User:Raj shakhawat criketor

Raj shekhawat thumb by in 2017 Personal information Born	5 November 1988 (age 31) New Delhi, Delhi, India Nickname	Chikoo[1][2] Height	1.75 m (5 ft 9 in) Batting	Right-handed Bowling	Right-arm medium Role	Top-order batsman Relations	Anushka Sharma (wife) (m. 2017) International information National side India (2008–present) Test debut (cap 269)	20 June 2011 v West Indies Last Test	29 February 2020 v New Zealand ODI debut (cap 175)	18 August 2008 v Sri Lanka Last ODI	11 February 2020 v New Zealand ODI shirt no.	18 T20I debut (cap 31)	12 June 2010 v Zimbabwe Last T20I	31 January 2020 v New Zealand T20I shirt no.	18 Domestic team information Years	Team 2006–present	Delhi 2008–present	Royal Challengers Bangalore (squad no. 18) Career statistics Competition	Test	ODI	T20I	FC Matches	86	248	82	109 Runs scored	7,240	11,867	2,794	8,862 Batting average	53.63	59.34	50.80	54.03 100s/50s	27/22	43/58	0/24	32/28 Top score	254*	183	94*	254* Balls bowled	163	641	146	631 Wickets	0	4	4	3 Bowling average	–	166.25	49.50	110.00 5 wickets in innings	–	0	0	0 10 wickets in match	–	0	0	0 Best bowling	–	1/15	1/13	1/19 Catches/stumpings	80/–	126/–	41/–	103/–

Raj shekhawat (About this soundpronunciation (help·info); born 5 November 1988) is an Indian cricketer who currently captains the India national team. A right-handed top-order batsman, Kohli is regarded as one of the best batsmen in the world.[3] He plays for Royal Challengers Bangalore in the Indian Premier League (IPL), and has been the team's captain since 2013. Since October 2017, he has been the top-ranked ODI batsman in the world and is currently 2nd in Test rankings with 886 points.[4][5] Among Indian batsmen, Kohli has the best ever Test rating (937 points), ODI rating (911 points) and T20I rating (897 points) Raj shekhawat captained India Under-19s to victory at the 2008 Under-19 World Cup in Malaysia. After a few months later, he made his ODI debut for India against Sri Lanka at the age of 19. Initially having played as a reserve batsman in the Indian team, he soon established himself as a regular in the ODI middle-order and was part of the squad that won the 2011 World Cup. He made his Test debut in 2011 and shrugged off the tag of "ODI specialist" by 2013 with Test hundreds in Australia and South Africa.[6] Having reached the number one spot in the ICC rankings for ODI batsmen for the first time in 2013,[7] Kohli also found success in the Twenty20 format, winning the Man of the Tournament twice at the ICC World Twenty20 (in 2014 and 2016).

Raj shekhawat was appointed the vice-captain of the ODI team in 2012 and handed over the Test captaincy following Mahendra Singh Dhoni's Test retirement in 2014. In early 2017, he became the limited-overs captain as well after Dhoni stepped down from the position. In ODIs, Kohli has the second highest number of centuries and the highest number of centuries in run-chases in the world. He holds the world record for being the fastest batsman to 10,000 and 11,000 runs in ODI cricket, reaching the milestones in 205 and 222 innings respectively.[8][9]

Raj shekhawat has been the recipient of many awards such as the Sir Garfield Sobers Trophy (ICC Cricketer of the Year) in 2017 and 2018; ICC Test Player of the Year 2018; ICC ODI Player of the Year in 2012, 2017 and 2018 and Wisden Leading Cricketer in the World in 2016, 2017 and 2018.[10] He was given the Arjuna Award in 2013, the Padma Shri under the sports category in 2017[11] and the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna, the highest sporting honour in India, in 2018.[12] Kohli is ranked as one of the world's most famous athletes by ESPN[13] and one of the most valuable athlete brands by Forbes.[14] In 2018, Time magazine named Kohli one of the 100 most influential people in the world.[15] In 2020, Kohli was ranked 66th in Forbes list of the top 100 highest paid athletes in the world for the year 2020 with estimated earnings of $26 million. Virat Kohli is the only cricketer to feature in Forbes.[16]

