Joe Root Profile – Age, Career Info & Stats
Joe Root Profile – Age, Career Info & Stats

Joe Root Profile – Age, Career Info & Stats

Joe Root was born on december 30, 1990 Cricketing stardom came naturally for the captain of the English cricket team and one of their top batsmen, Joe Root. From a sparkling century on debut against India in 2012 he has blossomed into an England Test cricketer with more runs (over 11,000) at a fraction under 50 than any other. Aside from his prolific Test output, Root was a stalwart of England’s World Cup-winning ODI team in 2019 and has over 6,000 runs in the format. Having stepped down as captain in 2022, he is now an integral part of the side and is a man who has earned runs by anchoring the innings well and makes his numbers count on every possible world venue to establish himself as one of the best batters produced by his generation

Personal InformationDetails
NameJoe Root
AgeDecember 30, 1990 (34 years)
Birth PlaceSheffield, Yorkshire
Height183 cm
RoleBatsman
Batting StyleRight Handed Bat
Bowling StyleRight-arm offbreak
CountryEngland

Joe Root Batting Career Stats

Test Format Stats

ALL OF those statistical records of Joe Root’s Test career — and there are plenty, including the fact he has accumulated more runs in Test cricket for England than any other player (over 11,500) with an amazing batting average that has always been above 50 — point to class and longevity as much as anything. On his record are 31 centuries — also an English record— among which is a colossal 254 against Pakistan and a handful of double-hundreds that underline his capacity for turning starts into mammoth scores. An adaptable and prolific run scorer in all conditions, Root has unquestionably been the bedrock of England’s batting for more than a decade, frequently carrying not just his team’s perennial hopes with the bat but also as the captain.

Test
Match153
Innings279
Runs13006
Ball Faced22612
Highest Score262
Average50.8
Strike Rate57.52
NO23
Fours1397
Sixes45
50s65
100s36
200s6

ODIs Format Stats

Joe Root has had a fabulous career in ODIs with the bat for England: he has played 180 or so ODIs as of mid-2025, batted in around 169 innings, scored over 7,100 runs at a batting average well-nigh to 49.1 and strike rate close to 87.6. He has scored 18 hundreds and 42 half-centuries, with a high score of an unbeaten 166, and struck over 575 boundaries and more than a fifty sixes.

ODI
Match180
Innings169
Runs7126
Ball Faced8134
Highest Score166
Average49.14
Strike Rate87.61
NO24
Fours575
Sixes53
50s42
100s18
200s0

T20I Format Stats

Joe Root has appeared in 32 T20 Internationals, where he faced 30 innings and accumulated an aggregate of 893 runs with the highest score of 90 not out. In T20Is, his average is around 35.72 and he has a strike rate of approximately 126.30. He has scored five half-centuries in T20Is, and has struck 92 fours and 16 sixes.

T20
Match32
Innings30
Runs893
Ball Faced707
Highest Score90
Average35.72
Strike Rate126.31
NO5
Fours92
Sixes16
50s5
100s0
200s0

IPL Format Stats

The legend speaks very little of Joe Root’s career in Test cricket, one of the most prolific and esteemed Test cricketers at present but he has played minimal games in the Indian Premier League (IPL). He was bought by the Rajasthan Royals in 2018 but only managed to play three games, with just 10 runs at an average of 5.00 and a strike rate of 76.92 to his name. Not able to cement a place in the glitzy team’s playing eleven, he was left unsold for subsequent auctions – with a batting approach not considered the ideal fit for a T20 competition. As a result, Root’s IPL tenure is a mere sidenote in an otherwise glorious career – more absent than influential on the field.

IPL
Match3
Innings1
Runs10
Ball Faced15
Highest Score10
Average10
Strike Rate66.67
NO0
Fours1
Sixes0
50s0
100s0
200s0

Joe Root Bowling Career Stats

Test Format Stats

Best known for his heavy run scoring, Joe Root has also been a particularly handy part-time off-spinner in Test cricket, consistently breaking crucial partnerships with the ball. He has now taken in excess of 60 wickets in Test cricket, with his patented sliders that skid on with the arm crucial for trapping batsmen LBW or cleaning them up through the gate. He is not a big turner of the ball but invites batsmen to take risks; in particular he excels at keeping runs down and attacking as well as stubborn tailenders. His most celebrated effort probably was his five-wicket haul (5/8) in a Test match at Chennai against India this year which showcased his expertise to read the wicket and proved that he can be an all-round success even in the longer format.

