ICC Cricket World Cup 2011 / Players / Kevin Pietersen
Full name Kevin Peter Pietersen
Born June 27, 1980, Pietermaritzburg, Natal
Current age 32 years 357 days
Major teams England, Deccan Chargers, Delhi Daredevils, Dolphins, Hampshire, ICC World XI, KwaZulu-Natal, Natal, Nottinghamshire, Royal Challengers Bangalore, Surrey
Nickname KP, Kelves, Kapes, Kev
Playing role Top-order batsman
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak
Height 6 ft 4 in
Education Maritzburg College, University of SA
| Mat | Inns | NO | Runs | HS | Ave | BF | SR | 100 | 50 | 4s | 6s | Ct | St | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tests | 94 | 161 | 8 | 7499 | 227 | 49.01 | 11947 | 62.76 | 22 | 30 | 907 | 74 | 54 | 0 |
| ODIs | 132 | 121 | 16 | 4369 | 130 | 41.60 | 5036 | 86.75 | 9 | 24 | 419 | 75 | 39 | 0 |
| T20Is | 36 | 36 | 5 | 1176 | 79 | 37.93 | 831 | 141.51 | 0 | 7 | 119 | 32 | 14 | 0 |
| First-class | 200 | 328 | 22 | 15123 | 254* | 49.42 | 47 | 64 | 141 | 0 | ||||
| List A | 249 | 229 | 34 | 8041 | 147 | 41.23 | 15 | 45 | 84 | 0 | ||||
| Twenty20 | 84 | 82 | 12 | 2402 | 103* | 34.31 | 1752 | 137.10 | 1 | 13 | 226 | 80 | 35 | 0 |
| Mat | Inns | Balls | Runs | Wkts | BBI | BBM | Ave | Econ | SR | 4w | 5w | 10 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tests | 94 | 57 | 1287 | 869 | 10 | 3/52 | 4/78 | 86.90 | 4.05 | 128.7 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| ODIs | 132 | 23 | 400 | 370 | 7 | 2/22 | 2/22 | 52.85 | 5.55 | 57.1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| T20Is | 36 | 3 | 30 | 53 | 1 | 1/27 | 1/27 | 53.00 | 10.60 | 30.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| First-class | 200 | 6383 | 3722 | 73 | 4/31 | 50.98 | 3.49 | 87.4 | 0 | 0 | |||
| List A | 249 | 2390 | 2122 | 41 | 3/14 | 3/14 | 51.75 | 5.32 | 58.2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| Twenty20 | 84 | 28 | 384 | 514 | 17 | 3/33 | 3/33 | 30.23 | 8.03 | 22.5 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Test debut | England v Australia at Lord's, Jul 21-24, 2005 scorecard |
| Last Test | New Zealand v England at Wellington, Mar 14-18, 2013 scorecard |
| Test statistics | |
| ODI debut | Zimbabwe v England at Harare, Nov 28, 2004 scorecard |
| Last ODI | India v England at Dharamsala, Jan 27, 2013 scorecard |
| ODI statistics | |
| T20I debut | England v Australia at Southampton, Jun 13, 2005 scorecard |
| Last T20I | England v Pakistan at Abu Dhabi, Feb 27, 2012 scorecard |
| T20I statistics | |
| First-class debut | 1997/98 |
| Last First-class | New Zealand v England at Wellington, Mar 14-18, 2013 scorecard |
| List A debut | 1998/99 |
| Last List A | India v England at Dharamsala, Jan 27, 2013 scorecard |
| Twenty20 debut | Durham v Nottinghamshire at Chester-le-Street, Jun 13, 2003 scorecard |
| Last Twenty20 | Delhi Daredevils v Lions at Durban, Oct 25, 2012 scorecard |
Brash, insecure and breathtaking Kevin Pietersen is one of the most exciting batsmen ever to play for England. His lust for box-office performances make him a matchwinner in all forms of the game but his ability to command attention is matched only by his ability to divide opinion.
Despite his overwhelming success for England, Pietersen has never won complete affection from either the ECB or the public. Both are wary of Pietersen's origins - he left South Africa as a young man in protest against the quota system - and his habit of speaking his mind. Alongside that is his cocksure front, unappealing to many England fans, which at the same time betrays a more vulnerable personality.
His England career began in a low-key one-day series in Zimbabwe in 2004 before launching spectacularly soon after in South Africa. The crowd in his former homeland turned their backs on him but Pietersen produced three audacious centuries in the series. He went on to reach 1000 one-day runs in just 21 innings - equalling Viv Richards' record. Test cricket beckoned with the 2005 Ashes the following summer: Pietersen started with two half-centuries at Lord's, then sealed the return of the urn after 17 years with a stroke-filled 158 at The Oval. The next five years were a whirl of runs and celebrity engagements, plus an ill-fated tilt at the England captaincy. His tenure started with a century and victory against South Africa at The Oval in 2008 but that was as close as he ever got to acceptance from the establishment. Early the following year, he fell out with the coach, Peter Moores. Pietersen recommended, rather too publicly, that Moores be removed ... and got his way, only to be summarily sacked as well. His relationship with the ECB never recovered and the flak probably affected Pietersen more than he cared to admit.
