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List of One Day International cricket hat-tricks

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This is a list of all hat-tricks in One-Day International cricket; that is, the occasions when a bowler has taken three wickets in consecutive deliveries in a One Day International (ODI) cricket match, dismissing three different batsmen with three consecutive balls bowled. A hat-trick is a relatively rare event: only 25 hat-tricks have been taken in over 2,500 ODIs since the first ODI, between Australia and England on 5 January 1971.Pakistan currently holds the record for the most hat-tricks taken by a team. To date the number of hat-tricks by team is;Pakistan- 8, England- 3, Australia- 3,Sri Lanka- 3, New Zealand - 2, India- 2, West Indies- 1, South Africa- 1, Bangladesh- 1, Zimbabwe- 1.


The first ODI hat-trick (#1 in the list below) was taken by Jalal-ud-Din of Pakistan, playing against Australia in the 158th ODI in September 1982; the most recent (#25) was taken by Andrew Flintoff of England, playing against West Indies in the 2833rd ODI in April 2009.

Contents

[edit] Notable ODI hat-tricks

  • Wasim Akram (#4, #5) and Saqlain Mushtaq (#10, #13) of Pakistan, and Chaminda Vaas (#14, #16) of Sri Lanka, are the only cricketers to have taken two ODI hat-tricks.
  • Wasim Akram and Mohammad Sami (#15), also of Pakistan, are the only cricketers to have taken a hat-trick in Test cricket and ODIs.[a]
  • Uniquely, Wasim Akram has also taken two Test hat-tricks, making four international hat-tricks in all.[a]
  • Saqlain Mushtaq (#10, #13) is also the only spinner to have taken an ODI hat-trick.
  • Aaqib Javed (#7) of Pakistan is the youngest player to take an ODI hat-trick, against India on 25 October 1991, aged 19 years and 81 days. The oldest is Eddo Brandes (#11) of Zimbabwe, against England on 3 January 1997, aged 33 years and 305 days.
  • Chaminda Vaas is the only bowler to have taken a hat-trick in the first three balls of an ODI. He went on to take a 4th wicket just 2 balls after his hat-trick.
  • No player has yet taken a hat-trick on their ODI debut.
  • Sri Lankan Lasith Malinga is the only international bowler to have taken more than three consecutive wickets; he took four wickets in four balls in the 2007 World Cup Super 8 match against South Africa.
  • Brett Lee has taken a hat-trick in ODI and Twenty20 Cricket. Lee is also the first person to take a hat-trick in International Twenty20.

[edit] List of ODI hat-tricks

Hat-tricks taken in a Cricket World Cup match are shaded in blue.

ODI hat-tricks
ODI №[b] Bowler For Against Wickets At Date
1. 158 Jalal-ud-Din  Pakistan  Australia

• Rod Marsh (b)
• Bruce Yardley (c Wasim Bari)
• Geoff Lawson (b)

Niaz Stadium, Hyderabad 20 September 1982
2. 359 Bruce Reid  Australia  New Zealand

• Bruce Blair (c Greg Matthews)
• Ervin McSweeney (c Allan Border)
• Stuart Gillespie (b)

SCG, Sydney 29 January 1986
3. 474 Chetan Sharma  India  New Zealand

• Ken Rutherford (b)
• Ian Smith (b)
• Ewen Chatfield (b)

Vidarbha Cricket Ground, Nagpur 31 October 1987
4. 570 Wasim Akram  Pakistan  West Indies

• Jeff Dujon (b)
• Malcolm Marshall (b)
• Curtly Ambrose (b)

Sharjah Stadium, Sharjah 14 October 1989
5.[1] 631 Wasim Akram  Pakistan  Australia

• Merv Hughes (b)
• Carl Rackemann (b)
• Terry Alderman (b)

Sharjah Stadium, Sharjah 4 May 1990
6. 661 Kapil Dev  India  Sri Lanka

• Roshan Mahanama (c Kiran More)
• Rumesh Ratnayake (lbw)
• Sanath Jayasuriya (c Sanjay Manjrekar)

