List of cricketers who have carried the bat in international cricket
In cricket, the phrase "carrying the bat" refers to a situation in which an opening batsman remains not out at the end of an innings where all the 10 wickets have fallen;[1] the other 10 players in the team have all been dismissed.[2] It may also be used in situations where one or more of these players are unable to bat due to retiring out or causes like injury or illness, and the remaining players are dismissed. It is not used, however, in any other situation where the innings closes before all 10 wickets have fallen, such as when it is declared closed, or when the team successfully chases a set run target to win the match. A rare feat,[3] this has happened only 69 times in international cricket spanning all three formats—Tests, One Day Internationals (ODIs) and Twenty20 Internationals (T20Is).
In Tests, South African Bernard Tancred was the first cricketer to carry the bat; he made 26 runs in his team's total of 47 against England in 1889.[lower-alpha 1][4] The following year, Jack Barrett of Australia became the first player to carry the bat on debut.[5] In the 1892 tour of Australia, England's Bobby Abel scored 132 and became the first player to score a century while carrying the bat. The following year, Bill Woodfull of Australia set a new record by becoming the first player to perform this feat twice in Tests;[6] he scored 73 not out during the third test of England's 1933 tour.[lower-alpha 2] Apart from Woodfull, five other cricketers have performed this feat more than once in their in Test careers—while Bill Lawry (Australia), Glenn Turner (New Zealand) and Len Hutton (England)[lower-alpha 3][7] have done it twice, Dean Elgar (South Africa) and Desmond Haynes (West Indies) have performed the feat on three occasions.[8] As of December 2018, New Zealand's Tom Latham's 264, against Sri Lanka in December 2018, is the highest score in Test cricket by a player while carrying the bat.[9] The Australian players have performed this feat more than any other,[lower-alpha 4] followed by England. In all, 48 players have carried their bats on 56 occasions in Test cricket.[lower-alpha 5]
In ODIs, there have been only 12 instances of a player carrying their bat. The first occasion was when Grant Flower made 84—in Zimbabwe's total of 205—against England in December 1994.[10][11] The following year, Saeed Anwar became the first player to score an ODI century while carrying his bat; he made 103 against Zimbabwe in Harare. England's Nick Knight surpassed Anwar's score and went on to make 125 against Pakistan in 1996.[10]
Key
Symbol | Meaning |
---|---|
Runs | Number of runs scored by the batsman |
Total | Number of runs scored by the team |
Not all 10 wickets fell in the innings | |
Inn | Innings in which the bat was carried |
Date | Day on which the match was held |
Result | Result for the team for which the bat was carried |
Tests
ODIs
T20Is
No | Name | Runs | Total | Inn. | Team | Opposition | Venue | Date | Result | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Chris Gayle | 63* | 101 | 2 | West Indies | Sri Lanka | The Oval, London, England | 19 June 2009 | Lost | [81] |
Notes
- As of March 2018, this remains the lowest score by a batsman carrying the bat.
- He previously carried the bat against England in 1928, scoring 30 runs.
- Hutton is the only player to make centuries on both the occasions.
- 11 players have carried their bats on 13 occasions
- Out of the 56 occasions, 35 have resulted in a batsman scoring a century.
- Charles Kellaway and Jack Gregory were absent hurt.
- Bert Oldfield was absent hurt.
- Graham McKenzie was retired hurt.
- Khaled Mashud was absent hurt.
- Gary Kirsten, Gibbs' opening partner, was retired hurt.
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