Alongside brushes with management - a feature in all the teams he has played for - injuries have interrupted him at key moments. His 2009 Ashes campaign was cut short by leg trouble that needed surgery and he left the 2011 World Cup with a hernia. His form became mercurial rather than reliable and he seemed to develop a weakness against left-arm spin in particular. But he ended a 20-month wait for an international century by making a career-best 227 as England won the Ashes in Australia for the first time in 24 years, then scored 533 runs at 106.60 in England's 4-0 whitewashing of India that secured them the No.1 ranking in Tests.
He was also the Man of the Tournament in England's World Twenty20 win in 2010 but his one-day batting tailed off, with no centuries over a three-year period between 2009 and 2011. He scored two in successive innings against Pakistan in 2012 - including his highest ODI score of 130 - but they were to be his last innings in coloured kit for England. Having always spoken out against the volume of international cricket, it was not entirely unexpected when, in mid-2012, Pietersen announced his retirement from limited-overs internationals, disagreeing with the ECB's policy that a centrally contracted player had to make himself available for both forms of limited-overs cricket. The decision come on the back of a breakthrough 2012 season in the IPL, in which he scored 305 runs for Delhi Daredevils.
It was another chapter of controversy in a career that has had many. Yet on the field, in whatever format, Pietersen can dominate any attack and is the wicket England's opponents crave the most. Even as it emerged that Pietersen had asked the ECB to miss Tests in New Zealand in 2013 in order to play a full season of IPL, he slammed a brilliant 149 against South Africa at Headingley becoming, in the process, the fastest man in terms of time, to reach 7,000 Test runs. That was quickly followed by more off-field drama, as Pietersen was dropped for the next Test, at Lord's, over alleged text messages to South African players which had derogatory references to people in the current England set-up.
Though his commitment is forever questioned, Pietersen has always stated his ambition for 10,000 Test runs, 30 centuries and a Test average of 50. If he gets there he will stand among England's greats.
Steven Lynch and ESPNcricinfo staff
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March 6, 1998
A gentle offspinner makes his debut-
Pietersen makes his first-class debut for Natal 'B' against Easterns at Kingsmead aged just 17. Regarded primarily as an offspinner and lower-order batsman at this stage of his career, Pietersen took one wicket in the match and, batting at no.8, made an unbeaten three in his only innings.
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December 1999
Graeme Swann, 10 years earlier-
Impresses members of the touring England side, including Nasser Hussain, during an England XI warm-up match against KwaZulu-Natal at Kingsmead, clearing the boundary four times on his way to an unbeaten 57-ball 61. He also picks up four top-order wickets with his handy offspin.
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October 2000
Mother's love-
Signs a three-year contract with Nottinghamshire in the year he turns 20. Pietersen, who has a British passport courtesy of his English mother, tells a South African newspaper "I'm not turning my back on South African cricket", but eventually decides to throw in his lot with Nottinghamshire, saying that the "guarantee of three years of high-quality cricket" with Nottinghamshire was "a career opportunity too good to turn down."
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April 21, 2001
Start as you mean to go on-
Pietersen cracks his maiden first-class hundred on debut for Nottinghamshire against Loughborough UCCE at Trent Bridge. It is a typically bellicose knock, with Pietersen reaching 122 from 147 balls, with three sixes, before being stumped.
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April to September, 2001
A star ascends-
Pietersen powers his way to 1275 first-class runs at 57.95 in his first season for Nottinghamshire. The highlight of the season is his unbeaten double-hundred against Derbyshire.
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April to September, 2002
Second season blues-
Pietersen's second season of English domestic cricket, proves to be less fruitful than the first, but he still manages 737 runs in 10 County Championship games and two hundreds in the Norwich Union League. His unbeaten 254 against Middlesex earns widespread acclaim, and he follows that up with 122 in a Norwich Union League game against Somerset, and a championship hundred against Gloucestershire at Trent Bridge, to storm to three hundreds in as many games.
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February to March 2004
Man among boys-
Tours India with England A and despite the visitors losing every match Pietersen's reputation towers, as he finishes with three centuries in six innings at 104.60 from the first-class games and 50.66 from the three-match ODI series against India A, including a 122-ball 131 in the second game.