Eden Gardens, Calcutta 4 January 1991
7.[2] 685 Aaqib Javed  Pakistan  India

• Ravi Shastri (lbw)
• Mohammed Azharuddin (lbw)
• Sachin Tendulkar (lbw)

Sharjah Stadium, Sharjah 25 October 1991
8. 896 Danny Morrison  New Zealand  India

• Kapil Dev (b)
• Salil Ankola (b)
• Nayan Mongia (b)

McLean Park, Napier 25 March 1994
9.[1] 966 Waqar Younis  Pakistan  New Zealand

• Chris Harris (b)
• Chris Pringle (b)
• Richard de Groen (b)

Buffalo Park, East London 19 December 1994
10.[3] 1136 Saqlain Mushtaq  Pakistan  Zimbabwe

• Grant Flower (c Moin Khan)
• John Rennie (c Moin Khan)
• Andrew Whittall (c Salim Malik)

Arbab Niaz Stadium, Peshawar 3 April 1996
11.[4] 1158 Eddo Brandes  Zimbabwe  England

• Nick Knight (c Andy Flower)
• John Crawley (lbw)
• Nasser Hussain (c Andy Flower)

Harare Sports Club, Harare 3 January 1997
12. 1164 Anthony Stuart  Australia  Pakistan

• Ijaz Ahmed (c Ian Healy)
• Mohammad Wasim (c Ian Healy)
• Moin Khan (c Mark Taylor)

MCG, Melbourne 16 January 1997
13.[1] 1479 Saqlain Mushtaq  Pakistan  Zimbabwe

• Henry Olonga (st  Moin Khan)
• Adam Huckle (st  Moin Khan)
• Mpumelelo Mbangwa (lbw)

The Oval, London 11 June 1999
14.[5] 1776 Chaminda Vaas  Sri Lanka  Zimbabwe

• Stuart Carlisle (c Suresh Perera
• Craig Wishart (lbw)
• Tatenda Taibu (lbw)

Sinhalese Sports Ground, Colombo 8 December 2001
15.[1] 1808 Mohammad Sami  Pakistan  West Indies

• Ridley Jacobs (lbw)
• Corey Collymore (b)
• Cameron Cuffy (b)

Sharjah Stadium, Sharjah 15 February 2002
16.[4][6] 1950 Chaminda Vaas  Sri Lanka  Bangladesh

• Hannan Sarkar (b)
• Mohammad Ashraful (c and b)
• Ehsanul Haque (c Mahela Jayawardene)

Pietermaritzburg Oval, Pietermaritzburg 14 February 2003
17.[4] 1990 Brett Lee  Australia  Kenya

• Kennedy Otieno (b)
• Brijal Patel (c Ricky Ponting)
• David Obuya (b)

Kingsmead, Durban 15 March 2003
18.[1] 2026 James Anderson  England  Pakistan

• Abdul Razzaq (c Marcus Trescothick)
• Shoaib Akhtar (c Chris Read)
• Mohammad Sami (b)

The Oval, London 20 June 2003
19.[1] 2164 Steve Harmison  England  India

• Mohammed Kaif (c Geraint Jones)
• Lakshmipathy Balaji (c Andrew Flintoff)
• Ashish Nehra (c and b)

Trent Bridge, Nottingham 1 September 2004
20.[1] 2243 Charl Langeveldt  South Africa  West Indies

• Ian Bradshaw (b)
• Daren Powell (b)
• Corey Collymore (lbw)

Kensington Oval, Barbados 11 May 2005
21. 2394 Shahadat Hossain  Bangladesh  Zimbabwe

• Tafadzwa Mufambisi (c Khaled Mashud)
• Elton Chigumbura (lbw)
• Tawanda Mupariwa (c Khaled Mashud)

Harare Sports Club, Harare 2 August 2006
22. 2432 Jerome Taylor  West Indies  Australia

• Michael Hussey (b)
• Brett Lee (lbw)
• Brad Hogg (b)

Brabourne Stadium, Mumbai 18 October 2006
23. 2474 Shane Bond  New Zealand  Australia

