rory burns Profile - ICC Profile, Age, Career Info & Stats.
rory burns is a cricketer(sportsman) from England. His ICC profile, age, career info & stats are given below.
Full Name
Rory Joseph Burns
Born
August 26, 1990, Epsom, Surrey
Age
33 years old
Batting Style
Left hand Bat
Bowling Style
Right arm Medium
Fielding Position
Occasional Wicketkeeper
Playing Role
Opening Batter
Education
City of London Freemen's School
Batting Stats
Test | ODI | T20I | IPL | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mat | 32 | - | - | - |
Inn | 59 | - | - | - |
Runs | 1789 | - | - | - |
Avg | 30.32 | - | - | - |
SR | 43.81 | - | - | - |
HS | 133 | - | - | - |
NO | 0 | - | - | - |
100s | 3 | - | - | - |
50s | 11 | - | - | - |
4s | 219 | - | - | - |
6s | 2 | - | - | - |
Bowling Stats
Test | ODI | T20I | IPL | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mat | 32 | - | - | - |
Inn | - | - | - | - |
Balls | - | - | - | - |
Runs | - | - | - | - |
Wkt | - | - | - | - |
BBI | - | - | - | - |
BBM | - | - | - | - |
Eco | - | - | - | - |
Avg | - | - | - | - |
5W | - | - | - | - |
10W | - | - | - | - |
Teams he has played for:
- England
- Cardiff MCCU
- England Lions
- Hampshire 2nd XI
- Oval Invincibles (Men)
- Surrey
- Surrey 2nd XI
- Surrey Under-19s
Heres what CricBuzz says about him.
Burns got a shot at the Championship side when he was 21, and he promptly scored a pivotal hundred in a cliffhanger of a win against Middlesex and helped his county slip a division. A Surrey veteran, Burns has crossed the coveted 1000-run mark for his county for four successive seasons and continues to be a pivotal member of the team as well as the deputy skipper.
Burns' was at the peak of his powers in 2017 on a flat Oval wicket, averaging almost 50 but was overshadowed by the colossal feats of the Bradmanesque Sangakarra and English opener Mark Stoneman. His solitary century turned into a daddy 219* over 600 minutes, but unfortunately lacking any context in a high-scoring draw against Hampshire. Due to his by-the-book approach, he has had limited chances in the shorter formats, despite his attempts to adapt with more inventive shots. His part-time wicketkeeping is extremely safe as well, ticking yet another box in his jack-of-all-trades resume.
Burns made the news when he had a hazardous accident on the field - a collision with team-mate Moises Henriques during a NatWest T20 Blast fixture in 2015. The players fell unconscious upon impact and they were both rushed to the hospital immediately with Henriques cracking open his jaw and Burns cutting himself near his left eye. Both were heavily concussed. He made his comeback during the Colchester Festival against Essex with a 158 and exhibited no long-term side-effects of the accident. He then went on a rampant streak of 76, 95, 24, 42, 92, 23, 50, 56 and 30 to hand Surrey the championship, in an emotional moment for the fans as the county’s most respected veteran had made a fairy tale comeback from a horrific injury to deliver a win.
By Rishi Roy
Heres what ESPNcricinfo says about him.
England had tried more elegant or aggressive options in their bid to find a reliable Test opener, but few offered the returns or the resilience of Rory Burns.
By the time the 2019 Ashes ended, Burns had not only established himself as England's first choice opener but registered two things even Alastair Cook never managed: a home Ashes century and more than 350 runs in a home Ashes series. England, it seemed, had found their man. There were even whispers to suggest he could, in time, develop into a Test captaincy option.
That would not come to pass. He was one of many casualties after the 4-0 loss in the 2021/22 Ashes, managing just 77 across six innings, with a sense from the management he was reluctant to take on greater responsibility within the set-up. It was a peculiar criticism, tallying with misgivings about his perceived technical idiosyncrasies that ultimately spoke of one thing - he is a man happy to do things very much his own way. Burns responded to the axing by leading Surrey to their 21st County Championship title - a second in five years - in the summer of 2022, leading their run chats with 842 at an average of 40.09.
Burns had to work harder than most to win his opportunity on the tour of Sri Lanka in 2018. Alastair Cook's retirement had left a gaping hole at the top of England's order and Burns, at 28, had undoubtedly earned the right to press his claims to replace him. Many had tried and failed.
He impressed in both Sri Lanka and the Caribbean - he averaged in the mid-20s in both series - without the big scores to nail down a place. But a century in the first Ashes Test - a scrappy but determined affair - seemed to settle him and, while the Australian attack tested him with the short ball, he proved equal to the challenge and admirably tight outside off stump. Half-centuries followed at Lord's and Manchester, with 47 more at The Oval.
Burns' 2018 was a triumph on a number of fronts, not just because it led to international honours. His 1,359 runs at 64.71 in 2018 were a central component of the club's first Championship for 16 years - a veritable stroll for an exciting young side he captained for the first time that season. He admitted to a peculiar batting style: a left-hander with a dominant left eye, he adopted an open stance to bring his dominant eye into play. The frustration of Surrey supporters when he was not given a Test debut in the final Test of the summer against India - the series had already been won - gave way to delight when he finally won a chance to prove his worth, albeit in unfamiliar surroundings.
Burns is a batsman of impressive consistency and unusual self-denial. He has a compact game, centred on his dexterity off his legs and his driving through the covers, and the patience to leave the ball copiously. He has been a model of consistency for Surrey, passing 1,000 first-class runs for five successive seasons between 2014-18.
The 2017 summer was particularly statistically weighty. The Oval played flat and true and, by the end of the Championship season, Surrey had the three biggest run-makers in the country: Kumar Sangakkara, who was feted around the country as he averaged more than 100 in his farewell season to first-class cricket, Mark Stoneman, who won England recognition, and Burns himself, whose average was a touch below 50 and who stirred little interest outside south London. The only time he passed 100 he turned into a mammoth 219 not out, a career-best stretching over nearly 10 hours, in a batting stalemate against Hampshire at The Oval.
The turbulence at Surrey in 2012 gave Burns his chance in the Championship side just before his 22nd birthday, and he immediately responded with a century marked by unobtrusive accumulation in a nerve-shredding eight-run victory over Middlesex that helped Surrey to escape relegation. There have been plenty of examples of Burns' class since, although he has gone through more form-slumps than he would have liked.
His orthodoxy has limited his chances in one-day and T20 cricket, although Burns has developed the ability to paddle the ball over fine leg and is working on adding more power to the game. He is also a very assured wicketkeeper, though Surrey have deemed that it is not viable for him to open and keep wicket simultaneously in the long-term.
Burns was involved in a frightening collision in the field with his Surrey team-mate Moises Henriques as they both converged on a skier in a NatWest T20 Blast tie at Arundel in 2015. Both players were taken to hospital, Henriques breaking his jaw in three places and Burns requiring stitches after cuts near his left eye. His 158 against Essex at the Colchester Festival showed he had suffered no long-term effects from an incident that he said he could remember nothing about.
Burns made 158 and 71 against Essex. Thereafter, across all formats, he made runs all the way - 76, 95, 24, 42, 92, 23, 50, 56, 30 - until a duck on the final day with the Division Two title already in the bag: proof, if it was needed, that his horrific injury had brought no lasting effects.
ESPNcricinfo staff