INDIA

Full name  - Murali Kartik
Born -  September 11, 1976, Madras (now Chennai), Tamil Nadu
Current age -  30 years 70 days
Major teams -  India, Lancashire, Railways
Batting style  - Left-hand bat
Bowling style  - Slow left-arm orthodox

Statsguru  -  Test player, ODI player

 BATTING AND FIELDING AVERAGES
class  mat  inns  no  runs  hs  ave  bf  sr  100  50  4s  6s  ct  st
Tests   8   10   1   88   43   9.77   231   38.09   0   0   11   0   2   0
ODIs   30   11   4   89   32*   12.71   130   68.46   0   0   6   0   10   0
First-class   97   114   15   1913   96   19.32         0   11         58   0
List A   116   50   18   325   37*   10.15         0   0         38   0

 BOWLING AVEREGES
class  mat  balls  runs  wkts  bbi  bbm  ave  econ  sr  4  5  10
Tests   8   1932   820   24   4/44   7/76   34.16   2.54   80.50   1   0   0
ODIs   30   1530   1312   27   3/36   3/36   48.59   5.14   56.66   0   0   0
First-class   97   20797   8402   329   9/70      25.53   2.42   63.21      19   3
List A   116   6054   4482   142   5/29   5/29   31.56   4.44   42.63   2   1   0

 CAREER STATISTICS
 
Test debut  India v South Africa at Mumbai - Feb 24-26, 2000 
Last Test  India v South Africa at Kanpur - Nov 20-24, 2004 
ODI debut  India v Zimbabwe at Hyderabad (Decc) - Mar 16, 2002 
Last ODI  Pakistan v India at Peshawar - Feb 6, 2006
First-class span  1996/97 - 2006/07
List A span  1996/97 - 2006/07

A left-arm spinner in the classical mould, Murali Kartik has long been on the fringes of the national team. He has a high-arm action straight from the coaching manual, and possesses all the weapons in his armoury - the tantalising loop, the ability to extract sharp turn and bounce, and the subtle variations. But he hasn't always had the breaks, and has regularly played the understudy to Anil Kumble and Harbhajan Singh. Kartik forced his way into the Indian team in 1999-2000 after impressive performances in the domestic games, but didn't seem to enjoy his captain's confidence and was either used as a defensive option or underbowled. He made his mark as a one-day bowler against West Indies in 2002-03, consistently keeping the batsmen in check on pitches where every other bowler got tonked for plenty. However, his best moment clearly came at Mumbai, against Australia in 2004-05. Enjoying the confidence reposed in him by Rahul Dravid, the captain, Kartik ran through the Australian batting on a dustbowl, taking seven wickets in the match to bowl India to a famous win.
S Rajesh April 2005

 
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