• Cameron White (c Craig McMillan)
• Andrew Symonds (c Brendon McCullum)
• Nathan Bracken (b)

Bellerive Oval, Hobart 14 January 2007
24.[7] 2556 Lasith Malinga  Sri Lanka  South Africa

• Shaun Pollock (b)
• Andrew Hall (c Upul Tharanga)
• Jacques Kallis (c Kumar Sangakkara)
• Makhaya Ntini (b)

Providence Stadium, Georgetown 28 March 2007
25. 2833 Andrew Flintoff  England  West Indies • Denesh Ramdin (b)
• Ravi Rampaul (lbw)
• Sulieman Benn (b)
Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, St Lucia 3 April 2009

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Last three wickets of the innings (see linked scorecard[b]).
  2. ^ Aaqib Javeb ended with 7-37, then the best bowling figures in an ODI and only the second time that a bowler had taken 7 wickets in an ODI.[c]
  3. ^ Saqlain Mushtaq also took the wicket of Gavin Rennie, taking 4 wickets in 5 balls.[d]
  4. ^ a b c First three wickets of the innings (see linked scorecard[b]).
  5. ^ Vaas also took the wicket of Dion Ebrahim with the first ball of the innings.[e] In all, Vaas took 8-19, the first and (as of April 2006) only time a bowler has taken 8 wickets in an ODI.[c] Zimbabwe were dismissed 38, then the lowest score recorded in an ODI (as of April 2006, the third lowest).[f]
  6. ^ First three balls of the match. Vaas also took the wicket of Sanwar Hossain with his fifth ball, a fifth wicket (Al Sahariar) in his third over, and the final wicket to end the innings (Mashrafe Mortaza), ending with 6-25.[g]
  7. ^ Four wickets in four balls, as Malinga had Makhaya Ntini out bowled off his next ball. South Africa required four runs to win with five wickets in hand and 32 balls to spare when Malinga bowled Pollock; after Ntini was bowled, South Africa required two runs to win with one wicket and 20 balls remaining.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] Complete lists

[edit] Additional information

     a.   1 2  "Hat Tricks in Test Matches". Cricinfo. The Wisden Group. http://uk.cricinfo.com/db/STATS/TESTS/BOWLING/TEST_HAT-TRICKS.html. Retrieved on 2006-05-20. 
     b.   1 2 3  Scorecard links are from Cricinfo, part of The Wisden Group, and last accessed 20 May 2006.      c.   1 2  "ODI Career Best Innings Bowling". Cricinfo. The Wisden Group. http://uk.cricinfo.com/db/STATS/ODIS/BOWLING/ODI_BOWL_BEST_INNS_FIGS.html. Retrieved on 2006-05-20. 
     d.   ^  "Pakistan v Zimbabwe, 1996/97, 3rd One-day International". Cricinfo. The Wisden Group. http://uk.cricinfo.com/link_to_database/ARCHIVE/1996-97/ZIM_IN_PAK/ZIM_PAK_ODI3_03NOV1996.html. Retrieved on 2006-05-20. 
     e.   ^  "LG Abans Triangular Series, 2001-02, 1st Match". Cricinfo. The Wisden Group. http://uk.cricinfo.com/link_to_database/ARCHIVE/2001-02/OD_TOURNEYS/LGABANS/SCORECARDS/SL_ZIM_LGABANS_ODI1_08DEC2001.html. Retrieved on 2006-05-20. 
     f.    ^  "ODIs - Lowest Team Totals". Cricinfo. The Wisden Group. http://uk.cricinfo.com/db/STATS/ODIS/TEAM/ODI_LOWEST_TEAM_TOTALS.html. Retrieved on 2006-05-20. 
     g.   ^  "ICC World Cup, 2002/03, 10th Match". Cricinfo. The Wisden Group. http://uk.cricinfo.com/link_to_database/ARCHIVE/WORLD_CUPS/WC2003/SCORECARDS/POOL-B/BDESH_SL_WC2003_ODI10_14FEB2003.html. Retrieved on 2006-05-20. 

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