All about Shikhar Dhawan
Shikhar Dhawan (conceived 5 December 1985) is an Indian worldwide cricketer and a previous restricted overs chief.
Being a left-given opening batsman and a periodic right-arm off-break bowler, he plays for Punjab Kings in the Indian Premier League and Delhi in top-notch cricket.
At the 2013 Champions Trophy, 2015 World Cup, and 2017 Champions Trophy,
Dhawan was the main run-scorer for India.
He likewise turned into the main player throughout the entire existence of IPL to score
two consecutive hundreds of years.
He was granted the ‘Player of the Tournament’ for his endeavors in the 2013 ICC Champions
Trophy
It turned into the third Indian after Sachin Tendulkar and Yuvraj Singh to win this honor in ICC competitions.
Dhawan made his One Day International (ODI) debut against Australia in October 2010 at Visakhapatnam.
His Test debut came against a similar resistance in March 2013 at Mohali
where he scored the quickest century by any batsman on Test
debut and finished his innings with 187 runs from 174 balls.
In August 2013, Dhawan kept the then-second-most noteworthy individual score in a List
In a match when he scored 248 runs off 150 balls for India An against South Africa An at Pretoria.
During the fourth ODI against South Africa in Johannesburg, he turned into the principal Indian and ninth generally to score 100 years in his 100th ODI game.
On 14 June 2018, against Afghanistan, Dhawan turned into the 6th batsman
the first for India, to score 100 years before lunch at the very beginning of a Test.
Early life
Shikhar Dhawan was brought into the world on 5 December 1985 in Delhi
India, to Sunaina and Mahendra Pal Dhawan in a Punjabi family.
He finished his tutoring at St. Imprint’s Senior Secondary Public School in Meera Bagh, Delhi.
Since the period of 12,[10] he prepared at Sonnet Club under the direction of mentor Tarak Sinha
who has prepared 12 global cricketers. Dhawan was a wicket manager when he originally joined the club.
Early vocation
Youth vocation
Dhawan previously played for Delhi Under-16s in the 1999/00 Vijay Merchant Trophy and was the main
run-scorer of the 2000/01 Vijay Merchant Trophy in which Delhi wrapped other participants.
He scored 755 runs from 9 innings at a normal of 83.88 with two centuries and a top score of 199.
Dhawan was chosen in the North Zone Under-16s crew for the Vijay Hazare Trophy in February 2001.
He scored 30 and 66 in the elimination round against South Zone.
Dhawan’s amazing exhibitions for Delhi Under-16s were compensated when he was picked in India
Under-17 crew for the 2000/01 ACC Under-17 Asia Cup. He played three games in the competition averaging 85.
Dhawan was in this manner drafted into the Delhi Under-19 group in October 2001,
at 15 years old, for the Cooch Behar Trophy. Once more in 2001/02 Vijay Merchant Trophy,
Dhawan dazzled with the bat by scoring 282 runs in 5 innings at a normal of 70.50.
In October 2002
Dhawan was chosen again in the Delhi Under-19 group for the Cooch Behar Trophy in which he made 388 runs from 8 innings at a normal of 55.42 including two centuries.
He was then picked to play for North Zone Under-19s in January 2003 in the Vinoo Mankad Trophy.
Dhawan scored 45 and 12 in the elimination round against Central Zone, before top-scoring for his
group with 71 in the last on a seaming track in Rohtak against East Zone getting his group an innings-win.
In the CK Nayudu Trophy held in February 2003,
Dhawan arrived at the midpoint of 55.50 with the bat for North Zone Under-19s.
He kept on hoarding runs at the Under-19 homegrown level as he scored 444 runs from 6 innings at a normal of 74 in the Cooch Behar
Trophy in October after which he was made the skipper of the Delhi Under-19 group.
Dhawan found the middle value of 66.66 in the MA Chidambaram Trophy held in December that
year which was his most memorable competition as chief.
Dhawan played for India in the 2004 Under-19 World Cup in Bangladesh and completed as
the main run-scorer of the competition scoring a sum of 505 runs.
Dhawan’s runs came at a normal of 84.16, with three centuries and a fifty, and was named Player of the Tournament.
In the two youth Tests against England the next January, he had scores of 69, 18, and 41.
Early homegrown profession
Dhawan made his five-star debut for Delhi against Andhra in November 2004, in 2004-05
time of the Ranji Trophy scoring 49 on his presentation innings.
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He completed as Delhi’s driving run-getter that Ranji season with a sum of 461 runs from 6 matches and a high score of 130,
scoring a bigger number of runs than experienced players in the group like Ajay Jadeja and Aakash Chopra.
In the Ranji One-day Trophy that followed, Dhawan made his List A presentation against
Jammu and Kashmir in January 2005.
He then scored consecutive unbeaten hundreds against Himachal Pradesh and Haryana.
He was picked in the India Seniors crew for the Challenger Trophy in February, in which he opened
the innings against India B with future India colleague MS Dhoni.
In the subsequent match, Dhawan scored a 124-ball 126, sharing a 246-run first-wicket
an organization with Dhoni who likewise struck hundred years, assisting India Seniors with pursuing down 276 for the deficiency of two wickets.