Shikhar Dhawan, an Indian international cricketer, is a left-handed opening batsman and an occasional right-arm off-break bowler. The player, who is widely popular for his composed yet aggressive batting approach, was born on December 5, 1985, in Delhi. Shikhar is often referred to as “Gabbar” by his peers because of his noticeable moustache. Following his brilliant domestic performances, Dhawan got the chance to play for India U-19 in the World Cup in Bangladesh in 2006. The opener remarkably amassed 505 runs and finished as the top run-scorer. In October 2010, Dhawan played his first ODI match against Australia. Though he made no significant contributions to international cricket for a while, his Test debut in 2013 against Australia helped him set a substantial achievement in his cricket career. Shikhar scored 187 runs from 174 balls, the fastest-ever century by any batsman on his Test debut.
Additionally, after scoring back-to-back Test hundreds away in 2015, he joined Rahul Dravid and Sunil Gavaskar as the only Indian batters to do so. The southpaw made his IPL debut in 2008 with his home franchise Delhi Daredevils. In his IPL career so far, Dhawan has played for different franchises, including Mumbai Indians, Deccan Chargers, and Sunrisers Hyderabad. Currently, he is the captain of Punjab Kings and was bought by the Northern outfit at Rs 8.25 Cr in the IPL 2023 Auction. Among rare records, Dhawan, while playing for Delhi Capitals, became the first player in the league’s history to hit consecutive centuries. In 2009, Dhawan started dating Melbourne-based Aesha Mukerji, an amateur kickboxer, and later got married in 2012. In early 2014, the duo became parents of a son named Zoravar. However, after nine years of marriage, the couple decided to part ways in 2022.
Shikhar Dhawan Biography
Full name | Shikhar Dhawan |
Nick Name | Gabbar, Jatt Ji, Daddy D |
Date of Birth/DOB/ age | Dec 05, 1985 (38 years) |
Birth Place | Delhi, India |
Zodiac sign/Sun sign | Sagittarius |
Profession | Indian Cricketer (Left-handed Batsman) |
Country | |
Cricket Role | Batsman |
Father name | Mahendra Pal Dhawan |
Mother name | Sunaina Dhawan |
Married | Divorced |
Spouse or Girlfriend | Ayesha Mukherjee (m. October 2012; div. October 2023) |
Children | Son– Zoravar (born in 2014) Daughters– Rhea (Step-daughter), Aliyah (Step-daughter) |
Education Qualification | 12th standard |
Religion | Hinduism |
Current Residence | Delhi, India |
Nationality | Indian |
Batting Style | Left Handed Bat |
Bowling Style | Right-arm offbreak |
Domestic Cricket debut | |
International Debut | ODI– 20 October 2010 against Australia at Visakhapatnam Test– 14 March 2013 against Australia at Mohali T20– 4 June 2011 against West Indies at Port of Spain |
Teams | Board Presidents XI, Mumbai Indians, India, Deccan Chargers, India Red, India A, Rest of India, North Zone, Mumbai A, Delhi, Sunrisers Hyderabad, Indians, Delhi Capitals, India B, Asia XI, Punjab Kings |
Shikhar Dhawan Physical Statistics
Height | in centimeters– 180 cm in meters– 1.80 m in feet inches– 5’ 11” |
Weight | in kilograms– 80 kg in pounds– 176 lbs |
Body Measurements (approx.) | – Chest: 40 inches – Waist: 32 inches – Biceps: 16 inches |
Eye Color | Dark Brown |
Hair Color | Black |
Shikhar Dhawan Profile
Shikhar Dhawan shot to fame after an unprecedented run in the 2004 U-19 World Cup, where he scored 505 runs garnished with 3 hundreds. However, it took him a long while to make it to the Indian team due to the large amount of competition at the time. A naturally attacking left-handed opener, Dhawan had been one of the mainstays of the Delhi line-up for a long time and forms an impregnable top-order along with Gautam Gambhir and Virender Sehwag, scoring runs by the barrel along with them. He was rated quite highly by experts for his ability to dig in and play the big innings.
Dhawan, with his side-on stance and negligible trigger movement, is strong on the off-side with his cuts and drives. His game against spin and the ability to come down the track to attack, and the prowess to score in big games and big tournaments made Dhawan a mainstay in the Indian limited overs team for a long time. A natural stroke-player, Dhawan has the gift of picking the line of the ball early and the length of the ball, allowing him ample time to get into position for any shot that he wishes to play.
After a string of excellent domestic performances, he was handed an India debut against Australia in 2010. He scored a duck and made no significant contributions for a while, as he continued to be the quintessential replacement player in the side. However, given the controversial axing of Virender Sehwag after the second Test, Dhawan was handed the desirable India Test cap to make his debut against the Australians in March 2013. He had a start that he wouldn’t have imagined in his wildest dreams as he raced away to the fastest ever hundred on debut off just 85 balls, and continued to score at will on a docile Mohali surface. Shikhar Dhawan continues to hold the record for the highest score by an Indian on Test debut, smashing 185 runs before being dismissed in the first innings.
