Yuvraj Singh
![]() | ||||
Personal information | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Born | 12 December 1981 Chandigarh, India | |||
Nickname | Yuvi | |||
Height | 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) | |||
Batting style | Left-handed | |||
Bowling style | Slow left arm orthodox | |||
Role | Batting All-rounder | |||
Relations | Yograj Singh (father) | |||
International information | ||||
National side | India | |||
Test debut (cap 247) | 16 October 2003 v New Zealand | |||
Last Test | 26 July 2010 v England | |||
ODI debut (cap 135) | 3 October 2000 v Kenya | |||
Last ODI | 2 April 2011 v Sri Lanka | |||
Domestic team information | ||||
Years | Team | |||
1996– | Punjab | |||
2003 | Yorkshire | |||
2008–2010 | Kings XI Punjab | |||
2011– | Pune Warriors | |||
Career statistics | ||||
Competition | Test | ODIs | FC | List A |
Matches | 35 | 274 | 97 | 344 |
Runs scored | 1,709 | 8,051 | 6,114 | 1,0236 |
Batting average | 35.60 | 37.62 | 44.62 | 38.05 |
100s/50s | 3/10 | 13/49 | 18/30 | 17/62 |
Top score | 169 | 139 | 209 | 172 |
Balls bowled | 823 | 4,832 | 2,113 | 5,901 |
Wickets | 9 | 109 | 21 | 143 |
Bowling average | 53.66 | 37.24 | 57.66 | 34.51 |
5 wickets in innings | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
10 wickets in match | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Best bowling | 2/9 | 5/31 | 3/25 | 5/31 |
Catches/stumpings | 31/– | 84/– | 93/– | 106/– |
Source: Cricinfo, 16 August 2011 |

Contents[hide] |
Early career
Yuvraj first came to attention when he captained the U-19 Punjab cricket team in the final of the Cooch-Behar Trophy against Bihar U-19s, in which he scored 358 at the Keenan Stadium in Jamshedpur.[5] He then gained selection for the U-19 World Cup in Sri Lanka in January 2000, where he was part of a team led by Mohammed Kaif which won the tournament.[6] Yuvraj was subsequently selected in 2000 for the first intake of the National Cricket Academy in Bangalore.[7]ODI career
Yuvraj made his One Day International debut against Kenya in 2000 during the ICC KnockOut Trophy. He showed his potential in his second ODI which was against the Australians where he scored a quickfire 84 off 82 balls against a pace attack consisting of Glenn McGrath, Brett Lee and Jason Gillespie.[8] However, after a lean run of form, he was dropped for the one-dayers against Australia in India in early 2001,[9] but returned later in the year and helped India win a match in Sri Lanka with an unbeaten 98.[10]One of his most memorable innings was a partnership with Mohammad Kaif in the NatWest Series final against England in July 2002 which led India to victory.[11] He represented India at the 2003 Cricket World Cup. He scored his first century in his fourth season with the Indian team against Bangladesh in 2003. After that he also scored hundreds against Zimbabwe and Australia, including a 139 off 119 balls at the Sydney Cricket Ground.[12] In the Indian Oil Cup 2005, he made 110 off 114 balls (his third century) and an important partnership worth 165 runs with Mohammad Kaif, to become the man of the match against West Indies in the last match of the round robin league. After reaching his century, he attracted attention by angry gesticulations to the Indian dressing room, which was postulated to be due to his clashes with team management – Greg Chappell had been appointed as the new Indian coach and he had criticised Yuvraj.[13] He later praised Chappell's techniques.[14]
Yuvraj had a good run of form late in 2005 and early in 2006 in ODIs. He was named as the man of the series in three consecutive series, against South Africa (joint with Graeme Smith),[15] and then against Pakistan and England, in which he scored three centuries and four half-centuries in fifteen matches, which propelled him into the top ten of the ICC ODI batting rankings. During the Pakistan tour, at times when captain and vice-captain Rahul Dravid and Virender Sehwag were absent, Yuvraj was the on-field captain.[13] In the next series in the West Indies, Yuvraj hit two fifties in four games, and India won the series 4–1. His performance was recognised with his shortlisting by the International Cricket Council (ICC) as one of four nominees for the One Day International player of the year award.