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October 2004
Heave-ho and time to go-
After another successful county season, and one month from qualifying to play for England, Pietersen's bristling intent on making it at the highest level sees him leave Nottinghamshire to join Shane Warne's Hampshire in Division One.
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November 28, 2004
Calm before the storm-
Having served his four-year qualification period Pietersen is immediately called up to make his debut against Zimbabwe. He starts quietly with 27 from 57 balls to guide England to the first of four easy victories.
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January to February 2005
Homecoming king-
Pietersen arrives back to the country of his birth swinging from the hip. He has a pop at the South African system, the South African captain but most memorably, the South African bowlers. Boos turned to gasps, as the home crowd were treated 108*, 75, 100 from 69 balls and 116 as Pietersen ends the seven-match series with 473 runs. Confirms his unwavering 'Englishness' by unreservedly pashing the England crest on his helmet upon reaching his first hundred before emblazoning his shoulder with a giant three-lions tattoo. English cricket finally unearths the gem that Graeme Hick was supposed to have been 13 years before.
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June 19, 2005
A statement of intent-
With anticipation ahead of the 2005 Ashes building into a crescendo unseen in English cricket for decades, Pietersen took his omission from the Test's against Bangladesh on the chin and announced himself to home crowds with a dazzling 91 from 65 deliveries to power England to victory in the first ODI against Australia of the summer in Bristol. His composure and relish for big-match pressure became a feature of the summer.
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July 21, 2005
Starting with style-
In a frantic opening Test at Lord's, Pietersen silenced any suspicions that his destructive approach would come unstuck with a pair of fifties as Australia beat England. Fourth England player to top-score in both innings on debut.
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September 12, 2005
Counter attack-
With England needing a draw to secure the Ashes at The Oval, Pietersen arrives at the crease with England only four wickets down with a slender 115 lead. Dropped twice before he reached double figures and shaken by a vicious bouncer attack from Brett Lee before lunch, Pietersen sauntered in after the break and smashed the bowling all round south London. He hurtled to 158, making the game and the series safe for England and taking the man-of-the-match award.
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October 2005
One to watch-
After less than a year in international cricket, Pietersen is named ICC One-day player of the year and ICC Emerging player of the year.
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May 2006
Three in a row-
Scores 158 at Lord's against Sri Lanka in the first Test of the summer and follows it up with 142 in the next Test at Edgbaston, which including his 158 against Australia to close of the 2005 summer makes him the first England player since Graham Gooch to make hundreds in three consecutive innings. Enters the top ten in the world rankings.
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November 2006 to April 2007
A class apart-
The wheels come off for England as they are demolished 5-0 by the Ricky Ponting's revenge-filled Australians before being dumped out of the World Cup in the Super-eight stage. Pietersen is the only player to impress for England, but the responsibility of shoring up a brittle batting line up blunts his flamboyant strokeplay as he settles for clinical run getting. His 158 in the first innings at Adelaide and 104 against the same side at in the World Cup confirm his status as the England's best player.
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May 2007
Ruthless run-making-
Welcomes West Indies with a 109 in a run-glut draw in the first Test at Lord's before following it with a double hundred in the second Test at Headingley.
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March 22, 2008
Back with a bang-
In the crucial deciding Test against New Zealand at Napier, England were staring down the barrel when Pietersen came to the crease at 4 for 2. While he tried to bed himself in England collapsed to 36 for four. However, with a patience rarely apparent in his approach he cajoled to lower order to take England to 253, finishing on 129 from 208 deliveries.
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July 10, 2008
Crowd favourite-
Having left the country of his birth to play for England, before returning to South Africa to rip their attack apart to announce himself on the world stage, the touring South Africans had a clear target for their big pace line-up to aim at. Yet, in his first Test against them, at Lord's he strokes his way to 152. The extended ovation he received up on reaching the milestone moved him to declare "I've never felt so loved".
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August 4, 2008
Captain fantastic-
After Michael Vaughan's tearful farewell, Pietersen is appointed England captain. The man to lead in all formats, he settles murmurs that the responsibility may affect his batting by scoring a century in his first Test in charge at the Oval. Goes on to lead England to a 4-0 rout of South Africa in the one-day series.
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December 31, 2008
Mission aborted-
Having been asked by the ECB to fulfil his 'end-of-term report' at the conclusion of the India tour, news breaks on new year's eve that Pietersen wants Moores removed as coach, telling his bosses: "I can't lead this team forward and take it to the West Indies if Peter Moores is coach." The bold move backfires as the ECB publicise the entire debacle - seemingly sharing Pietersen's assessment by firing Moores before 'accepting' a resignation from Pietersen which he insists he never made.
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February 2009
Back in the ranks-
With question marks surrounding Pietersen in the first Test since the conclusion on his brief captaincy stint, he responds with 97 against in the first innings against West Indies at Kingstown but a rash shot to get out, followed by England's second-innings collapse leaves many frustrated.
