowl close to the 140 kph mark consistently, which troubled the Aussies no end in that 2008 tour. The Aussie captain Ponting was Ishant's bunny as he dismissed him six times in seven Test matches. Ishant also had the distinction of having delivered the fastest ball ever bowled by an Indian, when he clocked 152.6 km/h (94.8mph) at Adelaide Oval against Australia on February 17, 2008. In the process, he also became the first Indian to bowl over 150 km/h, beating teammate Ashish Nehra's 149.7 kph delivery.
After all the exploits in the ensuing CB series, which finished with Ishant ending up as the highest wicket-taker in the tournament with 14 wickets to his name, Ishant had well and truly arrived on the international scene. Often compared to Javagal Srinath for a similarly lean build and high-arm action, Ishant, continued to shine and during the inaugural auction of the IPL, he was picked up for a whopping $950,000 by Bollywood superstar Shahrukh Khan for his franchise Kolkata - making him one of the highest paid players - and instantly catapulting him into the big league at the tender age of 20.
When the Australians came to India to play a four-match Test series later that year, Ishant along with Zaheer Khan mastered the art of reverse-swing and used it expertly to leave them dumbstruck. He gained appreciable movement both off the seam and in the air as he further enhanced his reputation with some fine spells of fast bowling on some placid wickets. He was named Man of the Series for his 15 wickets as he helped India to a 2-0 series victory.
The year 2009 turned out to be a rough one for the Delhi lad as he got to experience the vagaries of international cricket. It all started to go wrong during the second edition of the IPL when he looked a pale shadow of the bowler he is as he was smashed to all corners of the ground. With his performance plummeting, his side, Kolkata, had a horrid season finishing last. The downward slide continued in the T20 World Cup as well and the wheel came full circle when he was dropped from the side mid-way during the India - Australia ODI series in October 2009 after another disappointing show with the ball.
In 2012, Ishant underwent an ankle surgery and was out of action for the months that followed. After a string of poor performances, the selectors started to view Ishant as a Test specialist. However, his performances in Tests never got any better and he was very poor in the Tests in England and Australia, and again when Australia toured India, where he picked only 16 wickets from eight Tests.
Ishant did not have a good year in 2013. After performing listlessly in Tests, he was thrashed in the IPL. Against Chennai, playing for Hyderabad, he conceded 66 runs in his spell of four overs - the most runs for any bowler in IPL history at that time. When Australia toured India in October/November 2013, Ishant equaled the record for the most expensive over by an Indian bowler, conceding 30 runs in the third ODI. He was, hence, dropped from both the Test and ODI squads for the West Indies tour that followed. However, Ishant was named in both the teams for the South Africa tour in December 2013.
Since his return to the Test squad, however, Ishant performed very well. In the ODI format though, he was expensive in New Zealand and was again left out of the side for the 2014 Asia Cup. In the IPL auctions for the 2014 edition, Ishant was bought back by the Hyderabad franchise, for whom he played in 2013.
Ishant played three Test matches on the tour to England in 2014, where he bagged the Man of the Match award with a match-winning performance in the second innings of the Lord's Test, with figures of 7/74. His personal-best performance helped MS Dhoni bag a rare overseas Test victory as India made history at the Home of Cricket. Ishant did not feature in the ODI series that followed and was not preferred for the West Indies series as well. However, he returned to ODI cricket with a bang, bagging career-best figures of 4/34 against Sri Lanka in the third ODI at Cuttack. Ishant spearheaded the Indian attack in the 2014-15 Border-Gavaskar Trophy in three Test matches, before being sidelined for the final Test with an injury. Keeping in mind his height and the ability to generate extra bounce, the selectors named him in the squad for the 2015 World Cup. However, as Ishant failed to recover from a knee injury, he was ruled out of the showpiece event. Mohit Sharma replaced Ishant in the squad.
