South Africa
Sri Lanka
Sep 12, 2021
19:00 IST
R.Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
South Africa
Sri Lanka
163/5 (20.0)
135/6 (20.0)
South Africa beat Sri Lanka by 28 runs
New Zealand
Bangladesh
161/5 (20.0)
134/8 (20.0)
New Zealand beat Bangladesh by 27 runs
Zimbabwe
Ireland
Sep 13, 2021
15:00 IST
Civil Service Cricket Club, Stormont, Belfast
Marathi News
Sports
Cricket
David Warner
Batsman
AustraliaA destructive, fiery left-handed opening batsman from New South Wales, David Warner became the first Australian cricketer in 132 years to get into the national team without playing a first-class game. An outstanding fielder and a hard-hitting batter, he was the leading run-scorer in the 2005-06 season when the Australia Under-19s toured India. H...
| PERSONAL INFORMATION | |
|---|---|
| Born | October, 27 1986 |
| Birth Place | Australia |
| Current age | 34 yrs. |
| Role | Batsman |
| Batting style | Left Handed |
| Bowling style | Leg break |
| BATTING STATISTICS | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M | I | N/O | R | BF | Avg | S/R | HS | 200s | 100s | 50s | 4x | 6s | |
| Test | 86 | 159 | 7 | 7311 | 10059 | 48.09 | 72.68 | 335 | 1 | 24 | 30 | 859 | 56 |
| ODI | 128 | 126 | 6 | 5455 | 5710 | 45.45 | 95.53 | 179 | 0 | 18 | 23 | 571 | 85 |
| T20I | 81 | 81 | 9 | 2265 | 1621 | 31.45 | 139.72 | 100 | 0 | 1 | 18 | 218 | 89 |
| FC | 31 | 53 | 3 | 2479 | 3403 | 49.58 | 72.84 | 211 | 1 | 8 | 9 | 325 | 20 |
| List A | 49 | 49 | 2 | 1954 | 1916 | 41.57 | 101.98 | 197 | 0 | 6 | 6 | 197 | 58 |
| T20 | 223 | 222 | 29 | 7752 | 5493 | 40.16 | 141.12 | 135 | 0 | 7 | 64 | 755 | 290 |
| BOWLING STATISTICS | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M | I | O | Balls | Maiden | R | W | AVG | S/R | E/R | BEST BOWL | 5 WKT | 10 WKT | |
| Test | 86 | 19 | 57 | 342 | 1 | 269 | 4 | 67.25 | 85.50 | 4.71 | 2/45 | 0 | 0 |
| ODI | 128 | 1 | 1 | 6 | 0 | 8 | 0 | - | - | 8.00 | 0/8 | 0 | 0 |
| T20I | |||||||||||||
| FC | 31 | 15 | 42.1 | 253 | 3 | 186 | 2 | 93.00 | 126.50 | 4.41 | 1/0 | 0 | 0 |
| List A | 49 | 7 | 23 | 138 | 0 | 150 | 4 | 37.50 | 34.50 | 6.52 | 1/11 | 0 | 0 |
| T20 | 223 | 2 | 1.1 | 7 | 0 | 15 | 0 | - | - | 12.85 | 0/2 | 0 | 0 |
A destructive, fiery left-handed opening batsman from New South Wales, David Warner became the first Australian cricketer in 132 years to get into the national team without playing a first-class game. An outstanding fielder and a hard-hitting batter, he was the leading run-scorer in the 2005-06 season when the Australia Under-19s toured India. He then proceeded to play the Under-19 World Cup.
Warner's domestic career took off brilliantly as he represented New South Wales and recorded the then highest one-day score of 165* for his team in the FR Cup, which immediately called for his selection in the Australian T20 side. He made his T20I debut in 2009 against South Africa, where he smashed a quick 89 off 43 balls and also played his first ODI in the same year. After some good performances with the bat in the T20 arena, Warner finally made his first-class debut for New South Wales in the Sheffield Shield season of 2008-09.
The best was yet to come for this talented and destructive southpaw. Despite making a quiet Test debut against New Zealand in 2011, Warner shone with a maiden international ton in only his fourth innings, smashing a blazing knock of 123* and nearly taking Australia to victory single-handedly. That knock was particularly special as it showed a different side to his game, where he battled it out under pressure and showed the temperament and patience for the longest format of the game. If that showed one side, then he displayed his natural destructive abilities against India in 2012 by ripping apart the Indian bowling attack, making his then career-best score of 180.