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April 10, 2009
'Dumbslog millionaire'-
Becomes, along with England team-mate and rival Andrew Flintoff, the IPL's most expensive player, signing for Royal Chargers Bangalore for $1.55 million. Has a disappointing tournament and worsens a long-standing Achilles injury.
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July 8, 2009
It's the way I play-
Looking well-set on 69 in the first-Test of the 2009 Ashes at Cardiff Pietersen attempts an awkward and senseless sweep to Nathan Hauritz and is caught behind. His dismissal opens the door for Australia to charge through and dominate. He defends the shot insisting it's just the way he plays.
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July 22, 2009
Limps out of the limelight-
Fails to make an impression on one of cricket's biggest stages - the Ashes Test at Lord's and the Achilles injury rules him out of the rest of the summer as he heads for the operating table.
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November 2009 to January 2010
Nightmare return-
Having waited his entire career to play a Test in the country of his birth, Pietersen has endures a torrid tour to South Africa. Looking uncharacteristically tense at the crease the runs dry up following a hideous run out in the first Test at Centurion for 81. Ends the series with 177 runs at 25.28.
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December 3-7, 2010
Destroying Australia-
England roll over Australia by an innings in Adelaide, and Pietersen plays a big role, scoring 227, his highest in Tests.
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July-August 2011
An Indian summer-
Pietersen starts the four-Test home series against India by scoring an unbeaten 202 at Lord's, and finishes it with 175 at The Oval. His tally for the series is 533, easily his highest ever.
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January-February 2012
Misery against Pakistan-
From his best series to his worst: in three Tests against Pakistan, he scores 67 at an average of 11.16, his poorest average in a series ever. But returns to form in ODI cricket with two centuries in the final two matches of a series England win 4-0.
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June 2012
Frustrations come to a head-
Pietersen retires from all limited-overs cricket, four months before England defend their World T20 title. He had requested England's management to not be considered for 50-over cricket but the terms of England's central contracts require players to be available for all forms. So Pietersen throws in the towel on all white-ball cricket but goes on record to say he wants to play for England at the World T20.
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August 4, 2012
Stunning Headingley onslaught-
Amid all the off-field controversy, Pietersen slams an outstanding 149 against South Africa to ensure a draw.
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August 12, 2012
Dropped for Lord's-
Pietersen is left out of the England squad for the third Test against South Africa, over alleged text messages sent to South African players that were derogatory to people in the current England set-up.
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| Mat | Inns | NO | Runs | HS | Ave | BF | SR | 100 | 50 | 4s | 6s | Ct | St | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| World Cup | 13 | 13 | 1 | 575 | 104 | 47.91 | 684 | 84.06 | 2 | 4 | 53 | 7 | 3 | 0 |
| ODIs | 132 | 121 | 16 | 4369 | 130 | 41.60 | 5036 | 86.75 | 9 | 24 | 419 | 75 | 39 | 0 |
| List A | 249 | 229 | 34 | 8041 | 147 | 41.23 | 15 | 45 | 84 | 0 |
| Mat | Inns | Balls | Runs | Wkts | BBI | BBM | Ave | Econ | SR | 4w | 5w | 10 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| World Cup | 13 | 3 | 66 | 51 | 0 | - | - | - | 4.63 | - | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| ODIs | 132 | 23 | 400 | 370 | 7 | 2/22 | 2/22 | 52.85 | 5.55 | 57.1 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| List A | 249 | 2390 | 2122 | 41 | 3/14 | 3/14 | 51.75 | 5.32 | 58.2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| World Cup span | 2007-2011 |
| ODI debut | Zimbabwe v England at Harare, Nov 28, 2004 scorecard |
| Last ODI | India v England at Dharamsala, Jan 27, 2013 scorecard |
| List A debut | 1998/99 |
| Last List A | India v England at Dharamsala, Jan 27, 2013 scorecard |
Man of the Match
2007
100 v West Indies, Barbados
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108*, 100* and 116 v South Africa, 2005
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Three hundreds in five innings on an incredible maiden tour of his homeland, South Africa, in early 2005. He started the series as Public Enemy No. 1, but ended it with the respect of a hard-to-impress public.
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- Compton's Ashes hopes face defining month (May 29, 2013)
- Pietersen shadow lingers over England (May 23, 2013)
- England's beating heart (May 14, 2013)
- England buoyed by Pietersen fitness (May 11, 2013)
- Cricket as complex narrative (or how KP loves himself) (May 9, 2013)
ICC Emerging Player of the Year 2005
ICC One-Day Player of the Year 2005
Awarded the MBE on 31st December 2005
Wisden Cricketer of the Year 2006

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