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Thursday, February 18, 2016

AB de villiers OUTSTANDING CAREER STATS

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AB de Villiers South Africa

Personal Information
Born
Feb 17, 1984 (32 years)
Birth Place
Pretoria
Nickname
de Villiers
Height
5 ft 10 in (178 cm)
Role
WK-Batsman
Batting Style
Right Handed Bat
Bowling Style
Right-arm medium
ICC Rankings
 
Test
ODI
T20
Batting
7
1
--
Bowling
--
--
--
Career Information
Intl Debut
Last Intl Match
Current Teams
Titans, Delhi Daredevils, Africa XI, South Africa, Royal Challengers Bangalore
Born on February 17, 1984, Abraham Benjamin de Villiers has rose from the ranks to become one of the world's best batsmen, across all formats. When on song, de Villiers can take any bowling ...
Full profile
Batting Career Summary
MInnNORunsHSAvgBFSR100200504s6sSt
Tests10617616807427850.461502153.7521239933575
ODI20019234862116254.568605100.19240487631845
T20I6360911677922.88927125.89006104326
IPL1049323256913336.71775144.7320152181037
Bowling Career Summary
MInnBRunsWktsBBIBBMEconAvgSR5W10W
Tests1065204104249/249/23.065210200
ODI2009192202715/215/26.3128.8627.4300
Career Information
Profile
Born on February 17, 1984, Abraham Benjamin de Villiers has rose from the ranks to become one of the world's best batsmen, across all formats. When on song, de Villiers can take any bowling apart with his wide array of strokes on either side of the wicket. If his drives, pulls and cuts are pleasing to the eye, his ability to innovate has left bowlers hapless on many occasions.

A talented sportsman, de Villiers has not just excelled in cricket, but has also proved himself in other sports such as golf, rugby and tennis. Cricket was his passion though, and it soon turned out to be his chosen field for higher avenues. De Villiers spent his formative years with Nashua Titans, the Pretoria based franchise.

His supreme ability caught the eye of the selectors as he was fast-tracked into the national squad at an early age of 20. He made his Test debut against England in Port Elizabeth and showed his class with a fine knock of 52 in just his fourth innings with the bat, saving South Africa from what looked like a certain defeat. He registered his first century during the same series, a fine 109 on his home ground in Centurion.

Having played both as an opener and as a lower-order wicket-keeper-batsman in his first Test series, de Villiers was earmarked for greatness. He soon proved his worth by amassing 460 runs in his first away tour to the Caribbean Islands in 2005. A slump in form ensured - de Villiers battled for runs against Australia both at home and away - he had to wait until the home series against West Indies in 2007-08 to again reach the three-figure mark. However, he made up for the lost time, spanking a fine 217 against India in Ahmedabad, the first South African player to hit a double ton against India.

It was plain sailing later on for the flamboyant right-hander as he scored runs for fun. It included a superb 278 against Pakistan in Abu Dhabi in November 2010, briefly placing him at the top of the ladder for the highest individual score by a South African batsman. De Villiers soon grew in stature, becoming one of the mainstays of the South African team in their journey to attain the No.1 Test ranking.

An attacking batsman, de Villiers showed that he had it in him to play according to the merits of the situation as well. With South Africa struggling to save the Adelaide Test against Australia during the tour Down Under in 2012-13, de Villiers curbed his natural instincts, as he blocked his way to 33 from 220 balls. In the next Test at the WACA, he showed his other side, smacking 169 from just 184 balls as the visitors ruthlessly dismantled the hosts.

De Villiers is also one of the best ever players to grace the shorter formats, where he is currently ranked as the No. 1 batsman. Most of the ODI innings played by the master batsman, would be full of believe-it-or-not innovative shots, be it the ramp over the wicket-keeper, the cheeky paddles past short fine or the audacious reverse sweeps and reverse pulls while facing up to quick bowlers. Unquestionably, with his ability to manoeuvre the field placements and his excellent hand-eye co-ordination, de Villiers has turned out to be one of the most exciting batsmen across all formats of the game.

His knock of 278 against Pakistan in Abu Dhabi, 2010 was the highest individual Test score by a South African batsman until Amla made 311 against England at The Oval in 2012.

Following South Africa's exit from the 2011 World Cup, de Villiers was named as the captain of their ODI and T20I team in June 2011. However, he soon gave up the T20I captaincy in early 2013, as he was South Africa's main batsman as well as their first choice wicket-keeper. He though, captained the T20I side for two matches in the absence of Faf du Plessis in the 2014 World T20. He led them since du Plessis was injured for one game and was suspended in the other. He was instrumental in taking South Africa to the semi-final of the tournament.

He has also been one of the most sought after players in the Indian Premier League. De Villiers has had stints with Delhi and is currently a part of the Bangalore set-up.

AB de Villiers took 11 catches against Pakistan in Johannesburg in the 2012-13 season, equalling the record for most number of catches by a wicket-keeper in a Test match. He shares the record with former England keeper, Jack Russell. He also scored an unbeaten 103 off 117 balls in South Africa's second innings. In the process, he became the first wicket-keeper to score a century and claim 10 dismissals in a Test.

On 18 March, during the third ODI against Pakistan in Johannesburg, de Villiers and Hashim Amla shared a record for the highest third-wicket partnership of 238. De Villiers scored 12 fours and three sixes in his innings of 128. In December 2013, de Villiers became the ninth batsman in history to top the batting rankings in both Tests and ODIs. He also had a wonderful three-match Test series against Australia, where he finished as the second highest run-scorer. He continued to do well in both Tests and ODIs and ended 2014 as the second highest run-getter for South Africa in both the formats, behind Amla.

On January 18, 2015, de Villiers smashed the West Indies bowlers to all corners of Johannesburg en route to recording the fastest ever hundred in ODI history. He broke Corey Anderson's record, who achieved the feat in 2014 in 36 balls. The South African took five balls fewer to score his hundred and also equalled Rohit Sharma's record for most number of sixes hit in an innings with 16 sixes, before being dismissed for a 44-ball 149.

During the 2015 World Cup, in the match against West Indies, de Villiers scored 162 runs off 66 balls leading South Africa to their second highest total in world cup history (408) on the Sydney Cricket Ground. With this feat, he also became the record holder for the fastest 50, 100, and 150 in ODI history. He amassed 482 runs in the tournament and was the third highest run-scorer.

By Cricfuss author
SAMRAT RAI 

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