The Sri Lankan tour in 2015 was a big tipping point, especially his eight wickets in the deciding Test in Colombo - which swung the match India's way. His returns at home weren't as expected, then an injury and a marriage-enforced break meant he ended up missing most of the home season in 2016.
Since 2016, Ishant clearly stepped down in the pecking order of Indian fast bowlers. The return to fitness of Mohammed Shami and the resurgence of Umesh Yadav left the lanky Delhi pacer warming the benches for most of the season. Ishant did get to show his wares in a few Tests during the long 13-Test Indian home season in 2016-17, but on pitches that were unresponsive for his style of bowling, he barely managed decent figures. In the years that followed, Ishant managed to hold on to his place in the Indian Test team. In India’s 2018 tour to England, Ishant claimed his 250th Test wicket in the fourth game. In February of 2021, Ishant joined an elite list of players after playing his 100th Test. He had a sober outing in a game that India’s spinners dominated. Thereafter, however, the rise of young pacers like Mohammad Siraj coupled with a change of leadership prompted by Virat Kohli’s resignation as Test captain, led to Ishant’s exit from the Test team.
Heres what ESPNcricinfo says about him.
With a physique and attitude that is reminiscent of a young Javagal Srinath, Ishant Sharma shot into prominence during the 2007-08 Test series in Australia. Standing at 6'4", his rhythmic, high-arm action allowed him to bowl at around 140 kph. For one who started serious cricket at 14, his rise was rapid and he made his Ranji Trophy debut at 18. An injury to Munaf Patel provided him an opening during India's tour of Bangladesh in May 2007 but it was in Australia where he caught the attention, prompting Steve Waugh to call him the next best thing in Indian cricket. He showed he could move the ball both ways and his probing spell in the second innings in Perth, where he set-up Ricky Ponting, is the stuff of folklore. He continued to impress in the one-day series, clocking more than 150kph once, and ended as India's highest wicket-taker in the triumphant campaign.
The glory days continued through his debut season, with a notable performance against South Africa, followed by 15 wickets in four Tests in the succesful home series against Australia in 2008, and a couple of strong shows in Sri Lanka in ODIs. By now Ishant was clearly Zaheer Khan's deputy in the Indian seam arsenal, but things have gone seriously wrong since. Some have blamed it on his being over-bowled, particularly on flat tracks in the IPL, while others point to a malaise that has afflicted all of India's new crop of fast bowlers. The fact remains that Ishant lost the most crucial aspect of his bowling - his pace. Without it, his natural short-of-a-good-length that had tormented batsmen of Ponting's calibre a season earlier lost its venom. Eventually the loss of pace led to a loss of self-confidence. The Indian selectors decided to be careful and began shielding him from the shorter formats of the game in 2009 in the hope that he would rediscover his zip. His struggle continued but given India's limited seam-bowling resources at the time, Ishant was persisted with, even after an ankle surgery in 2012 that put him out of action for months. When he completed 50 Tests in early 2013 he had among the worst averages for bowlers with 50 Test caps to their name.
Since then Ishant has somewhat revived his Test career. He was impressive on the tour of New Zealand, being the top wicket-taker in Tests with 15 wickets that included two five-wicket hauls. On his next overseas assignment, in England, Ishant was the hero of India's famous win at Lord's when he bounced out the England batsmen with his spell of 7 for 74, helping India to a 1-0 lead in the Test series. It was perhaps one of his best performances for India in whites.
He soon suffered a leg injury and was ruled out for the following two Tests. He did return for the fifth Test but his 4 for 96 was only part of an embarrassing innings defeat for India. He then went back to Australia, the country that had kick-started his career, but he could only manage mediocre performances in the three Tests he was a part of. His landing foot was proving to be a constant irritant to his fitness and the fast bowler picked up another injury, this time to his knee and was ruled out of the ODI tri-series that followed. Ishant failed to recover in time for the World Cup and was replaced by Mohit Sharma.
Siddhartha Vaidyanathan