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Henry Nicholls Jersy

Henry Nicholls

Team flagNZ33 yrs
batting styleleft handed Batter
#85 Batter in ODI
#54 Batter in Test
Career & Stats
Batting
Bowling

Henry Nicholls Recent Form

Batting

CANT vs AUK, First class10 (18) *
NZ vs SL, ODI46 (51) *
NZ vs SL, ODI8 (23)
NZ vs SL, ODI6 (6)
CANT vs CS, LIST A8 (20)
CANT vs AUK, LIST A18 (20)
CANT vs OTG, LIST A0 (5)
CANT vs WEL, LIST A19 (30)
CANT vs AUK, First class1 (7)
CANT vs AUK, First class43 (61)
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Henry Nicholls Career Stats

Batting

FormatMatInnR100s50sHSSRAvgFoursSixesDuckRank
ODI7876211611512480.8935.2719319----
T20I109100003689.2912.5090----
Test5687297391220050.2037.163229----
WC ODI4491015561.0722.7580----

Bowling

FormatMatInnWEconAvgBest3W5WSRMaidenRank
ODI78000.000.000000.00----
T20I10000.000.000000.00----
Test56000.000.000000.00----
WC ODI4000.000.000-0000.00----

Career Debut Information

ODI Debut
New Zealand vs Sri Lanka at Christchurch - December 26, 2015
T20I Debut
New Zealand vs Bangladesh at Eden Gardens - March 26, 2016
Test Debut
New Zealand vs Australia at Wellington - February 12 - 15, 2016

Teams played for

Canterbury New Zealand Sydney Thunder New Zealand A New Zealand XI Derbyshire

About Henry Nicholls

NameHenry Nicholls
GenderMale
Birth15 Nov 1991
Birth PlaceChristchurch
Height5 ft 9 in
NationalityNew Zealander

A fidgety-yet-compact batsman hailing from New Zealand, who has played all three formats, Henry Micheal Nicholls, is a left-handed wicket-keeper batsman, and a fluent stroke maker, blessed with a sound technique that abides him time to play both spin and pace quite well. ... continue reading

Player Bio

A fidgety-yet-compact batsman hailing from New Zealand, who has played all three formats, Henry Micheal Nicholls, is a left-handed wicket-keeper batsman, and a fluent stroke maker, blessed with a sound technique that abides him time to play both spin and pace quite well. 

Nicholls represents the Canterbury side in the State Championship and other domestic competitions. He made his First-Class debut back in November 2011 in a four-day match against Otago. 

However, the southpaw’s breakthrough year came during the 2014-15 domestic season. The fluent stroke maker scored 454 runs at an average of 75.66 in his breakthrough year that got him his maiden New Zealand-A assignment, which was soon followed by a national side call-up. 

The gritty batsman made his international debut in an ODI against Sri Lanka at Christchurch, in December 2015. Later that year, he was added to New Zealand's squad for the World T20 as a backup wicketkeeper to Luke Ronchi and got his first T20I cap in the ICC event, held in India. In 2016, he played his maiden Test against Australia at Wellington and scored a half-century on debut. 

After Brendon McCullum’s retirement, the Blackcaps struggled to find another opener for the 50-overs format and a solid middle order in the longest format. Nicholls emerged as a troubleshooter for his side whenever they were in a spot of bother. 

During the 2019 World Cup, he replaced an out-of-form Colin Munro and played one of his best knocks of his career in the final of the global event, at the Lord’s Cricket Ground. He made a crucial 55 in tough batting conditions that almost won the World Cup for New Zealand.

In 2020, when India toured New Zealand, Nicholls once again got the opportunity to prove himself as an opener in the ODI format and stamped his class by thumping the Indian bowling. In the 2020-21 season of the Ford Trophy, he scored centuries in the final and semi-final, guiding his side to the 15th One-Day title.

Now, with age and talent being on his side, it won’t be surprising if he becomes the mainstay of New Zealand batting in the coming years.

(As of March 2021)