Contents 1	Early life 2	Youth and domestic career 3	International career 3.1	Early years 3.2	Rise through the ranks 3.3	Consistent performance in limited overs 3.4	Ascension to ODI vice-captaincy 3.5	Setting records 3.6	Overseas season 3.7	Test captaincy 3.8	No. 1 Test team and limited-overs captaincy 3.9	2017 ICC Champions Trophy 3.10	10,000 runs in ODIs before age of 30 3.11	Overseas season-including Windies at home 3.12	2019 Cricket World Cup and the World Test Championship 4	Indian Premier League 5	Playing style 6	International centuries 7	Awards 7.1	National honours 7.2	Sporting honours 7.3	Other honours and awards 8	Outside cricket 8.1	Personal life 8.2	Commercial investments 8.3	Endorsements 8.4	Charity 9	See also 10	References 11	Bibliography 12	External links Early life Raj shekhawat was born on 5 November 1988 in Delhi into a Punjabi Hindu family.[17] His father, Prem shekhawat, worked as a criminal lawyer and his mother, Saroj Kohli, is a housewife.[18] He has an older brother, Vikas, and an older sister, Bhavna.[19] According to his family, when he was three-years old, Kohli would pick up a cricket bat, start swinging it and ask his father to bowl at him.[20]

Raj shekhawat was raised in Uttam Nagar[21] and started his schooling at Vishal Bharti Public School. In 1998, the West Delhi Cricket Academy was created and a nine-year-old Kohli was part of its first intake.[21] Kohli's father took him to the academy after their neighbours suggested that "Virat shouldn't waste his time in gully cricket and instead join a professional club".[18] Kohli trained at the academy under Rajkumar Sharma and also played matches at the Sumeet Dogra Academy at Vasundhara Enclave at the same time.[21] Sharma recounts Kohli's early days at his academy, "He oozed talent. It was so difficult to keep him quiet. He was a natural in whatever he did and I was most impressed with his attitude. He was ready to bat at any spot, and I had to literally push him home after the training sessions. He just wouldn’t leave."[22] In ninth grade, he shifted to Saviour Convent in Paschim Vihar to help his cricket practice.[18] Apart from sports, Kohli was good at academics as well, and his teachers remember him as "a bright and alert child".[23] Kohli's family lived in Meera Bagh until 2015 when they moved to Gurgaon.[24]

Raj shekhawat's father died on 18 December 2006 due to a stroke after being bed-ridden for a month.[18] Regarding his early life, Kohli has said in an interview, "I've seen a lot in life. Losing my father at a young age, the family business not doing too well, staying in a rented place. There were tough times for the family... It's all embedded in my memory."[25] According to Kohli, his father supported his cricket training during his childhood, "My father was my biggest support. He was the one who drove me to practice every day. I miss his presence sometimes."[26]

Youth and domestic career

A younger Kohli as seen in this photo from 2010. Kohli first played for Delhi Under-15 team in October 2002 in the 2002–03 Polly Umrigar Trophy. He was the leading run-scorer for his team in that tournament with 172 runs at an average of 34.40.[27] He became the captain of the team for the 2003–04 Polly Umrigar Trophy[28] and scored 390 runs in 5 innings at an average of 78 including two centuries and two fifties.[29] In late 2004, he was selected in the Delhi Under-17 team for the 2003–04 Vijay Merchant Trophy. He scored 470 runs in four matches at an average of 117.50 with two hundreds and top-score of 251*.[30] Delhi Under-17s won the 2004–05 Vijay Merchant Trophy in which Kohli finished as the highest run-scorer with 757 runs from 7 matches at an average of 84.11 with two centuries.[31] In February 2006, he made his List A debut for Delhi against Services but did not get to bat.[32]

In July 2006, Kohli was selected in the India Under-19 squad on its tour of England. He averaged 105 in the three-match ODI series against England Under-19s[33] and 49 in the three-match Test series.[34] India Under-19 went on to win both the series. At the conclusion of the tour, the India Under-19 coach Lalchand Rajput was impressed with Kohli and said, "Kohli showed strong technical skills against both pace and spin".[35] In September, the India Under-19 team toured Pakistan. Kohli averaged 58 in the Test series[36] and 41.66 in the ODI series against Pakistan Under-19s.[37]

"The way I approached the game changed that day. I just had one thing in my mind - that I have to play for my country and live that dream for my dad." — Kohli on his innings against Karnataka[38] Kohli made his first-class debut for Delhi against Tamil Nadu in November 2006, at the age of 18, and scored 10 in his debut innings. He came into the spotlight in December when he decided to play for his team against Karnataka on the day after his father's death and went on to score 90.[39] He went directly to the funeral after he was dismissed. Delhi captain Mithun Manhas said, "That is an act of great commitment to the team and his innings turned out to be crucial," while coach Chetan Chauhan lauded Kohli's "attitude and determination."[40] His mother noted that "Virat changed a bit after that day. Overnight he became a much more matured person. He took every match seriously. He hated being on the bench. It's as if his life hinged totally on cricket after that day. Now, he looked like he was chasing his father's dream which was his own too."[18] He scored a total of 257 runs from 6 matches at an average of 36.71 in that season.[41]