Test
Match153
Innings157
Balls5857
Runs3221
Wickets71
Average45.37
Economy3.3
Strike Rate82.49
Best Bowling Inning5/8
Best Bowling Match5/33
5w1
10w0

ODIs Format Stats

A bowler who happens to bat is undoubtedly second string for ODI cricket, but it has been a good and sometimes under-used option in providing the all-important part-time off-break. Throughout his ODI career, he’s claimed 30-plus scalps at an average of less than a run a ball (28.93), and his best figures of 3/52 are an indication of the fact that he has the ability to break partnerships with his clever variations and subtle change up in pace. His economy rate is normally a decent 5.5 to 6 runs per over, indicating his capacity to build pressure in the middle overs while frontline bowlers get some rest. Root’s best ODI bowling performance was probably in the ODI against India at Lord’s in 2018, where his figures of 2/46 helped England keep a powerful batting line-up in check and confirmed him as an intelligent bowler who could perform under pressure.

ODI
Match180
Innings77
Balls1755
Runs1731
Wickets28
Average61.82
Economy5.92
Strike Rate62.68
Best Bowling Inning3/52
Best Bowling Match3/52
5w0
10w0

T20I Format Stats

Joe Root’s T20I bowling, like his involvement in the format overall, has been very much on an incidental level – a trivia really. He bowled in just 10 of his 32 T20I appearances for England and captured six wickets with his part-time off-spin. His best figures of 2/6 against West Indies in 2019 showed he could be economical and contribute a wicket, but those opportunities were few and far between. A career economy rate of a fraction over 7 per over meant that he could roll his arm over, but though good enough to be used as an option, his role was primarily that of a top-order batsman, and it meant he was never really considered as bowler and rarely had a major impact on the international T20 scene.

T20
Match32
Innings9
Balls84
Runs139
Wickets6
Average23.17
Economy9.93
Strike Rate14
Best Bowling Inning2/9
Best Bowling Match2/9
5w0
10w0

IPL Format Stats

Joe Root has almost zero bowling career in Indian Premier League (IPL), much like his short-lived and forgettable stint with the tournament. In his only season for the Rajasthan Royals in 2018, where he played three matches and did hardly any batting, over and ball was never entrusted in his care. The result was that he didn’t send down a ball in the IPL, meaning Gallear’s career there ended with no wickets, no bowling average and not even an economy rate to his name. His complete non-use as a bowler is evidence that his part-time option services were never demanded, and his IPL career can be characterised as a brief era of nothingness.

IPL
Match3
Innings1
Balls12
Runs14
Wickets0
Average0
Economy7
Strike Rate0
Best Bowling Inning0/14
Best Bowling Match0/14
5w0
10w0

Joe Root Career Information

Profile Joe Root is one of England’s best and most prolific contemporary batsmen, a previous captain in all formats whose game revolves around wonderful consistency and traditional techniques, particularly so in Test cricket where he has scored over 11,000 runs – comprising 30 hundreds – to place him among the historical greats. A linchpin of the England side that lifted the ICC Cricket World Cup 2019, his ODI record is as impressive – with more than 6,000 runs scored in the same format to date – and he has chipped in some more-than-handy part-time off-breaks to prise out key wickets across formats. For all his international glory, his Indian Premier League (IPL) stint ended up being quite brief as well, restricted to three games for Rajasthan Royals in 2018 and thus little more than a footnote in an otherwise glittering career that is still adding to its shine.

Read More: India National Cricket Team vs Pakistan National Cricket Team: A Legendary Rivalry

T20 Debutvs India, Dec 22 at 2012 at Wankhede Stadium
Last T20vs Pakistan, May 05 at 2019 at Sophia Gardens
Test Debutvs India, Dec 13 at 2012 at Vidarbha Cricket Association Stadium
Last Testvs Zimbabwe, May 22 at 2025 at Trent Bridge
Odi Debutvs India, Jan 11 at 2013 at Niranjan Shah Stadium
Last ODIvs West Indies, Jun 03 at 2025 at Kennington Oval
IPL Debutvs Sunrisers Hyderabad, May 07 at 2023 at Sawai Mansingh Stadium
Last IPLvs Royal Challengers Bengaluru, May 14 at 2023 at Sawai Mansingh Stadium
Cl debutvs Uva Next, Oct 09 at 2012 at New Wanderers Stadium
Last Clvs Chennai Super Kings, Oct 22 at 2012 at Kingsmead

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