Dhawan had a purple patch in 2013, and continued his form in ODIs and emerging as the player of the tournament in the ICC Champions Trophy in June 2013. He blazed away to 363 runs in just five games, including two hundreds. When Australia toured India in October 2013, Dhawan was relentless in his pursuit of runs as he slammed a ton and two fifties, finishing with 284 runs in six matches. He continued his good run in the home series against West Indies as well, becoming the highest run-getter for India in the calendar year.
Dhawan had a dismal Test series against South Africa in 2013 and an even worse one in England in 2014, with a best of 37 in six innings, where his problems outside off were exposed, as he committed to the line of the ball too early, thereby ending up not accounting for the lateral movement and had a tendency of chasing the ball. He continued to struggle in Tests barring a rather scratchy 81 in the second innings of the Brisbane Test, Dhawan did not get any significant scores in the 2014-15 Border-Gavaskar Trophy. Due to his technical deficiencies, he forfeited his spot to KL Rahul. However, in limited-overs cricket, where the pitches are true and all is rosy, Dhawan continued to prosper.
Against all odds, Dhawan started off the 2015 World Cup with a fluent 72 against arch-rivals Pakistan and a glorious and skillful 137 at the MCG against South Africa, looking like a different player and playing all kinds of shots against the likes of Morkel and Steyn, helping his side gain their first victory over South Africa in a World Cup encounter. The pace and bounce of the Australian pitches appeared to have undone Dhawan, but the true bounce and the lack of lateral movement meant that he could get into his zone and start to play close to his body again, ending the tournament with 412 runs. Dhawan and Rohit managed to set the platform every time for three hundred-plus totals with their solid first-wicket partnerships.
Dhawan has struggled for form in the longer format, with some small chinks in his armour such as the tendency of poking outside off and playing beside the line of the ball at all times rather than over it. Some of the virtues that work for him in the limited form, such as playing close to his body, do not work for him in the longer format because of the parallax error that he undergoes since he doesn’t get his eyes over the ball while playing it.
However, Dhawan continued to remain India’s go-to man in ODIs and delivered another fine performance in an ICC event, making him a specialist for the big stage in the limited-overs format. Despite his limitations, his carefree attitude and his explosive off-side shots, one can’t help but draw comparisons with another maverick opener from Delhi. The ability to peak during ICC events made him an almost indispensable asset to the side in limited -overs cricket – a rather theatrical oddity in his career with the utopian twist of opportune comebacks.
His luck though eventually faded out come the turn of the decade, with age and slowly down reflexes catching up to him. Although Dhawan was named stand-in captain for a few tours when Rohit Sharma was rested, he failed to set the stage on fire. A dipping strike rate and an inability to convert starts into big scorers consistently paved the path for Shubman Gill to be picked as ODI opener to pair-up with Rohit Sharma with Dhawan slowly being phased out.
IPL through the years
The Indian Premier League came at exactly the right time in Shikhar Dhawan’s cricket career. He wasn’t quite the star back then in 2008 but his credentials as a cricketer was good enough to earn him an IPL contract. Dhawan was picked up by Delhi Daredevils and he played in a star-studded team alongside Sehwag, Gambhir, de Villiers, Dilshan, and Collingwood in 2008. Shikhar batted at the vital number-3 spot and ended up as the third highest run-getter with 340 runs in 14 matches.
In a bizarre decision, Delhi let Shikhar go to Mumbai in the next season. And the move to Mumbai Indians proved to be a disaster for Dhawan. In two seasons for MI, Shikhar only played 15 matches. In 2009, he played 5 matches and averaged 10 and in the next edition, he could only make 191 runs in 10 matches. After two dismal seasons, Dhawan moved to Sunrisers Hyderabad and that decision transformed Shikhar’s career, he found back his consistency and became one of the key assets for Deccan Chargers first and then for Sunrisers Hyderabad. Soon, he was selected for the Indian team and since then he has been one of the top performers for India as well as for his IPL franchise.
Ahead of the 2019 IPL auctions, Shikhar was traded by Sunrisers Hyderabad. They sold him to Delhi and in return got Vijay Shankar, Abhishek Sharma, and Shahbaz Nadeem. So, after a gap of 11 years, Shikhar went on to represent the Delhi franchise once again and ended the first season as the leading run getter for the Capitals, with five fifties to his name. The 2020 season was no different, in fact it proved to be better for Shikhar Dhawan as he ended as the second highest run scorer in the competition, as he scored his first IPL ton and then became the first player ever in IPL history to record back-to-back hundreds. Dhawan’s efforts helped DC reach the final, where they were beaten by arguably the best franchise side ever assembled in Mumbai Indians.
In the 2021 season, Dhawan still remained the top run getter for Delhi Capitals, but his average dipped a bit and he could only manage three fifties that season. Ahead of the mega auctions, Dhawan was released with the franchise opting to retain younger players. Dhawan was the first player picked in the mega auction, with Punjab Kings raising their baton for him. He struggled to match his lofty standards in the 2022 season, as he was transitioning to become more of an anchor player. Nevertheless, he was top scorer for PBKS and he was subsequently retained and also made team captain for the next season with Mayank Agarwal being released.