From there on, Warner cemented his place in the Australian team but faced immense criticism for unnecessary off-field issues which often led to disciplinary actions. A major black mark on Warner's otherwise prolific career came when he allegedly had an altercation with Joe Root just before Australia's Ashes campaign in England, in 2013. He was then dropped for the first two Tests and asked to play for Australia A in their tour to South Africa. Warner, however, fought back hard with loads of runs in the Australian domestic season and contributed heavily in the return Ashes that followed Down Under. He scored 523 runs in the series, at an average of 58.11 which included two hundreds and as many fifties.
His form in Test matches was extraordinary as he continued his prolific scoring. Made 543 runs in the 3-match Test series against South Africa in 2014, where he notched up twin hundreds in the Cape Town Test. He repeated this feat against India in Adelaide and what made this more special was the fact that the Aussies returned to cricket after the unfortunate death of Phillip Hughes. Warner struggled in the shorter formats though, not being able to score a century in ODIs and scoring only one half-century in T20Is in that period.
He eventually regained his form and was back to his best again and won the Allan Border Medal in 2016 and 2017, becoming the fourth player after Ricky Ponting, Shane Watson and Michael Clarke to win it back-to-back. To add to his laurels, David became the first Australian cricketer to score seven ODI tons in a calendar year (2016), joint second with Sourav Ganguly on the all-time list and only behind Sachin Tendulkar (9).
The left-hander was the second highest run-scorer for Australia in their 2015 World Cup winning campaign, with 345 runs in 8 games. That included a thumping of the Afghan side with a blazing 178 runs. This was an excellent year for David to say the least. His vital presence in the team was recognized and he was made deputy to Steven Smith in the Tests and ODIs. In the Indian T20 League, he successfully represented Delhi since the opening season before going on to lead Hyderabad to the trophy in 2016. In their title-winning season, he was the second highest run-getter of the tournament with 848 runs. In 2015 and 2017, he was the highest scorer with 562 and 641 runs respectively.
Just when it looked like things were going right for David Warner things took an unexpected turn and he had the darkest day in his cricketing life. During the third Test of Australia's tour of South Africa in 2018, Cameron Bancroft was caught tampering the ball with a foreign object (Sandpaper). David Warner was found to be the instigator of this scandal and was banned for 12 months by Cricket Australia. This also saw him being barred from the Indian T20 League in 2018.
David Warner made his comeback in 2019 and showed exemplary form in the 12th edition of the Indian T20 League where he finished as the highest run-scorer. His inclusion in the 2019 World Cup squad was never in doubt once he served his punishment. David batted like a man on a mission in the mega event and finished second in the list of the top run-scorers, just one run behind Rohit Sharma.
The southpaw from New South Wales is one of the few players in world cricket who are doing well across all formats and Australia will continue to benefit immensely from his presence.
| Rank | Team | Rating |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | New Zealand |
126 |
| 2 | India |
119 |
| 3 | Australia |
108 |
| 4 | England |
107 |
| 5 | Pakistan |
92 |
| 6 | South Africa |
88 |
| 7 | West Indies |
80 |
| 8 | Sri Lanka |
78 |
Last updated on 25 Aug 2021
| Rank | Player | Points |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Joe Root | 903 |
| 2 | Kane Williamson | 901 |
| 3 | Steven Smith | 891 |
| 4 | Marnus Labuschagne | 878 |
| 5 | Rohit Sharma | 813 |
