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Cheteshwar Pujara Jersy

Cheteshwar Pujara

Team flagIND36 yrs
batting styleright handed Batter
#40 Batter in Test
Career & Stats
Batting
Bowling

Cheteshwar Pujara Recent Form

Batting

SUS vs LEIC, First class38 (148)
SAUR vs TN, First class2 (22)
SAUR vs TN, First class46 (170)
SAUR vs MNP, First class108 (105)
SAUR vs RAJ, First class110 (230)
SAUR vs RAJ, First class25 (60)
SAUR vs MAH, First class0 (6)
SAUR vs MAH, First class3 (16)
SAUR vs SER, First class91 (133)
SAUR vs VID, First class43 (105)
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Bowling

IND vs AUS, Test0-1
SUS vs LEIC, First class0-8
NOTS vs GLCS, First class0-10
NOTS vs GLM, First class0-7
IND vs SA, Test0-2
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Cheteshwar Pujara Carrer Stats

Batting

FormatMatInnR100s50sHSSRAvgFoursSixesDuckRank
ODI5551002739.2310.2040----
T20I0000000.000.0000----
Test1031767195193520644.3743.6186316----
IPL3022390015199.7420.52504----

Bowling

FormatMatInnWEconAvgBest3W5WSRMaidenRank
ODI5000.000.000000.00----
T20I0000.000.000000.00----
Test103201.500.000/2000.00----
IPL30000.000.000000.00----

Carrer Debut Information

ODI Debut
Zimbabwe vs India at Bulawayo - August 01, 2013
Test Debut
India vs Australia at Bengaluru - October 09 - 13, 2010
IPL Debut
vs Deccan Chargers at Dr DY Patil Sports Academy, Mar 12, 2010

Teams played for

Board Presidents XI Kolkata Knight Riders India Royal Challengers Bangalore India A Rest of India India B West Zone Mumbai A Saurashtra Indians Kings XI Punjab Derbyshire Yorkshire Indian Board Presidents XI India Blue Nottinghamshire Zalawad Royals

About Cheteshwar Pujara

NameCheteshwar Pujara
GenderMale
Birth25 Jan 1988
Birth PlaceRajkot, Gujarat, India
Height5 ft 11 in
NationalityIndian

Cheteshwar Pujara belongs from an old school and is regarded as one of the finest Test cricketers of this generation. ... continue reading

Player Bio

Cheteshwar Pujara belongs from an old school and is regarded as one of the finest Test cricketers of this generation. 

It was in the early 2000s when Pujara was making heads turn with his daddy hundreds. Pujara had scored a triple century at the U-14 tournament and followed it up with a double ton against England U-19 in a four-day match. 

He made a reputation of himself for scoring big. It was after his knack of scoring big, the officials were forced to change the playing conditions in Rajkot. By a short span of time, Pujara had become a run machine in Ranji Trophy games. 

Pujara was tipped to be the next Rahul Dravid in Test cricket more due to the mental aspect of his game rather than his technique. After churning out triple centuries and double centuries for fun at the flat Rajkot wicket, the selectors couldn’t overlook him. 

In a generation where quick money at different franchise T20 leagues has become a trend, Pujara remains one of those very few players who take pride in playing Test cricket and doesn’t have any qualms about being a longer format specialist. 

Pujara made his Test debut in October 2010 against Australia at Bangalore, where he scored a quick-fire 72, before getting bowled to a Nathan Hauritz’s delivery. He had to wait for three more years to get his maiden ODI cap. Meanwhile, he represented Kings XI Punjab (now Punjab Kings) in between 2010-14 seasons of the Indian Premier League (IPL). 

He was picked for the tour of South Africa for the 2010-11 tour but couldn’t manage to make an impact. 

Pujara was in ominous form during the home Test series against England which India eventually lost by a 1-2 margin. He smashed a sensational 206 against England and followed it up with 135 in the Mumbai Test on a track where the other batsmen including the great Sachin Tendulkar were failing miserably. He continued to be a consistent run-scorer in home Tests. 

He came strongly after the injury which prevented him from taking part in the tour of England and Australia in 2011. 

In March 2013, he scored a sensational double century against Australia in the home series as India whitewashed the Aussies 4-0. His record in home Tests was quite staggering but what made heads turn was his performance in South Africa. He smashed a sensational 153 and followed it up with a half-century against a star-studded South African bowling line-up in December 2013. 

Pujara had a poor run of form in England and Australia in 2014 and was subsequently dropped from the Test squad. He made a remarkable comeback in the 2015 series against Sri Lanka with an epic knock of 145 where he carried the bat through the innings on a seam-friendly surface. 

Pujara has remained an integral part of the Indian Test setup. During the tour of England in 2018, Pujara was dropped from the XI after a poor series in South Africa. However, he returned with a bang in the 3rd Test which India won quite comfortably. Pujara was by far the Player of the Series for India when they defeated Australia for the first time Down Under in 2018-19. 

Post the Australia tour, he had a relatively poor time in West Indies and New Zealand in the ICC Test Championship, in 2019. However, the Indian Number-3, once again, stood tall during the 2020-21 tour of Australia. He started the series averagely, but as the series progressed, he became like a wall and took the Australian short-pitch assault on his body. His twin half-centuries at SCG and the second innings 56 at Brisbane, earned him the title of “Iron man of India”. 

In February 2021, Pujara was picked by Chennai Super Kings in the auctions ahead of the 14th edition of the Indian Premier League, to make his IPL come back after seven years. There have been critical comments already made, taunting his strike-rating, although his domestic T20 stats state that Pujara’s technique doesn’t bid him but give him wings. 

(As of March 2021)