Saturday, November 20, 2010

Rahul Dravid Profile

Rahul Dravid Profile



Rahul Dravid is probably one of the last classical Test match batsmen. His progress into the national side may have been steady and methodical rather than meteoric, but once there, Dravid established himself at the vanguard of a new, defiant generation that were no longer easybeats away from home. Armed with an orthodox technique drilled into him by Keki Tarapore, he became the cement that held the foundations firm while the flair players expressed themselves. Yet, for a man quickly stereotyped as one-paced and one-dimensional, he too could stroke the ball around when the mood struck him.

Never a natural athlete, he compensated with sheer hard work and powers of concentration that were almost yogic. At Adelaide in 2003, when India won a Test in Australia for the first time in a generation, he batted 835 minutes over two innings. A few months later, he was at the crease more than 12 hours for the 270 that clinched India's first series win in Pakistan.

Initially seen as a liability in the one-day arena, he retooled his game over the years to become an adept middle-order finisher. The heaves and swipes didn't come naturally, but by the time the selectors eased him aside in early 2008, he had more than 10,000 runs to his name in the 50-over game. There had also been a lengthy phase where he donned the wicketkeeping gloves, helping the team to find a balance that was crucial in the run to the World Cup final in 2003.

However, it's his Test exploits that he will be most remember for. After impressing in a Lord's debut where he was eclipsed by Sourav Ganguly, Dravid's breakthrough innings arrived at the Wanderers a few months later, against a South African attack accustomed to bullying visitors. A brief slump followed, but he emerged from that with perhaps one of the most famous supporting acts of all, to VVS Laxman in an Eden Gardens Test that rejuvenated Indian cricket. The half decade that followed was a golden one with the bat, as tours of England and Australia realised more than 600 runs. A two-year stint as captain, following Ganguly's axing, was less successful, though he did lead the side to series victories in England and the West Indies for the first time in a generation.

Resigning the captaincy didn't free his batting from the shackles immediately, but by the time Sri Lanka arrived in 2009, Dravid had regained the positivity that some thought he had lost forever. By then, he had gone past Mark Waugh to become the most successful slip catcher in history, and grown into his role as senior statesman of a team that was finally keeping pace with the expectation of the teeming multitudes.

Full name Rahul Sharad Dravid

Born January 11, 1973, Indore, Madhya Pradesh

Current age 37 years 314 days

Major teams India, Scotland, Asia XI, ICC World XI, Karnataka, Kent, Royal Challengers Bangalore

Nickname The Wall

Batting style Right-hand bat

Bowling style Right-arm offbreak

Fielding position Occasional wicketkeeper

Education St. Joseph's Boys' High School

Batting and fielding averages

    Mat     Inns     NO     Runs     HS     Ave     BF     SR     100     50     4s     6s     Ct     St
Tests     146     252     29     11752     270     52.69     27742     42.36     30     59     1480     18     199     0
ODIs     339     313     40     10765     153     39.43     15124     71.17     12     82     941     42     196     14
First-class     278     460     64     22135     270     55.89             61     113             340     1
List A     444     411     55     15147     153     42.54             21     111             233     17
Twenty20     54     47     5     1187     75*     28.26     989     120.02     0     6     130     20     11     0

Bowling averages

    Mat     Inns     Balls     Runs     Wkts     BBI     BBM     Ave     Econ     SR     4w     5w     10
Tests     146     5     120     39     1     1/18     1/18     39.00     1.95     120.0     0     0     0
ODIs     339     8     186     170     4     2/43     2/43     42.50     5.48     46.5     0     0     0
First-class     278         617     273     5     2/16         54.60     2.65     123.4         0     0
List A     444         477     421     4     2/43     2/43     105.25     5.29     119.2     0     0     0
Twenty20     54     -     -     -     -     -     -     -     -     -     -     -     -

Career statistics

Test debut     England v India at Lord's, Jun 20-24, 1996
Last Test     India v New Zealand at Hyderabad (Deccan), Nov 12-16, 2010
ODI debut     India v Sri Lanka at Singapore, Apr 3, 1996
Last ODI     India v West Indies at Johannesburg, Sep 30, 2009
First-class debut     1990/91
Last First-class     India v New Zealand at Hyderabad (Deccan), Nov 12-16, 2010
List A debut     1992/93
Last List A     Karnataka v Bengal at Vadodara, Feb 27, 2010
Twenty20 debut     Karnataka v Gujarat at Mumbai (BS), Apr 17, 2007
Last Twenty20     Chennai Super Kings v Royal Challengers Bangalore at Durban, Sep 24, 2010

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