| 6 | Virat Kohli | 783 |
| 7 | Babar Azam | 749 |
| 8 | David Warner | 724 |
Last updated on 08 Sep 2021
| Rank | Player | Points |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Pat Cummins | 908 |
| 2 | Ravichandran Ashwin | 831 |
| 3 | Tim Southee | 824 |
| 4 | Josh Hazlewood | 816 |
| 5 | Neil Wagner | 810 |
| 6 | Kagiso Rabada | 798 |
| 7 | James Anderson | 794 |
| 8 | Shaheen Afridi | 783 |
Last updated on 08 Sep 2021
| Rank | Player | Points |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jason Holder | 434 |
| 2 | Ben Stokes | 348 |
| 3 | Ravindra Jadeja | 338 |
| 4 | Shakib Al Hasan | 334 |
| 5 | Ravichandran Ashwin | 331 |
| 6 | Kyle Jamieson | 311 |
| 7 | Mitchell Starc | 275 |
| 8 | Pat Cummins | 249 |
Last updated on 08 Sep 2021
| Rank | Team | Rating |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | New Zealand |
121 |
| 2 | England |
119 |
| 3 | Australia |
116 |
| 4 | India |
113 |
| 5 | South Africa |
98 |
| 6 | Pakistan |
93 |
| 7 | Bangladesh |
91 |
| 8 | West Indies |
84 |
Last updated on 10 Sep 2021
| Rank | Player | Points |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Babar Azam | 873 |
| 2 | Virat Kohli | 844 |
| 3 | Rohit Sharma | 813 |
| 4 | Ross Taylor | 801 |
| 5 | Aaron Finch | 779 |
| 6 | Jonny Bairstow | 775 |
| 7 | David Warner | 762 |
| 8 | Quinton de Kock | 758 |
Last updated on 20 Aug 2021
| Rank | Player | Points |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Trent Boult | 737 |
| 2 | Josh Hazlewood | 709 |
| 3 | Mujeeb Ur Rahman | 708 |
| 4 | Chris Woakes | 700 |
| 5 | Mahedi Hasan | 692 |
| 6 | Matt Henry | 691 |
| 7 | Jasprit Bumrah | 679 |
| 8 | Mitchell Starc | 652 |
Last updated on 20 Aug 2021
| Rank | Player | Points |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Shakib Al Hasan | 416 |
| 2 | Mohammad Nabi | 294 |
| 3 | Chris Woakes | 282 |
| 4 | Rashid Khan | 270 |
| 5 | Mitchell Santner | 268 |
| 6 | Ben Stokes | 266 |
| 7 | Colin de Grandhomme | 257 |
| 8 | Imad Wasim | 256 |
Last updated on 20 Aug 2021
| Rank | Team | Rating |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | England |
278 |
| 2 | India |
266 |
| 3 | Pakistan |
261 |
| 4 | New Zealand |
257 |
| 5 | South Africa |
246 |
| 6 | Bangladesh |
241 |
| 7 | Australia |
240 |
| 8 | Afghanistan |
236 |
Last updated on 11 Sep 2021
| Rank | Player | Points |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Dawid Malan | 841 |
| 2 | Babar Azam | 819 |
| 3 | Aaron Finch | 733 |
| 4 | Devon Conway | 728 |
| 5 | Virat Kohli | 717 |
| 6 | KL Rahul | 699 |
| 7 | Mohammad Rizwan | 692 |
| 8 | Evin Lewis | 664 |
Last updated on 11 Sep 2021
| Rank | Player | Points |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Tabraiz Shamsi | 792 |
| 2 | Wanindu Hasaranga | 764 |
| 3 | Rashid Khan | 719 |
| 4 | Adil Rashid | 689 |
| 5 | Mujeeb Ur Rahman | 687 |
| 6 | Ashton Agar | 649 |
| 7 | Adam Zampa | 648 |
| 8 | Tim Southee | 630 |
Last updated on 11 Sep 2021
| Rank | Player | Points |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Shakib Al Hasan | 291 |
| 2 | Mohammad Nabi | 285 |
| 3 | Richie Berrington | 194 |
| 5 | Collins Obuya | 153 |
| 6 | Rohan Mustafa | 152 |
| 7 | Glenn Maxwell | 151 |
| 8 | Ryan Burl | 142 |
| 9 | Mitchell Marsh | 141 |
Last updated on 11 Sep 2021
12 Sep 2021
Sri Lanka
South Africa19:00, R.Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
13 Sep 2021
Ireland
Zimbabwe15:00, Civil Service Cricket Club, Stormont, Belfast
14 Sep 2021
Sri Lanka
South Africa19:00, R.Premadasa Stadium, Colombo
15 Sep 2021
Scotland
Zimbabwe18:30, Grange Cricket Club, Raeburn Place, Edinburgh
17 Sep 2021
Pakistan
New Zealand15:00, Pindi Club Ground, Rawalpindi
17 Sep 2021
Scotland
Zimbabwe18:30, Grange Cricket Club, Raeburn Place, Edinburgh
19 Sep 2021
Pakistan
New Zealand15:00, Pindi Club Ground, Rawalpindi
19 Sep 2021
Scotland
Zimbabwe18:30, Grange Cricket Club, Raeburn Place, Edinburgh
21 Sep 2021
Pakistan
