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Rory Burns Jersy

Rory Burns

Team flagENG33 yrs
batting styleleft handed Batter
Career & Stats
Batting
Bowling

Rory Burns Recent Form

Batting

SUR vs SOM, First class0 (4)
SUR vs SOM, First class75 (141)
SUR vs LANCS, First class5 (26) *
SUR vs HAM, First class27 (57)
SUR vs HAM, First class7 (26)
SUR vs NOR, First class11 (50)
SUR vs NOR, First class71 (196) *
SUR vs WARKS, First class11 (24)
SUR vs HAM, LIST A8 (15)
SUR vs LANCS, LIST A22 (38)
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Bowling

SUR vs NOR, First class0-0
SUR vs LANCS, First class0-2
SUR vs YORKS, First class0-5
SUR vs KT, First class0-5
SUR vs GLCS, First class0-5
SUR vs WARKS, First class0-6
SUR vs HAM, First class0-5
SUR vs LEIC, First class0-5
SUR vs LEIC, First class0-12
SUR vs ESS, First class0-0
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Rory Burns Carrer Stats

Batting

FormatMatInnR100s50sHSSRAvgFoursSixesDuckRank
Test3259178931113343.8130.322192----
T20-Blast551010037112.2225.2583----

Bowling

FormatMatInnWEconAvgBest3W5WSRMaidenRank
Test32000.000.000000.00----
T20-Blast5000.000.000000.00----

Carrer Debut Information

Test Debut
Sri Lanka vs England at Galle- November 06 - 09, 2018
T20-Blast Debut
Hampshire v Surrey The Rose Bowl, Southampton, 19-6-2022

Teams played for

Surrey England Lions England

About Rory Burns

NameRory Burns
GenderMale
Birth26 Aug 1990
Birth PlaceEpsom, Surrey
Height5 ft 10 in (178 cm)
NationalityEnglish

Rory Joseph is a left-handed opening batsman who occasionally keeps the stumps. The southpaw had to wait too long for his Test turn and got his chance post Alastair Cook’s retirement, when England was struggling to find an opening duo in the longest format. ... continue reading

Player Bio

Rory Joseph is a left-handed opening batsman who occasionally keeps the stumps. The southpaw had to wait too long for his Test turn and got his chance post Alastair Cook’s retirement, when England was struggling to find an opening duo in the longest format. 

Burns emerged to make his Test debut against Sri Lanka at Galle. Though the opener didn’t have a good start and could only manage to score 9 and 23 runs on debut. A couple of days later, he scored 43 and 59 in a gritty fashion to prove his worth. He backed it up with a subtle performance against West Indies and Ireland. It wasn’t until the first Test of the Ashes of 2019 when Burns stamped his class to announce himself. 

Burns didn’t become an overnight success as he had to go through a grind of seven years to achieve his dream of playing Test cricket. He made his first-class debut for Surrey in May 2011 at the age of 20 and played as a keeper-batsman. In the next season, he scored an exciting century against Middlesex and finished the season with 741 runs at an average of 49.4. The opener hasn’t dropped a beat ever since. He has crossed the 1000-run mark for his county for five successive seasons and been a prime member in the Surrey setup. In 2018, he led his county to its first Championship title since 2002. 

His domestic success led to his awaited national call-up during the Sri Lanka series in 2018. During the Ashes, Burns was England’s main man and finished the series as the third-highest run-getter. He scored 390 runs in his ten outings, including two fifties and a ton at Birmingham. Since then, Burns has scored runs in all conditions, against all oppositions, in all kinds of situations. 

In 2020, Burns was part of the Test squad to play against West Indies and Pakistan, post the lockdown. However, he has struggled since the Pakistan series. He made a comeback in the Indian series but was dropped after the first two Tests. 

Over the years, Burns has become a veteran in county cricket and is more than capable to re-establish himself in the English Test team. Although with competitors like Dom Sibley and Zak Crawley also in the English setup, Burns surely has a neck-to-neck fight for a berth. 

(As of March 2021)