Rohit Sharma

Rohit Sharma - Batsman

Apr 30, 1987
Personal Information
  • Full Name Rohit Sharma
  • Born Apr 30, 1987
  • Birth Place Nagpur, Maharashtra
  • Height --
  • Role Batsman
  • Batting Style Right Handed Bat
  • Bowling Style Right-arm offbreak
Teams
India
Mumbai Indians
India U19
Mumbai
India A
Batting Career
Format IPL ODI T20 Test
Matches 273 282 159 67
Innings 268 274 151 116
Runs 7124 11577 4231 4301
Balls 5372 12482 3003 7538
Highest 109 264 121 212
Average 29.93 48.85 31.34 40.58
SR 132.61 92.75 140.90 57.06
Not Out 30 37 16 10
Fours 646 1089 383 473
Sixes 308 357 205 88
Ducks 18 16 12 6
50s 48 61 32 18
100s 2 33 5 12
Bowling Career
Format IPL ODI T20 Test
Matches 273 282 159 67
Innings 32 40 9 16
Runs 453 533 113 224
Balls 339 610 68 383
Wickets 15 9 1 2
Avg 30.20 59.22 113.00 112.00
Eco 8.02 5.24 9.97 3.51
SR 22.60 67.78 68.00 191.50
BBI 4/6 2/27 1/22 1/26
4w 1 0 0 0
5w 0 0 0 0
About

For years, the word “talent” followed Rohit Sharma like a double-edged sword—promising greatness but often hinting at unfulfilled potential. Today, looking back at a career that spanned over a decade and delivered multiple world titles, Rohit Sharma’s journey is one of resilience, reinvention, and redemption.

From the moment whispers began in Mumbai’s cricketing circles about a teenager with elegant stroke play and timing to die for, Rohit was marked for greatness. He burst onto the domestic scene with a blistering triple century and soon earned a last-minute call-up to India’s squad for the inaugural 2007 T20 World Cup. His calm, mature half-century against South Africa at Kingsmead—facing the likes of Shaun Pollock and Makhaya Ntini—helped eliminate the hosts and marked his arrival.

Dubbed by many as the natural successor to Sachin Tendulkar, particularly because of his classical technique and Mumbai roots, Rohit’s early international career promised a lot but delivered inconsistently. Flashes of brilliance in ODIs and T20s were too often followed by lapses in shot selection and technical shortcomings. His repeated struggles with the short ball and off-stump discipline saw him miss out on the 2011 World Cup squad.

It was the Indian Premier League (IPL) that kept Rohit relevant during the lean years. From 2008 to 2010, he was a key figure for the Deccan Chargers. His switch to the Mumbai Indians (MI) in 2011 marked the beginning of a deeper association—one that would eventually help him unlock both his leadership and batting potential.

Rohit’s transformation truly began in 2013, when captain MS Dhoni made a bold move: promoting him to open the innings in ODIs. The result? India’s Champions Trophy win that year, powered in large part by a new-look opening pair—Rohit and Shikhar Dhawan.

The runs flowed. A 209 against Australia in Bangalore. A world-record 264 against Sri Lanka. Three double centuries in ODIs. He was no longer just “talented”; he was now a white-ball behemoth.

In Tests, though, the journey was rockier. A freak injury on the cusp of his debut in 2010 delayed his red-ball arrival. When it finally came in 2013, Rohit scored twin centuries in his first two Tests—one in Sachin Tendulkar’s farewell series. However, his Test career struggled to find rhythm outside India, especially on bouncier, seaming tracks in South Africa and Australia.

That began to change in the late 2010s. He retooled his game, became more compact, and adapted his technique for red-ball cricket. By 2019, he was India’s most dependable limited-overs batter—top-scoring at the ODI World Cup with 648 runs, including five centuries, a tournament record.

With Virat Kohli stepping down as T20I captain in 2021, Rohit was the natural successor. Months later, he was handed the ODI and Test captaincy as well. Under his leadership, India swept home series against Sri Lanka and Bangladesh and shared a hard-fought series in England.

But leadership was truly tested in ICC tournaments. After a crushing semifinal loss to England in the 2022 T20 World Cup, Rohit spearheaded a shift in culture—urging his team to play fearless, aggressive cricket.

That vision peaked in 2023. Rohit led India to the ODI World Cup final on home soil, providing blazing starts and selflessly putting the team ahead of personal milestones. Though India fell to Australia in the final, his leadership and intent drew praise.

Redemption followed in 2024. In Barbados, under Rohit’s leadership, India broke their ICC title drought by winning the T20 World Cup, defeating England in the semifinal and lifting the trophy against South Africa. Rohit bowed out of T20Is on a high, announcing his retirement after lifting the title.

Later that year, form deserted him in Tests. A shocking 3-0 home series loss to New Zealand, followed by defeat in the Border-Gavaskar Trophy, led Rohit to bench himself for the final Test of the Australian tour—despite being captain. It was a telling move, a reminder of his self-awareness.

But his white-ball brilliance continued. In early 2025, Rohit struck form again in ODIs, culminating in a Champions Trophy-winning performance, where he was named Player of the Final for a match-winning innings.

In April 2025, Rohit Sharma brought the curtain down on his Test career, ending a 12-year journey in the longest format. It was a farewell befitting a player who had fought hard to shed the “talent” tag and evolve into a dependable Test batter and a formidable captain.

IPL: The Launchpad and Legacy

Few players owe as much to the IPL as Rohit Sharma—and fewer still have given back as much.

He began his IPL journey with Deccan Chargers, scoring over 350 runs in each of his first three seasons. The turning point came in 2011, when he moved to Mumbai Indians. By 2013, he took over as captain—and led MI to their first-ever title that very season.

What followed was a dynasty.

Rohit led Mumbai Indians to five IPL titles, matching strategy with calmness and performance. With over 6,000 IPL runs, he is among the tournament’s all-time top scorers—behind only Virat Kohli and Shikhar Dhawan.

In a major development ahead of IPL 2024, MI replaced Rohit as captain, bringing in Hardik Pandya. Despite the leadership change, Rohit was retained ahead of the 2025 mega auction, highlighting his enduring value.

Legacy

From prodigy to proven leader, from underachiever to legend—Rohit Sharma’s career is a story of persistence, adaptability, and unrelenting self-belief.

With two ICC trophies as captain, multiple world records, and a legacy as one of India’s greatest white-ball batters, Rohit Sharma leaves behind not just numbers—but memories, milestones, and moments that shaped a generation of Indian cricket.

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