Yuvraj missed the first game in the series after that, the tri-series against Australia and West Indies, due to illness and after failing to reach double figures in the following two games, was axed in favour of Mohammed Kaif in the last group match. He showed signs of returning to form in the Champions Trophy, hitting a restrained unbeaten 27 to guide India to victory against England in the opening game after he was recalled in place of Kaif, but a knee injury forced him out of the final group match. He subsequently missed the tour of South Africa and was in doubt for the 2007 Cricket World Cup, but made a faster than expected recovery to play in the ODI series against the West Indies in India in January 2007. He struck a fluent 95 not out from 83 balls in India's final match against Sri Lanka before heading to the World Cup. At the World Cup, Yuvraj only managed one fifty against a lowly Bermuda and along with rest of the squad, was criticised for India's first-round exit. Nevertheless, Yuvraj kept his place in the side for the tours of Bangladesh and Ireland in 2007.
In September 2007, he was named as the ODI vice captain of Mahendra Singh Dhoni after the resignation of Rahul Dravid. He then scored 121 in a losing cause during India's One-day International series defeat at the hands of Australia before enjoying a return to form as India beat Pakistan 3–2 on home soil in November 2007 and he was named Man of the series. In the five matches, he scored four half-centuries, although he was fined after showing dissent in the final match in Jaipur.[16]
In November 2008, he hit 138 not out from 78 balls against England at Rajkot, taking 64 balls to reach his century, which at the time was the second fastest by an Indian in ODIs, after Mohammad Azharuddin's century in 1988 against New Zealand came off 62 balls. After reaching 50 from 42 balls, he added a further 88 in the next 36 balls. He did so despite straining his back, which necessitated the use of Gautam Gambhir as a runner.[17] This was followed by 118 from 122 balls and a 4/28—all his wickets being specialist batsmen—in the next match in Indore, earning him two consecutive man of the match awards.[18]
In the 2011 World Cup, in India's match against Ireland, Yuvraj became the first player to take 5 wickets and score 50 runs in a World Cup match.[19] He took his 100th ODI wicket, with the dismissal of the Netherlands' Wesley Barresi.[20] He won the Man of the Match award four times in a row, which is just the third time the feat has been achieved after Sri Lanka's Aravinda de Silva (1996) and South Africa's Lance Klusener (1999).[21] Yuvraj scored 362 runs at average of 90.50 and took 15 wickets at 25.13 runs apiece. He was hence declared the Man of the Tournament in the World Cup.
Test career
Yuvraj was included in India's Test squad to face Pakistan in November 2007, but was not included in the playing 11 for the first test. Yuvraj was picked in the 3rd Test due to an injured Sachin Tendulkar. India were 61/4 before he and Sourav Ganguly made a 300 run partnership with Yuvraj recording his highest Test score of 169. He had a very poor Test series against Australia when India toured in 2007–08. After his poor showing in the first two Tests he was dropped for the remainder of the series. Yuvraj scored 85 not out and put on an unbroken partnership of 163 with Sachin Tendulkar to defeat England in the First Test at Chennai on 15 December 2008. It was the fourth highest successful run chase in history and the highest in India.
