Mahendra Singh Dhoni (About this soundpronunciation (help·info) brought into the world 7 July 1981), is an Indian universal cricketer who captained the Indian national group in restricted overs positions from 2007 to 2016 and in Test cricket from 2008 to 2014. He is the main skipper throughout the entire existence of Cricket to win all ICC trophies. Under his captaincy, India won the 2007 ICC World Twenty20, the 2010 and 2016 Asia Cups, the 2011 ICC Cricket World Cup and the 2013 ICC Champions Trophy. A right-gave center request batsman and wicket-attendant, Dhoni is one of the most elevated run scorers in One Day Internationals (ODIs) with in excess of 10,000 runs scored and is viewed as a powerful "finisher" in constrained overs formats.[2][3][4][5] He is additionally viewed by some as outstanding amongst other wicket-managers and skippers in present day restricted overs global cricket.[6]
Mahendra Singh Dhoni
PB PS
Mahendra Singh Dhoni January 2016 (cropped).jpg
Dhoni in 2016
Individual data
Complete name
Mahendra Singh Pansingh Dhoni
Conceived
7 July 1981 (age 38)
Ranchi, Bihar(now in Jharkhand), India
Moniker
Mahi, Captain Cool, MSD, Thala[1]
Stature
1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)
Batting
Right-gave
Bowling
Right-arm medium
Job
Wicket-guardian batsman
Global data
National side
India (2004–present)
Test debut (top 251)
2 December 2005 v Sri Lanka
Last Test
26 December 2014 v Australia
ODI debut (top 158)
23 December 2004 v Bangladesh
Last ODI
9 July 2019 v New Zealand
ODI shirt no.
7
T20I debut (top 2)
1 December 2006 v South Africa
Last T20I
27 February 2019 v Australia
T20I shirt no.
7
Residential group data
A long time
Group
1999–2004
Bihar cricket crew
2004/05–present
Jharkhand
2008–2015
Chennai Super Kings (crew no. 7)
2016–2017
Rising Pune Supergiant
2018–
Chennai Super Kings (crew no. 7)
Profession insights
Competition Test ODI T20I
Matches 90 350 98
Runs scored 4,876 10,773 1,617
Batting average 38.09 50.53 37.60
100s/50s 6/33 10/73 0/2
Top score 224 183* 56
Balls bowled 96 36 –
Wickets 0 1 –
Bowling average – 31.00 –
5 wickets in innings – 0 –
10 wickets in match – 0 –
Best bowling – 1/14 –
Gets/stumpings 256/38 321/123 57/34
Source: ESPNcricinfo, 9 July 2019
He made his ODI debut in December 2004 against Bangladesh, and played his first Test a year later against Sri Lanka. Dhoni has been the beneficiary of numerous honors, including the ICC ODI Player of the Year grant in 2008 and 2009 (the main player to win the honor twice), the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna grant in 2007, the Padma Shri, India's fourth most noteworthy regular citizen respect, in 2009 and the Padma Bhushan, India's third most elevated non military personnel respect, in 2018.[7] He was named as the chief of the ICC World Test XI in 2009, 2010 and 2013. He has likewise been chosen a record multiple times in ICC World ODI XI groups, multiple times as commander. The Indian Territorial Army gave the privileged position of Lieutenant Colonel[8] to Dhoni on 1 November 2011. He is the second Indian cricketer after Kapil Dev to get this respect.
Dhoni likewise holds various captaincy records, for example, the most successes by an Indian skipper in ODIs and T20Is, and generally consecutive successes by an Indian commander in ODIs. He assumed control over the ODI captaincy from Rahul Dravid in 2007 and drove the group to its first-since forever respective ODI arrangement wins in Sri Lanka and New Zealand. In June 2013, when India crushed England in the last of the Champions Trophy in England, Dhoni turned into the primary commander to win each of the three ICC constrained overs trophies (World Cup, Champions Trophy and the World Twenty20). In the wake of taking up the Test captaincy in 2008, he drove the group to arrangement wins in New Zealand and the West Indies, and the Border-Gavaskar Trophy in 2008, 2010 and 2013. In 2009, Dhoni additionally drove the Indian group to number one situation without precedent for the ICC Test rankings.
In 2013, under his captaincy, India turned into the principal group in over 40 years to whitewash Australia in a Test arrangement. In the Indian Premier League, he captained the Chennai Super Kings to triumph at the 2010, 2011 and 2018 seasons, alongside wins in the 2010 and 2014 versions of Champions League Twenty20. In 2011, Time magazine included Dhoni in its yearly Time 100 rundown as one of the "Most Influential People in the World."[9] Dhoni holds the post of Vice-President of India Cements Ltd., subsequent to leaving Air India. India Cements is the proprietor of the IPL group Chennai Super Kings, and Dhoni has been its chief since the first IPL season.[10][11] He reported his retirement from Tests on 30 December 2014.[12]
In 2012, SportsPro evaluated Dhoni as the sixteenth most attractive competitor in the world.[13] Dhoni is the co-proprietor of Indian Super League group Chennaiyin FC.[14] In June 2015, Forbes positioned Dhoni at 23rd in the rundown of most generously compensated competitors on the planet, assessing his income at US$31 million.[15] In 2016, a biopic M.S. Dhoni: The Untold Story was made about his life and cricketing profession up to the Indian group's success at the 2011 Cricket World Cup.
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