The Wall — the most technically correct batsman of his era, whose 13,288 Test runs and extraordinary consistency made him the foundation stone of India's batting for 16 years.
Rahul Sharad Dravid was born in Indore, India in 1973 and became the most technically correct batsman of his generation — nicknamed The Wall for his imperviousness to dismissal. His Test record: 13,288 runs in 164 matches at 52.31 with 36 centuries and 63 half-centuries — the third-highest total in Test history. His ODI record: 10,889 runs in 344 matches at 39.16. He plays for Karnataka and played county cricket for Kent and Scotland. He held 210 catches — the most by any non-wicketkeeper in Test history at the time of his retirement. He captained India in 25 Tests. His 270 against Pakistan in Rawalpindi in 2004 is his highest Test score and one of the finest displays of concentration in Test cricket — batting for over 11 hours. He scored Test centuries in all 10 Test-playing countries — the only batsman to achieve this. He and Tendulkar shared 20 century partnerships in Tests — the most by any batting pair in history. He won the ICC Player of the Year in 2004. After retirement he became a highly successful India head coach, guiding the team to the 2024 T20 World Cup. He was awarded the Padma Shri in 2000 and Padma Bhushan in 2013.
ICC Champions Trophy 2002 (India)
His batting average of 52.31 across 164 Tests — maintaining that level of consistency over 16 years — is a statistical achievement unique among the great batsmen.
Did You Know?Career Honours
- ICC Champions Trophy 2002 (India)
- Wisden Cricketer of Year 2000
- ICC Player of Year 2004
- ICC Test Team of Decade 2000–2010
- Padma Bhushan 2013
- Khel Ratna 2004