Yuvraj has taken a number of important wickets with his left-arm spin. Two "soft" dismissals of Kevin Pietersen in 2008, led to controversy. Pietersen, then the England captain, "labelled Yuvraj a "pie-chucker" and suggested that he was a purveyor of "left-arm filth"."[23]
Twenty20 career
On 19 September 2007 against England in the ICC World Twenty20 Super 8 match held at Kingsmead in Durban, he hit 6 sixes in an over up against Stuart Broad. This helped him to reach the fastest fifty ever in Twenty20 game, off just 12 balls and also the fastest in any form of international cricket.[24][25][26] This was the fourth time that six sixes had been hit in one over in senior cricket, the first time in Twenty20 cricket, and the first time in any form of international cricket against a bowler from a Test playing nation. He has also hit the longest six of the tournament: 119 metres (390 ft) off of Australian bowler Brett Lee.[citation needed] Yuvraj was awarded a Porsche 911 for his 6 sixes achievement by the Vice President of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), Lalit Modi. Yuvraj also received Rs.10,000,000 (US$252,716) in cash from the BCCI for his performance in the tournament.[27] He is also the first Indian player to cross 100 Sixes in Twenty 20 matches.Yuvraj also scored 70 runs off 30 balls and went on to claim the Man of the Match against Australia in the World Twenty20 semifinals at Durban.[28]
He was the icon player and captain for Indian Premier League (IPL) team Kings XI Punjab in the first two seasons; in 2010, the third season, icon player status was abolished and the captaincy given to Kumar Sangakkara. They came second in the round robin phase of the tournament, but lost their semi-final to the Chennai Super Kings. On 1 May 2009, Yuvraj picked up his first hat-trick in T20 cricket against Royal Challengers Bangalore at Kingsmead in Durban, the same ground where he hit his six sixes. He dismissed Robin Uthappa, Mark Boucher and Jacques Kallis. On 17 May 2009, Yuvraj picked up his second Twenty20 hat-trick against Deccan Chargers at the Wanderers Stadium in Johannesburg. Yuvraj dismissed Herschelle Gibbs, Andrew Symonds and Venugopal Rao.
The Pune Warriors were a new team introduced for the 2011 IPL. Yuvraj Singh was bought by the team and chosen as captain.[29] Pune Warriors finished ninth, ahead of only the Delhi Daredevils.[30] From 14 matches, Yuvraj scored343 runs at an average of 34.30, including two half-centuries.[31]
Style
Yuvraj is primarily a left-handed batsman but can bowl part-time left-arm orthodox spin. He is regarded as being better at batting against fast bowling than spin bowling, and cites the Indian Oil Cup 2005 as a turning point in his career.[32] He is one of the better fielders in the Indian team, fielding primarily at point, with a good aim at the stumps. A Cricinfo report published in late 2005 showed that since 1999, he was the fourth most prolific fielder in affecting ODI run outs, and of those on the list of prolific fielders, he had the second highest rate of effecting a run out.[33] He was previously often characterised as having attitude problems,[34] but later often assumed leadership positions during Rahul Dravid's tenure as captain.Centuries
Test centuries
Test Cricket Centuries of Yuvraj Singh | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | Runs | Match | Against | City/Country | Venue | Year |
1 | 112 | 3 | ![]() | Lahore, Pakistan | Gaddafi Stadium | 2004 |
2 | 122 | 13 | ![]() | Karachi, Pakistan | National Stadium | 2006 |
3 | 169 | 20 | ![]() | Bangalore, India | M.Chinnaswamy Stadium | 2007 |
[edit] ODI centuries
ODI Cricket Centuries of Yuvraj Singh | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | Runs | Match | Against | City/Country | Venue | Year |
1 | 102 | 71 | ![]() | Dhaka, Bangladesh | Shere Bangla National Stadium | 2003 |
2 | 139 | 85 | ![]() | Sydney, Australia | Sydney Cricket Ground | 2004 |
3 | 110 | 120 | ![]() | Colombo, Sri Lanka | R Premadasa Stadium | 2005 |
4 | 120 | 125 | ![]() | Harare, Zimbabwe | Harare Sports Club | 2005 |
5 | 103 | 134 | ![]() | Hyderabad, India | Rajiv Gandhi International Cricket Stadium | 2005 |
6 | 107* | 142 | ![]() | Karachi, Pakistan | National Stadium, Karachi | 2006 |
7 | 103 | 145 | ![]() | Margao, India | Nehru Stadium, Fatorda, Margao | 2006 |
8 | 121 | 186 | ![]() | Hyderabad, India | Rajiv Gandhi International Cricket Stadium | 2007 |
9 | 138* | 218 | ![]() | Rajkot, India | Madhavrao Scindia Cricket Ground | 2008 |
10 | 118 | 219 | ![]() | Indore, India | Maharani Usharaje Trust Cricket | 2008 |
11 | 117 | 225 | ![]() | Colombo, Sri Lanka | R Premadasa Stadium | 2009 |
12 | 131 | 233 | ![]() | Kingston, Jamaica | Sabina Park | 2009 |
13 | 113 | 271 | ![]() | Chennai, India | MA Chidambaram Stadium | 2011 |
0 comments:
Post a Comment