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Ravindra Jadeja

Ravindra Jadeja
FULL NAME

Ravindrasinh Anirudhsinh Jadeja

BORN

December 06, 1988, Navagam-Khed, Saurashtra

AGE35y 
BATTING STYLELeft hand Bat

BOWLING STYLE

Slow Left arm Orthodox

PLAYING ROLE

Allrounder

TEAMSIndia, India U19, Rajasthan Royals, Saurashtra, Board Presidents XI, Kochi Tuskers Kerala, Chennai Super Kings, India B, Indians, India A, Gujarat Lions, India Blue, Rest of India

Batting Career Summary

Batting Test ODI T20 IPL
Matches 72 197 66 240
Innings 105 132 36 184
Runs 3036 2756 480 2959
Balls 5437 3240 383 2281
Highest 175 87 46 62
Average 36.14 32.42 22.86 27.4
SR 55.84 85.06 125.33 129.72
Not Out 21 47 15 76
Fours 299 199 36 215
Sixes 64 54 13 107
Ducks 7 6 2 8
50s 20 13 0 3
100s 4 0 0 0
200s 0 0 0 0
400s 0 0 0 0


Bowling Career Summary

Bowling Test ODI T20 IPL
Matches 72 197 66 240
Innings 136 189 64 211
Balls 17233 9750 1272 3829
Runs 7096 7936 1506 4864
Maidens 706 56 4 2
Wickets 294 220 53 160
Avg 24.14 36.07 28.42 30.4
Eco 2.47 4.88 7.1 7.62
SR 58.62 44.32 24.0 23.93
BBI 7/42 5/33 3/15 5/16
BBM 10/110 5/33 3/15 5/16
4w 13 7 0 3
5w 13 2 0 1
10w 2 0 0 0


Ravindra Jadeja player profile

Dissed when he first appeared, Ravindra Jadeja won the doubters and haters over with his deeds, and now sits among the elite of Indian spin bowling.

In October 2019 he became the quickest left-arm bowler to reach 200 Test wickets. Six years before that, he had became the first Indian since Anil Kumble in 1993 to top the ICC ODI bowling rankings. In the IPL, he drew a scarcely believable bid of US$2 million in 2012.

In an era in which he was bound to be overshadowed by the artistry of fellow spinner R Ashwin, Jadeja kept his senior colleague on his toes, and often stole the spot when conditions allowed India to play just the one spinner. It helped that he was a captain’s dream: arguably the fastest man on the turf and the best fielder in the time that he played, he went on to become an important lower-order batter.

Some of his best batting performances came against the top teams, and they were often accompanied by the swordsman’s celebration that became his signature. Ten years into his career, he had five Test fifties and a hundred against England – the latter in a partnership of 222 with Rishabh Pant at Edgbaston in 2022 – and four half-centuries against Australia. It was all a far cry from the memes his batting inspired at the start of his career – though the ridicule directed at his three triple-hundreds in domestic cricket back then was more an indictment of the quality of bowling on the Indian first-class circuit at the time.

Jadeja shone in India’s 2013 Champions Trophy win, finishing as the leading wicket-taker, with 12 wickets, two of those in the final, where he also made an unbeaten 33.

His most valuable assets as a bowler are perhaps his fitness and strength, which enable him to go at batters for hours, ready to pounce on any assistance from the pitch. Like with his batting, his bowling highlights too feature the best sides disproportionately. His first Test five-for came against Australia in Delhi in 2013, and was followed by 6 for 138 in his next match, against South Africa in Durban, though that was in an India defeat. When South Africa next visited India, he got stuck into them, with 23 wickets in the four Tests in 2015. Against England at home in 2016-17, he harvested 26; this included an impressive demolition job in Chennai, where he took 7 for 48 after India had racked up 759 runs. Later that season he took 25 wickets when Australia visited for four Tests, to go with the 24 from the previous time, in 2013.

Through the first half of his career and beyond, Jadeja’s place in the Test side was never quite secure. He had to fight through a serious shoulder injury, and he was even dropped from the squad, but he kept coming back. Of course, these hardships paled in comparison with a tough childhood in Jamnagar, and the hard knocks that marked his early career, including being banned by the IPL for a year for essentially trying to negotiate his salary. In that tournament, Jadeja has been synonymous with Chennai Super Kings, for whom he has taken over 100 wickets over nine seasons and whom he briefly captained in 2022.

Ravindra Jadeja IPL factfile

– Ravindra Jadeja has won the IPL final four times, once with Rajasthan Royals (RR) and three times with Chennai Super Kings (CSK).

– He was the Player of the Match in CSK’s thrilling win in 2023 when he hit a four off the last ball of the match.

– The late Shane Warne marked him out as a future superstar when he captained the 19-year-old Jadeja in 2008, nicknaming him “Rockstar”.

– Jadeja is CSK’s second-highest wicket-taker in the IPL, behind only Dwayne Bravo (140).

– He was handed the CSK captaincy in 2022, but stepped down mid-season and MS Dhoni took the reins again. CSK finished joint-bottom of the table that year.

– Jadeja holds the record for scoring most runs in an over in the IPL: he took 36 off RCB’s Harshal Patel in a seven-ball over in 2021. The over went for 37 in all.