The unstoppable Ellyse Perry
Since the start of 2014, the Australian allrounder has made 17 fifty-plus scores in 23 ODI innings. No other player - male or female - has ever had such an incredible run

Since the start of 2014, Australian allrounder Ellyse Perry's ODI scores read as follows: 65*, 0, 90*, 53, 72, 64*, 74*, 78, 48, 67, 90, 31, 50, 51, 64*, 35, 4, 17, 77*, 93*, 95*, 69, 56. In 23 innings, she averages 89.53, with 17 scores of 50 or more. From these numbers, it's clear that she finds scoring fifties three times as easy as not scoring them.
These stats are incredible for any player in any format, but even more so for Perry, who has been on a stunning spree in the last three years. Before 2014, in 37 ODI innings, mostly at Nos. 7 and 8, she had scored just 555 runs at 23.12, with a single half-century.
Since 2014, though, her game has moved to another level. The average of 89.53 is easily the best for any player with at least 150 runs during this period. With a 750-run cut-off, the next best is Meg Lanning's average of 58.20.
Player | Innings | Runs | Average | Strike rate | 50+ scores |
Ellyse Perry | 23 | 1343 | 89.53 | 80.32 | 17 |
Meg Lanning | 29 | 1455 | 58.20 | 94.05 | 11 |
Mithali Raj | 20 | 785 | 56.07 | 66.41 | 5 |
Amy Satterthwaite | 31 | 1246 | 51.91 | 82.68 | 9 |
Suzie Bates | 34 | 1452 | 48.40 | 81.80 | 14 |
Perry's average during this period is the highest for any batsman over three calendar years in women's ODIs (with a 1000-run cut-off). The next highest is Karen Rolton's 76.64 between 2002 and 2004; Rolton also takes the third and fourth spots in this list, with averages of 73.66 between 2000 and 2002, and 66.43 between 2004 and 2006. Perry's 17 fifty-plus scores is a record too in a three-year period, with two others on 15 coming in next - Debbie Hockley, between 1995 and 1997, and Rolton (2003-05).
In terms of runs scored, Perry's 1393 in her last 25 innings is the second-highest in women's ODIs. Belinda Clark had scored 1508 at 75.40 between November 1997 and February 2000. However, Clark was an opener, which gave her more opportunities to play long innings. In terms of averages, Perry's 87.80 is the best for any player over 25 successive ODI innings, marginally ahead of Rolton's 87.73 between July 2001 and December 2004. Both batsmen had ten nots in those 25 innings, though, with Perry scoring only one run more than Rolton (1317 to 1316). Clark's average of 75.40 is third in the list.
What is more incredible than the average is the number of 50-plus scores Perry has notched up in the last three years - 17 in 23 innings is scarcely believable, and something that has never been achieved in ODIs, by men or women. Even when taking a 25-innings stretch, the next best is 15, by five of the top men in ODI batting - Kane Williamson, Javed Miandad, Hashim Amla, Viv Richards and Dean Jones. Among the women, 13 is the next highest, by four players - Hockley, Rolton, Clark and Mithali Raj.
Player | 50+ scores | Period |
Ellyse Perry | 17 | Aug '13 - Nov '16 |
Kane Williamson | 15 | Jun '13 - Feb '15 |
Hashim Amla | 15 | Jan '09 - Jan '11 |
Dean Jones | 15 | Oct '89 - Dec '90 |
Javed Miandad | 15 | Mar '87 - Oct '88 |
Viv Richards | 15 | Jan '85 - Mar '86 |
During this amazing run, Perry has two separate streaks of five or more successive fifties: from January 2014 to July 2015 she had six in a row, while she is currently on an streak of five in a row. The only other player to have two separate streaks or five or more 50-plus scores in women's ODIs is the former England captain, Charlotte Edwards. In fact, only three players in this format have six successive scores of 50 or more - Perry, Edwards, and Australia's Lindsay Reeler.
All these numbers don't even take into account Perry the bowler: in the 24 matches since the start of 2014, she has taken 33 wickets - sixth-highest during this period - at an average of 26.54. Six other women have achieved the double of 25 wickets and 500 runs during this period, but Perry's numbers stand out because the difference between her batting and bowling averages is a whopping 62.98; the next highest difference among this group is 21.32, for Suzie Bates.
Player | Mat | Runs | Bat ave | Wkts | Bowl ave | Ave diff |
Ellyse Perry (Aus) | 24 | 1343 | 89.53 | 33 | 26.54 | 62.98 |
Suzie Bates (NZ) | 36 | 1452 | 48.40 | 26 | 27.07 | 21.32 |
Heather Knight (Eng) | 27 | 839 | 38.13 | 32 | 22.18 | 15.94 |
Deandra Dottin (WI) | 27 | 784 | 34.08 | 27 | 23.33 | 10.75 |
Dane van Niekerk (SA) | 31 | 677 | 33.85 | 32 | 24.25 | 9.60 |
Marizanne Kapp (SA) | 29 | 580 | 29.00 | 32 | 25.31 | 3.68 |
Hayley Matthews (WI) | 23 | 570 | 24.78 | 26 | 22.61 | 2.16 |
With an overall ODI career aggregate of 1898 to go with 112 wickets, Perry is within touching distance of becoming only the third woman to achieve the double of 2000 runs and 100 wickets. The two who have achieved this so far are Australia's Lisa Sthalekar and West Indies' Stafanie Taylor. Perry's numbers aren't very different to those of Taylor's in terms of the difference between the batting and bowling averages: the difference for Taylor, over her entire career, is 25.65, compared to Perry's 24.51. They are also currently Nos. 1 and 2 in the ICC ratings for ODI allrounders, while Perry is No. 2 in batting and No. 7 in bowling. In 2013, Taylor became the only player in ODI history, men or women, to simultaneously be ranked No. 1 in both batting and bowling. That is probably the gold standard that Perry would be aspiring towards.
Player | Mat | Runs | Bat ave | Wickets | Bowl ave | Ave diff |
Stafanie Taylor (WI) | 98 | 3732 | 44.42 | 114 | 18.77 | 25.65 |
Lisa Sthalekar (Aus) | 125 | 2728 | 30.65 | 146 | 24.97 | 5.67 |
Player | Mat | Runs | Bat ave | Wickets | Bowl ave | Ave diff |
Ellyse Perry (Aus) | 81 | 1898 | 48.66 | 112 | 24.15 | 24.51 |
With inputs from Shiva Jayaraman.
S Rajesh is stats editor of ESPNcricinfo. Follow him on Twitter.
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