New Zealand15:00, Pindi Club Ground, Rawalpindi
25 Sep 2021
Pakistan
New Zealand19:30, Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore
26 Sep 2021
Pakistan
New Zealand19:30, Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore
29 Sep 2021
Pakistan
New Zealand19:30, Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore
01 Oct 2021
Pakistan
New Zealand19:30, Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore
03 Oct 2021
Pakistan
New Zealand19:30, Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore
07 Oct 2021
Oman
Sri Lanka19:30, Al Amerat Cricket Ground Oman Cricket (Ministry Turf 1), Oman
09 Oct 2021
Oman
Sri Lanka19:30, Al Amerat Cricket Ground Oman Cricket (Ministry Turf 1), Oman
13 Oct 2021
Pakistan
England18:30, Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium, Rawalpindi
14 Oct 2021
Pakistan
England18:30, Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium, Rawalpindi
17 Oct 2021
Bangladesh
Scotland19:30, Al Amerat Cricket Ground Oman Cricket (Ministry Turf 1), Oman
18 Oct 2021
Ireland
Netherlands15:30, Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi
18 Oct 2021
Sri Lanka
Namibia19:30, Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi
19 Oct 2021
Oman
Bangladesh19:30, Al Amerat Cricket Ground Oman Cricket (Ministry Turf 1), Oman
20 Oct 2021
Sri Lanka
Ireland19:30, Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi
21 Oct 2021
Bangladesh
Papua New Guinea15:30, Al Amerat Cricket Ground Oman Cricket (Ministry Turf 1), Oman
22 Oct 2021
Namibia
Ireland15:30, Sharjah Cricket Stadium, Sharjah
22 Oct 2021
Sri Lanka
Netherlands19:30, Sharjah Cricket Stadium, Sharjah
23 Oct 2021
Australia
South Africa15:30, Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi
23 Oct 2021
England
West Indies19:30, Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai
24 Oct 2021
India
Pakistan19:30, Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai
25 Oct 2021
Afghanistan
T.B.C.19:30, Sharjah Cricket Stadium, Sharjah
26 Oct 2021
South Africa
West Indies15:30, Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai
26 Oct 2021
Pakistan
New Zealand19:30, Sharjah Cricket Stadium, Sharjah
27 Oct 2021
England
T.B.C.15:30, Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi
28 Oct 2021
Australia
T.B.C.19:30, Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai
29 Oct 2021
West Indies
T.B.C.15:30, Sharjah Cricket Stadium, Sharjah
29 Oct 2021
Afghanistan
Pakistan19:30, Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai
30 Oct 2021
South Africa
T.B.C.15:30, Sharjah Cricket Stadium, Sharjah
30 Oct 2021
England
Australia19:30, Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai
31 Oct 2021
India
New Zealand19:30, Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai
31 Oct 2021
Afghanistan
T.B.C.15:30, Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi
01 Nov 2021
England
T.B.C.19:30, Sharjah Cricket Stadium, Sharjah
02 Nov 2021
South Africa
T.B.C.15:30, Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi
02 Nov 2021
Pakistan
T.B.C.19:30, Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi
03 Nov 2021
India
Afghanistan19:30, Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi
03 Nov 2021
New Zealand
T.B.C.15:30, Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai
04 Nov 2021
Australia
T.B.C.15:30, Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai
04 Nov 2021
West Indies
T.B.C.19:30, Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi
05 Nov 2021
India
T.B.C.19:30, Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai
05 Nov 2021
New Zealand
T.B.C.15:30, Sharjah Cricket Stadium, Sharjah
06 Nov 2021
Australia
West Indies15:30, Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi
06 Nov 2021
England
South Africa19:30, Sharjah Cricket Stadium, Sharjah
07 Nov 2021
New Zealand
Afghanistan15:30, Sheikh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi
07 Nov 2021
Pakistan
T.B.C.19:30, Sharjah Cricket Stadium, Sharjah