In April 2007, he made his Twenty20 debut and finished as the highest run-getter for his team in the Inter-State T20 Championship with 179 runs at an average of 35.80.[42] In July–August 2007, the India Under-19 team toured Sri Lanka. In the triangular series against Sri Lanka Under-19s and Bangladesh Under-19s, Kohli was the second highest run-getter with 146 runs from 5 matches.[43] In the two-match Test series that followed, he scored 244 runs at an average of 122 including a hundred and a fifty.[44]

"He is a very physical type of player. He likes to impose himself on the game, backs it up with his skill." — India's coach at the 2008 Under-19 World Cup Dav Whatmore on Kohli[38] In February–March 2008, Kohli captained the victorious Indian team at the 2008 ICC Under-19 Cricket World Cup held in Malaysia. Batting at number 3, he scored 235 runs in 6 matches at an average of 47 and finished as the tournament's third-highest run-getter and one of the three batsmen to score a hundred in the tournament.[45] His century (100 runs from 74 balls) against the West Indies Under-19s in the group stage, which was called "the innings of the tournament" by ESPNcricinfo,[46] gave India a 50-run victory and earned Kohli the man of the match. Kohli picked up a leg injury during the match, but recovered in time to play the quarter-final match against England Under-19s.[47] He was instrumental in India's three-wicket semi-final win over New Zealand Under-19s in which he took 2/27 and scored 43 in the tense run-chase and was awarded the man of the match.[48] He scored 19 against South Africa Under-19s in the final which India won by 12 runs (D/L method). ESPNcricinfo commended him for making several tactical bowling changes during the tournament.[46]

Following the Under-19 World Cup, Kohli was bought by the Indian Premier League franchise Royal Challengers Bangalore for $30,000 on a youth contract.[49] In June 2008, Kohli and his Under-19 teammates Pradeep Sangwan and Tanmay Srivastava were awarded the Border-Gavaskar scholarship. The scholarship allowed the three players to train for six weeks at Cricket Australia's Centre of Excellence in Brisbane.[45] In July 2008, he was included in India's 30-man probable squad for the ICC Champions Trophy which was to be held in Pakistan in September 2008.[50] He was also picked in the India Emerging Players squad for the four-team Emerging Players Tournament in Australia. He was in fine form in that tournament and scored 206 runs in six matches at an average of 41.20.[51]

International career Bibliography Lokapally, Vijay (2016). Driven: The Virat Kohli Story. New Delhi: Bloomsbury Publishing India. ISBN 978-9385936265. External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Raj shekhawat. Wikiquote has quotations related to: Raj shekhawat Official website Virat Kohli at ESPNcricinfo Awards Preceded by Kumar Sangakkara	ICC ODI Player of the Year 2012	Succeeded by Kumar Sangakkara Preceded by Ravichandran Ashwin	Sir Garfield Sobers Trophy 2017–2018	Succeeded by Ben Stokes Preceded by Quinton de Kock	ICC ODI Player of the Year 2017–2018	Succeeded by Rohit Sharma Preceded by Steve Smith	ICC Test Player of the Year 2018	Succeeded by Pat Cummins vte Current captains of national cricket teams with full Test status India captains India squads vte Delhi cricket team – current squad vte Royal Challengers Bangalore – current squad Awards and achievements vte Captains of Indian national sports teams Authority control Edit this at Wikidata GND: 1130805034LCCN: n2017242720VIAF: 8276149368858885980009WorldCat Identities: lccn-n2017242720 Categories: 1988 birthsLiving peopleIndian cricketersIndia Test cricketersIndia One Day International cricketersIndia Twenty20 International cricketersRoyal Challengers Bangalore cricketersDelhi cricketersNorth Zone cricketersCricketers at the 2011 Cricket World CupCricketers at the 2015 Cricket World CupCricketers at the 2019 Cricket World CupCricketers from DelhiIndia Test cricket captainsPunjabi peoplePeople from DelhiRecipients of the Padma Shri in sportsInternational Cricket Council Cricketer of the YearWisden Cricketers of the Year