Kevin Peter Pietersen,
MBE (born 27 June 1980
in Pietermaritzburg
, Natal, South Africa) is a South African-born cricketer who plays for the England cricket team. He is a
right-handed
batsman and occasional
off spin bowler who
plays for
Hampshire County
Cricket Club,
England, and
is captain of the
Indian Premier
League team
Royal
Challengers Bangalore. He was captain of the England
Test and
One
Day International teams from 4 August 2008 to 7 January 2009.
He resigned after just three tests and nine One Day Internationals,
following a dispute with England coach
Peter Moores, who was sacked the
same day.
He made his
first-class debut
for
Natal in 1997 before
moving
to England after voicing his displeasure at the
racial quota system in place in South Africa,
and to further his opportunities for playing at international
level. His English mother gave Pietersen eligibility to play for
England, and after serving a qualifying period of four years
playing at
county level, he was
called up almost immediately into the national side. He made his
international debut in the One Day International match against
Zimbabwe in 2004, and
his Test match debut in the
2005 Ashes
series against
Australia the following
year.
Pietersen became the fastest batsman to reach both 1,000 and 2,000
runs in One Day International cricket, and has the highest average
of any England player to have played more than 20 innings of
one-day cricket. He has the second-highest run total from his first
25 Tests, behind only the Australian
Donald Bradman, and was the fastest player,
in terms of days, to reach 4,000 Test runs. He became only the
third English batsman to top the ICC One Day International
rankings, doing so in March 2007. In July 2008, after a century
against South Africa,
The Times
called him "the most complete batsman in cricket".
Shane Warne, a close friend, in a September
serial for the same newspaper, wrote, "I don't think he has an
obvious flaw in his technique."
Early and personal life
Born of an English mother, Penny, and an
Afrikaner father, Jannie, Pietersen had a strict
and well-disciplined childhood, along with his three brothers Tony,
Greg and Bryan; he learned valuable lessons from this "fantastic"
approach to parenting, and said: "Discipline is good. It taught me
that I didn't always have to have what I wanted; that what I needed
was different from what I wanted." Bryan plays club and second XI
cricket in England.
Pietersen
attended Maritzburg College,
Pietermaritzburg
, and made his first-class cricket debut for Natal's B team in 1997, aged 17,
where he was regarded predominantly as an off
spin bowler and a hard-hitting lower-order batsman.
After two
seasons, he moved to England for a five-month spell as the overseas
player for club side Cannock
CC, helping
them win the Birmingham and District
Premier League in 2000. This first spell away from home did not
leave him with fond memories for England, in particular "those
horrible Black Country accents" referring to the dialect of the
Midlands
, living in a
single room above a squash court, and working in the club
bar. However, he returned to newly renamed
KwaZulu Natal side a better
cricketer; a lack of opportunities to bowl had improved his
batting.
Having seen Pietersen play at a school cricket festival,
Clive Rice invited him to sign for
Nottinghamshire County
Cricket Club. Pietersen accepted without hesitation, keen to
make the most of top-class cricket under a coach for whom he had
the utmost admiration. He did not at this stage contemplate
forsaking his nation; nor had it yet occurred to him that the
decision would eventually have to be taken.
Pietersen is widely portrayed in the media as having a self-assured
personality, described by
Geoffrey
Boycott as being "cocky and confident". Former England test
captain
Michael Vaughan counters
this, saying, "KP is not a confident person. He obviously has great
belief in his ability but that's not quite the same thing... And I
know KP wants to be loved. I try to text him and talk to him as
often as I can because I know he is insecure." He has been noted
for unusual haircuts, with his peroxide blond dyed streak of hair
along the middle of his head during the
2005 Ashes series being described as a
"dead skunk" look. During the
2006–07
Ashes tour, the Australian team, noted for their efforts to
dominate opponents psychologically, dubbed him "The Ego", or
"FIGJAM" (Fuck I'm Good, Just Ask Me). Other
nicknames include
KP,
Kelves and
Kapes..
Kevin Pietersen published his autobiography:
Kevin Pietersen:
Crossing the Boundary in early 2007.A second biography:
Kevin Pietersen: Portrait of a Rebel written by journalist
Marcus Stead, was published in the autumn of 2009. This book
includes a detailed account of the controversies of Pietersen's
reign as England captain.
Pietersen is married to
Liberty X singer
Jessica Taylor.
The couple
married on 29 December 2007 at the Manor House Hotel in Castle Combe
, Wiltshire, with former England team-mate Darren Gough acting as best man.Their
first child is due in the summer of 2010.
Domestic career
He impressed members of
Nasser
Hussain's England side when playing for
KwaZulu Natal in 1999; he took
four top-order wickets and, despite batting at number nine, scored
61
not out from 57 balls, hitting four
sixes. Hussain then recommended that Pietersen secure a contract
with an English county side.
Despite the praise from the England side, Pietersen claimed he was
dropped from the Natal first team. Pietersen felt that this was due
to the country's
racial quota system,
in which provincial sides were required to have at least four
non-white players. Pietersen's view was that players should be
judged on merit, and described it as "heartbreaking" when he was
left out of the side, although he later reflected "it turned out it
was the best thing that could have happened". Pietersen has since
firmly criticised the quota system, which he feels forced him out
of the country of his birth. He has also criticised
Graeme Smith, who became captain of the South
African side in 2003, calling him "an absolute muppet, childish and
strange" and that his behaviour "leaves a lot to be desired". Smith
opposed this, saying, "I'm patriotic about my country, and that's
why I don't like Kevin Pietersen. The only reason that Kevin and I
have never had a relationship is because he slated South Africa".
