Kedar Jadhav

Kedar Jadhav
Personal information
Full name Kedar Mahadav Jadhav
Born 1985
Pune, Maharashtra, India
Height 165 cm (5 ft 5 in)
Batting style Right-handed
Bowling style Right arm off break
Role Batsman; Occasional wicket-keeper
International information
National side
ODI debut 16 November 2014 v Sri Lanka
Last ODI 23 October 2016 v New Zealand
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
2007–present Maharashtra
2010 Delhi Daredevils
2011 Kochi Tuskers Kerala
2013–2015 Delhi Daredevils (squad no. 18)
2016–present Royal Challengers Bangalore
Career statistics
Competition ODI FC LA T20
Matches 5 52 50 54
Runs scored 146 3,671 1,856 840
Batting average 48.66 50.28 47.58 23.33
100s/50s 1/- 10/13 4/12 0/4
Top score 105* 327 141 60*
Balls bowled - 167 18 54
Wickets 6 1 2 4
Bowling average 3 116.00 19.50
5 wickets in innings - 0 0
10 wickets in match - 0 n/a n/a
Best bowling 3/29 1/23 2/6 2/23
Catches/stumpings 2/- 35/– 22/– 20/2
Source: Cricinfo, 14 November 2014

Kedar Mahadav Jadhav (born 26 March 1985) is an Indian cricketer. Jadhav is a right-handed middle-order batsman and occasional off-break bowler. He plays for Maharashtra in Indian domestic cricket. He played in the Indian Premier League with the Delhi Daredevils in 2010 before being picked by the Kochi Tuskers Kerala for 2011.[1] Jadhav has also represented India A and West Zone cricket team.

He made his One Day International debut for India against Sri Lanka on 16 November 2014 and scored 20 off 24 balls before he was out stumped.[2] He made his Twenty20 International debut for India against Zimbabwe on 17 July 2015.[3]

Domestic career

Jadhav, who was initially in the Royal Challengers Bangalore development squad, was signed by Delhi Daredevils in 2010. He made immediate impact as he scored a 29-ball 50 (5 fours and 2 sixes) for Delhi Daredevils against the Royal Challengers Bangalore in his debut IPL match. He won the Man of the match award for this innings. For the next season, he was signed by the new franchise Kochi Tuskers Kerala, for whom he played only 6 matches that year. In 2013, he was signed up by the Delhi Daredevils and played a few matches that season but was not successful. He was not retained by Delhi in the 2014 IPL auction but was bought back by Delhi for 20 million.

In 2012, Jadhav made his first triple ton by scoring 327, the second-highest by a Maharashtra batsman ever in the Ranji Trophy, against Uttar Pradesh at Maharashtra Cricket Association Stadium in Pune.

He was a star in 2013–14 Ranji Trophy season where he scored 1223 runs including six centuries and was highest run-getter and the fourth-highest in a season in the tournament's history, to help Maharashtra make their first Ranji final since 1992-93. He also scored 149 runs in 10 innings for Delhi Daredevils in their poor IPL campaign in 2014.

Ahead of the 2016 IPL, he was traded to Royal Challengers Bangalore for an undisclosed amount.

International career

He was named in Indian squad for Bangladesh tour in June 2014 but did not get a game.

He played his first international match in November 2014 against Sri Lanka in fifth match of Sri Lanka tour of India at Ranchi and scored 20 off 24 balls before he was out stumped. India went on inflict a first time 5-0 whitewash on Sri Lanka.

Jadav played in all three ODIs against Zimbabwe in July 2015. In the third match at Harare, he scored 105 not out off 87 balls, his maiden ODI hundred. India won the series by a 3-0 margin. During the tour, he also made his T20I debut.

International centuries

ODI centuries

Kedar Jadhav's ODI centuries
No. Runs Match Against Venue City Year Result Ref.
1 105* 4  Zimbabwe Harare Sports Club Harare, Zimbabwe 2015 Won [4]

Awards

  1. Madhavrao Scindia Award for highest run-getter in Ranji Trophy: 2013/14

ODI Man of the Match awards

S No Opponent Venue Date Match Performance Result
1 Zimbabwe Harare Sports Club, Harare 14 July 2015 105 (87 balls, 12×4, 1×6); 1 catch  India won by 83 runs.[5]

T20I Man of the Match awards

S No Opponent Venue Date Match Performance Result
1 Zimbabwe Harare Sports Club, Harare 22 June 2016 58 (42 balls, 7×4, 1×6)  India won by 3 runs.[6]

References

External links

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