Jonny Bairstow

Jonny Bairstow - Wicketkeeper

Sep 26, 1989
Personal Information
  • Full Name Jonny Bairstow
  • Born Sep 26, 1989
  • Birth Place Bradford, Yorkshire
  • Height
  • Role Wicketkeeper
  • Batting Style Right Handed Bat
  • Bowling Style Right-arm medium
Teams
Mumbai Indians
Yorkshire
Welsh Fire
MI Emirates
Sunrisers Eastern Cape
Batting Career
Format IPL ODI T20 Test
Matches 50 107 125 100
Innings 50 98 106 178
Runs 1589 3868 2616 6042
Balls 1100 3758 1845 10228
Highest 114 141 116 167
Average 31.78 39.47 24.68 33.94
SR 144.45 102.93 141.79 59.07
Not Out 4 8 20 12
Fours 166 437 527 721
Sixes 69 92 125 56
Ducks 3 17 8 17
50s 9 17 14 26
100s 2 11 1 12
Bowling Career
Format IPL ODI T20 Test
Matches 50 107 125 100
Innings 0 0 0 0
Runs 0 0 0 0
Balls 0 0 0 0
Wickets 0 0 0 0
Avg 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
Eco 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
SR 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00
BBI 0 0 0 0
4w 0 0 0 0
5w 0 0 0 0
About

A right-handed wicket-keeping batsman who plays for Yorkshire, Jonny Bairstow is the son of former England keeper David Bairstow. His introduction to the game was natural and came at an early age, and within no time rich accolades came his way. He was chosen as the winner of the Young Wisden Schools Cricketer of the year award for his 654 runs in the 2007 season. Soon, he went on to represent Yorkshire's second XI and impressed many with his consistent batting, scoring 308 runs at an average of 61.6 in 2008. This included a 139 not out against Worcestershire at Headingley Carnegie. In October that year, Bairstow signed a full time contract with the county side.

On his first class debut in 2009, he top-scored with an unbeaten 82 in the second innings. He went on to become a regular in the county team over the next two years, and averaged more than forty in both. He scored eight fifties, but could not convert them into triple-figure scores. 2011 turned out to be a better year for the youngster, as he was selected in the England Lions squad for the tour to West Indies in January. In May that year, he scored his maiden first-class century (which he converted into a double) and was picked for the national squad to play against Ireland in an ODI game in August. However, he was not selected in the playing eleven.

His first international appearance came in the fifth ODI game against the visiting Indians in Cardiff, and he made it special with a stunning 21-ball 41 to help England win the match. Further success during a warm-up match against India and in T20s against Pakistan led to Bairstow's first Test call to face West Indies. At the beginning of the 2012 season, Baristow had hit two brilliant hundreds for Yorkshire and was eager to capitalize on that achievement. His Test debut against West Indies, however, was not that eventful and was mediocre with the bat.
Although Bairstow was selected in the England squad for the 2012 ICC World Twenty20, his contribution was negligible and failed to flourish with the bat. Bairstow was included in the England team that toured India in 2012-2013 and performed exceptionally well in the warm-up match against Mumbai A, hitting a remarkable 118. He was only included in the squad for the second Test to replace Ian Bell but did not make a significant contribution to warrant an inclusion for the third Test.

A strong 64 laced with powerful cuts and controlled pulls at his home ground in Headingley against the Kiwis in 2013 handed Bairstow his much awaited Ashes debut at Nottingham. However, Bairstow managed only a lone fifty in the 4 games he played to cap a rather shoddy series. Bairstow then traveled to Australia for the return Ashes series and played a couple of games at Melbourne and Sydney respectively, but could not do anything special to bail his side out of trouble. It was the tour of South Africa in 2015 that saw Bairstow turning to his best.

The wicket-keeper batsman made his maiden Test hundred in Cape Town, was involved in a stunning 399-run stand with Ben Stokes for the sixth wicket and ended the series with 359 runs at an astonishing average of 89.75. He then began the home summer with two hundreds against Sri Lanka. A solid series against Pakistan was followed by solid showing in his first tour of the sub-continent. 2016 was a year to remember for Bairstow - not just for his 1470 runs at an average of 58.8 but also for his 70 dismissals as a wicket-keeper, a record for the most dismissals by a keeper in a calendar year.

IPL through the years
Jonny Bairstow registered for the IPL for the first time only in 2019, and was picked by Sunrisers Hyderabad. He formed a lethal combination there alongside David Warner, opening the batting. The duo both scored centuries in a game against RCB that season - first and only time in the IPL that two openers have scored tons. Bairstow averaged in excess of 55 and held a strike rate of over 150 in his first season.

The next season however there were depreciating returns from Bairstow as the IPL shifted to the UAE, as Bairstow’s strike rate dropped below 125 and his average dipped to 31.96. The next season, he started brilliantly for SRH- scoring 248 runs in seven matches before the IPL was called off, and then didn’t turn up for the UAE leg of the competition citing bubble fatigue. Bairstow was picked by Punjab Kings in the 2022 mega auction, and had a sketchy tournament as he was being batted all round the order. Bairstow was retained for the 2023 season but has been ruled out due to injury.

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