Elton Chigumbura (born 14 March 1986) is a Zimbabwean cricketer. He is
the current Zimbabwe's One Day International and Twenty20 International captain
appointed in August 2014.
He made his debut at the age of
18, amidst the rebel crisis and has played 14 Test matches.
Chigumbura is the most capped player in the current ODI squad with almost 200
caps.
In May 2015 Chigumbura made his
maiden ODI century, against Pakistan in Lahore, in
his 174th ODI match.[2] With over 4000 runs and 100 wickets in ODI,
he is widely regarded as one of Zimbabwe's greatest all-rounders. His T20I
strike rate of 150.83 is one of the best in the world.
Elton Chigumbura
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Personal information
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Full name
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Elton Chigumbura
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Born
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Batting style
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Right-handed bat
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Bowling style
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Role
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International information
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National side
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Last Test
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Last ODI
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ODI shirt no.
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47
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T20I debut
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Last T20I
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T20I shirt no.
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47
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Domestic team information
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Years
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Team
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2010
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2006
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2005–2006
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Manicaland
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2002–2005
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2009-
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2013
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2014
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2015–Present
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2016–Present
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Career statistics
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Chigumbura made his first class debut for Mashonaland aged just fifteen and went on
to represent Zimbabwe in two consecutive Under-19 World Cups.
He took four wickets in their upset win over Australia in the Under-19 World Cup inBangladesh.
He made his international debut sooner than expected due to the
absence of the 'rebel' players, playing his first Test aged just 18 during a
tour of Sri Lanka. It was a demoralising tour for Zimbabwe and
Chigumbura looked out of his depth. He missed the majority of 2005 due to a
stress fracture in his back which he picked up during a series against South
Africa in March.
Prior to Zimbabwe being barred from Test cricket in 2005, he
went on to play 6 Tests for his country. He struggled with the bat, making five
ducks in his twelve innings. He made one half century, an innings of 71 against
Bangladesh in Chittagong. It turned out to be a good game for Chigumbura as he
followed up his batting performance with a career best bowling return of 5/54
He has had more success in ODI cricket, playing some memorable
innings. In May 2004 he scored 77 against Australia at Harare but arguably his
greatest performance came later in the year against Sri Lanka in the Champions
Trophy. In a man of the match winning effort he made 57 with the bat and took
3/37 with the ball.
The next year in a game against Bangladesh in Harare he put on
165 runs for 6th wicket with Stuart Matsikenyeri as they successfully chased down 246 to
win with 5 balls in hand. Chigumbura contributed 70 off 68 deliveries. At the
same ground against the same opponent in February 2007 he equalled his highest
ODI score of 77 in an innings that included 7 sixes. At the conclusion of the
game only 3 other Zimbabwean cricketers had hit more sixes than Chigumbura in
their one day careers.
Chigumbura was part of the Zimbabwean squad for the 2007 World
Cup in the West
Indies. He registered new
career-best ODI bowling figures of 3/25 and scored 38 runs from 34 balls in
Zimbabwe's shock win against the West Indies on 30 November 2007.
In March 2010, Chigumbura signed for Northamptonshire
County Cricket Club as an overseas player, giving him the
chance to return to England after having a short spell at Eppleton Cricket
Club.[3]
In May 2010, Chigumbura replaced Prosper Utseya as Zimbabwe's captain. He led Zimbabwe
to the 2011 World Cup, but resigned within months of the tournament
in which Zimbabwe defeated only Canada and Kenya and failed to qualify for the
quarter-finals.[4]
He was replaced in the captaincy by Brendan Taylor.[5] He was retained in the team for Zimbabwe's victorious
return to Test cricket in a one-off match against Bangladesh in August 2011,
taking three wickets,[6] before a knee injury ruled him out of the following Test
against Pakistan.[7] Chigumbura had earlier led Zimbabwe in 24 limited-overs
games from May 2010 to March 2011 in which his form was fell away.
In March 2014, Chigumbura scored a quickfire 53 from No. 6 to
complete the chase in 13.4 overs against UAE at 2014 ICC World
Twenty20 in Bangladesh. He started with a six and a four in his first two balls, and
maintained the same intensity throughout his innings. His last shot was a
straight six not only took Zimbabwe over the line it also brought him his
half-century off 21 balls.
In August 2014, Chigumbura was named Zimbabwean captain for
second time. He was appointed ODI and T20 captain as Brendan Taylor retained the leadership in the Tests as
part of Zimbabwe Cricket's decision to split the captaincy across
formats.
He scored 90 runs off 122 balls with 10 fours and two sixes in
defeat against South
Africe at Queens Sports Club in Bulawayo. Out of 165 runs Chigumbura scored 54.5 percentage of team
runs.
Chigumbura's unbeaten 52 engineered the chase that led Zimbabwe to their first victory over Australia in
31 years.[8]
He is an aggressive batsman, who generally bats in the middle
order for his team. He is strong on the lofted drive and he consistently clears
the fence in ODI with his big hitting in the final overs. He is also a useful
seam bowler, regarded as being his country's fastest in the current squad,
clocking at more than 140 km/h when at his peak. In the field he is an
athletic outfielder, once taking 4 catches in an ODI against the West Indies
at Queen's Park Oval.[9]
Elton Chigumbara's One Day International
centuries
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#
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Runs
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Match
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Against
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City/Country
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Venue
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Year
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Result
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1
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117
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174
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Lost
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2
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104*
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175
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Lost
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S No
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Opponent
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Venue
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Date
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Match Performance
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Result
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1
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14 September 2004
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57 (71 balls, 6x4); 8.5-0-37-3
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2
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10 January 2009
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64 (95 balls, 5x4, 1x6); 6-0-21-1
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3
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14 August 2009
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61* (33 balls, 3x4, 5x6); 8-0-46-2
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4
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27 October 2009
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8-1-27-3; 60* (50 balls, 9x4, 1x6)
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5
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31 August 2014
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DNB; 52* (68 balls, 4x4)
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6
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3 October 2015
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67 (55 balls, 4x4, 2x6) ; 5-0-33-1 ; 1 ct. ; 1
runout.
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#
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Series
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Season
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Match Performance
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Result
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1
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2014
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DNB; 53* (21 balls, 6x4, 3x6)
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