08 Nov 2021
India
T.B.C.19:30, Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai
26 Nov 2021
South Africa
Netherlands13:30, SuperSport Park, Centurion
27 Nov 2021
Australia
Afghanistan05:00, Bellerive Oval, Hobart
28 Nov 2021
South Africa
Netherlands13:30, SuperSport Park, Centurion
01 Dec 2021
South Africa
Netherlands13:30, SuperSport Park, Centurion
08 Dec 2021
Australia
England05:30, Brisbane Cricket Ground (Woolloongabba), Brisbane
16 Dec 2021
Australia
England09:30, Adelaide Oval, Adelaide
17 Dec 2021
South Africa
India16:28, The Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg
26 Dec 2021
South Africa
India13:30, SuperSport Park, Centurion
26 Dec 2021
Australia
England05:00, Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG), Melbourne
03 Jan 2022
South Africa
India13:30, The Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg
05 Jan 2022
Australia
England05:00, Sydney Cricket Ground (SCG), Sydney
11 Jan 2022
South Africa
India16:30, Boland Park, Paarl
14 Jan 2022
South Africa
India13:30, The Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg
14 Jan 2022
Australia
England08:00, W.A.C.A. Ground, Perth
16 Jan 2022
South Africa
India13:30, The Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg
19 Jan 2022
South Africa
India16:30, Newlands, Cape Town
21 Jan 2022
South Africa
India19:30, Newlands, Cape Town
23 Jan 2022
South Africa
India17:30, Paarl Cricket Club, Paarl
26 Jan 2022
South Africa
India18:30, Paarl Cricket Club, Paarl
29 Jan 2022
West Indies
England03:30, To Be Confirmed
30 Jan 2022
Australia
New Zealand09:10, W.A.C.A. Ground, Perth
31 Jan 2022
West Indies
England03:30, To Be Confirmed
02 Feb 2022
Australia
New Zealand08:40, Bellerive Oval, Hobart
03 Feb 2022
West Indies
England03:30, To Be Confirmed
05 Feb 2022
West Indies
England03:30, To Be Confirmed
05 Feb 2022
Australia
New Zealand08:40, Sydney Cricket Ground (SCG), Sydney
06 Feb 2022
West Indies
England03:30, To Be Confirmed
08 Feb 2022
Australia
New Zealand13:40, Manuka Oval, Canberra
11 Feb 2022
Australia
Sri Lanka13:30, Sydney Cricket Ground (SCG), Sydney
13 Feb 2022
Australia
Sri Lanka13:40, Brisbane Cricket Ground (Woolloongabba), Brisbane
15 Feb 2022
Australia
Sri Lanka13:40, Carrara Oval, Carrara
18 Feb 2022
Australia
Sri Lanka13:40, Adelaide Oval, Adelaide
20 Feb 2022
Australia
Sri Lanka10:00, Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG), Melbourne
08 Mar 2022
West Indies
England19:30, To Be Confirmed
16 Mar 2022
West Indies
England19:30, To Be Confirmed
18 Mar 2022
South Africa
Bangladesh13:30, To Be Confirmed
20 Mar 2022
South Africa
Bangladesh13:30, To Be Confirmed
23 Mar 2022
South Africa
Bangladesh13:30, To Be Confirmed
24 Mar 2022
West Indies
England19:30, To Be Confirmed
30 Mar 2022
South Africa
Bangladesh13:30, Westridge, Cape Town
07 Apr 2022
South Africa
Bangladesh13:30, Curries Fountain, Durban
02 Jun 2022
England
New Zealand15:30, Lord's, London
10 Jun 2022
England
New Zealand15:30, Trent Bridge, Nottingham
23 Jun 2022
England
New Zealand15:30, Headingley, Leeds
01 Jul 2022
England
India22:30, Old Trafford, Manchester
03 Jul 2022
England
India22:30, Trent Bridge, Nottingham
06 Jul 2022
England
India22:30, The Rose Bowl, Southampton
09 Jul 2022
England
India15:30, Edgbaston, Birmingham
12 Jul 2022
England
India15:30, The Oval, London
14 Jul 2022
England
India15:30, Lord's, London
19 Jul 2022
England
South Africa15:30, Riverside Ground, Chester-le-Street
22 Jul 2022
England
South Africa15:30, Old Trafford, Manchester
24 Jul 2022
England
South Africa15:30, Headingley, Leeds
27 Jul 2022
England
South Africa22:30, County Ground, Bristol
28 Jul 2022
England
South Africa22:30, Sophia Gardens, Cardiff
31 Jul 2022
England
South Africa22:30, The Rose Bowl, Southampton
17 Aug 2022
England
South Africa15:30, Lord's, London
25 Aug 2022
England
South Africa15:30, Edgbaston, Birmingham
08 Sep 2022
England
South Africa15:30, The Oval, London