World Cup through the years
The Ultimate ICC event player. Shikhar Dhawan is the individual equivalent of the Australian team post the 1999 World Cup – regardless of merit or form, he has a knack of attaining his peak form just before World events. Such was the case ahead of the 2019 World Cup, where an incredible IPL season a few months earlier made him the mainstay for the International side. Dhawan started with a bang, as he scored a sensational match-defining hundred against Australia in the group stages despite nursing a finger injury sustained during the match. That finger injury proved to be a fracture which ruled out Dhawan from the World Cup, with KL Rahul being asked to deputize as opener for the rest of the tournament. In India’s 2015 World Cup campaign, Dhawan was the team’s highest run-getter with 412 runs, scoring at an average in excess of 50, with two crucial knocks in pressure games against major teams – 137 against South Africa, and a useful 73 against Pakistan.
Shikhar Dhawan Career Stats
Batting & Fielding
FORMAT | Mat | Inns | NO | Runs | HS | Ave | BF | SR | 100s | 50s | 4s | 6s | Ct | St |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tests | 34 | 58 | 1 | 2315 | 190 | 40.61 | 3458 | 66.94 | 7 | 5 | 316 | 12 | 28 | 0 |
ODIs | 167 | 164 | 10 | 6793 | 143 | 44.11 | 7436 | 91.35 | 17 | 39 | 842 | 79 | 83 | 0 |
T20Is | 68 | 66 | 3 | 1759 | 92 | 27.92 | 1392 | 126.36 | 0 | 11 | 191 | 50 | 19 | 0 |
FC | 122 | 202 | 10 | 8499 | 224 | 44.26 | 14372 | 59.13 | 25 | 29 | – | – | 120 | 0 |
List A | 302 | 298 | 23 | 12074 | 248 | 43.90 | – | – | 30 | 67 | – | – | 149 | 0 |
T20s | 329 | 326 | 34 | 9645 | 106* | 33.03 | 7695 | 125.34 | 2 | 69 | 1090 | 224 | 133 | 0 |
Bowling
FORMAT | Mat | Inns | Balls | Runs | Wkts | BBI | BBM | Ave | Econ | SR | 4w | 5w | 10w |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tests | 34 | 5 | 54 | 18 | 0 | – | – | – | 2.00 | – | 0 | 0 | 0 |
ODIs | 167 | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
T20Is | 68 | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
FC | 122 | – | 298 | 142 | 3 | 2/30 | 2/30 | 47.33 | 2.85 | 99.3 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
List A | 302 | – | 272 | 249 | 9 | 2/22 | 2/22 | 27.66 | 5.49 | 30.2 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
T20s | 329 | 6 | 48 | 66 | 4 | 1/7 | 1/7 | 16.50 | 8.25 | 12.0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Shikhar Dhawan IPL Auction Price History
Year | Price | Team |
---|---|---|
2018 | 5.20 Cr | Hyderabad |
2019 | 5.20 Cr | Delhi |
2020 | 5.20 Cr | Delhi |
2021 | 5.20 Cr | Delhi |
2022 | 8.25 Cr | Punjab |
2023 | 8.25 Cr | Punjab |
2024 | 8.25 Cr | Punjab |
Shikhar Dhawan’s Social Media Accounts
Shikhar Dhawan (@shikhardofficial) | |
Shikhar Dhawan (@SDhawan25) | |
Shikhar Dhawan | |
Wikipedia | Shikhar Dhawan |
Some Lesser-Known Facts About Shikhar Dhawan
- Does Shikhar Dhawan smoke?: No
- Does Shikhar Dhawan drink alcohol?: Yes
- Shikhar was born into a middle-class Punjabi family with roots in Ludhiana.
- His cousin used to play for Sonnet Club, Delhi. Watching him play, he developed his interest in cricket, after which his parents enrolled him at the Sonnet Club, aged 12, under the coaching of Tarak Sinha.
- The same year, he scored a century in a U-15 school tournament.
- When he joined the club, he was more of a wicket-keeper than a batsman.
- While he was playing domestic cricket, there was a time when he was continually overlooked by the selectors, which frustrated him so much that he wanted to quit playing cricket.
- On his ODI debut, he got out on a “duck” and scored a “century” on his Test debut.
- He was selected ahead of Virender Sehwag on his Test debut, and he fully justified his selection by hitting the fastest century on Test debut — in just 85 balls.
- His Ghajini haircut, curved moustache, and the way he twirls his moustache are trendsetters among the youths.
- His wife Ayesha Mukherji who was settled in Australia was introduced to him by their common friend Harbhajan Singh on Facebook. Later, they both got into a relationship and got married.
- His wife Ayesha is half-Bengali and half-British, who hails from Melbourne, Australia. She has 2 children with her first husband and 1 child with Shikhar Dhawan.
- His wife is 10 years older than him.
- He has a signature style of celebration after taking a catch.
- He is known to be a grounded person and he credits Sufi songs for it as it taught him to treat success and failure in the same way.
- In September 2021, his wife, Ayesha, took to Instagram to announce that Shikhar and she had parted ways after nine years of marriage.