Pietersen's outspoken views published in his autobiography,
Crossing the Boundary, in September 2006, and in an
interview for South African magazine
GQ, led to unsuccessful calls for an
ICC investigation
regarding bringing the game into disrepute.
In 2000,
Nottinghamshire coach
Clive Rice, who had seen Pietersen play
in 1997 in South Africa at a schools week, heard that Pietersen was
playing club cricket for the Cannock Cricket Club and offered him a
three-year contract to play for the county. His maiden first-class
century came on his Nottinghamshire debut against
Loughborough UCCE.
In his first season he
made 1,275 runs with an impressive batting average of 57.95, including 218 not
out in an unbroken sixth-wicket stand of 352 with John Morris at Derby
in July,
after having been out lbw for a
duck in the first innings.
These performances led to praise in the
Wisden Cricketers'
Almanack: "If he can maintain his first season's form, the
name of Pietersen should be pencilled in for future Test squads."
This form did indeed continue into the following year: he made
another unbeaten double-century, against
Middlesex, taking part in a
partnership of 316 for the fourth wicket with
Darren Bicknell. This period proved to be a
purple patch for the batsman, scoring
four consecutive centuries (254 not out, 122, 147 and 116) in one
week in August.
In 2003, Pietersen scored 1,546
first-class runs, and 764 runs in
limited overs cricket.
He was
selected for the 2003/04 ECB
National Academy tour of India, and had a successful tour
scoring 523 runs including three centuries in his six first-class
innings to record an average of 104.60, and making 131 in a one-day
match against India A in Bangalore
.
After
Nottinghamshire were relegated in 2003, Pietersen requested a
release from his contract, saying "I haven't been happy for a
while....The pitch at Trent Bridge
has been one of my problems... I could have
done so much better if the wicket had been good."
This led to a public
row with club captain Jason Gallian,
where Gallian allegedly threw Pietersen's kit off the Trent Bridge
balcony and broke his bat:
During the game I told the captain that I was not happy
and that I wanted to leave.
After the game we spoke in the dressing room and then I
went to have dinner.
I got a call saying the captain had trashed my
equipment.
I was told the captain had said, 'if he does not want
to play for Notts he can f*** off.'
I have not spoken to Gallian since, nor have I received
an apology.
Pietersen was made to honour the last year of his contract at
Nottinghamshire, but "didn't enjoy it at all". In October 2004, he
joined
Hampshire under
the captaincy of
Shane Warne.
After becoming a regular in the international side, Pietersen
rarely gets an opportunity to play domestic cricket. Having an
England "central contract" meant that Pietersen was only released
to play for Hampshire at the discretion of the national coach.
After being left out of the national side to face
Bangladesh in May 2005,
Pietersen had several good innings in the English
County Championship, including two
centuries. He only played twice for the county in 2006, and
appeared just once in 2007, with an unbeaten 66 against
Ireland.
International career
Success in South Africa
The tour
of Zimbabwe
caused several players to voice their concerns
about the Robert Mugabe regime, the
security issues in the country and the standard of the Zimbabwean side. Steve Harmison was the first to boycott the
tour for "political and sporting reasons", and all-rounder
Andrew Flintoff was reported to be
considering taking a moral stand himself. The England Chairman of
Selectors
David Graveney denied that
the selectors would leave out players unhappy with touring Zimbabwe
and would put their absences down to injury. Flintoff was, however,
"rested" and Pietersen rushed into the squad "at the earliest
opportunity". In the five match ODI series, Pietersen batted in
three innings which included a score of 77 not out; he finished the
series with an average of 104.00 as England won the series
4–0.
Pietersen was upset not to be initially in the squad to tour South
Africa. With Flintoff withdrawing due to injury, Pietersen was
recalled to the squad, and cemented his place in the first team
with 97 off 84 balls in the warm-up match against South Africa A,
in the face of a hostile crowd. Throughout the tour, Pietersen was
subjected to a barrage of abuse from the South African crowd, who
regarded him somewhat like a
traitor. He
said:
I knew I was going to cop a lot of stick but it will be
like water off a duck's back...I expected stick at the start of the
innings, and I'm sure it will carry on through the whole
series.
But I just sat back and laughed at the opposition, with
their swearing and 'traitor' remarks... some of them can hardly
speak English.
My affiliation is with England.
In fact, I'm starting to speak too much like Darren Gough...
In fact, I'm going to get one of Gough's tattoos with
three lions and my number underneath...No one can say I'm not
English.
Pietersen
scored a 96-ball 108 not out in the tied second ODI at Bloemfontein
, after which the crowd turned their backs on him as
he returned to the pavilion. This score set his ODI average
at an incredible record 234.00.
He made 75 at Cape Town
, then at East London
Pietersen made an unbeaten 100 from only 69 balls,
the fastest century by an England player in a one-day match,
although England still lost by eight runs. In the final game at
Centurion
Park
, Pietersen came to the wicket at 32/3 and scored
116, but again could not prevent a defeat. Pietersen ended
the series, which England lost 4–1, with 454 runs in five innings,
and the Player of the Series award. By the end of the series, the
South African crowds had generally replaced hostility with respect
for Pietersen, his final century being awarded a standing
ovation.
Mixed success in Ashes build-up
Despite
press speculation, Pietersen was not picked for the Tests against Bangladesh—his early season form
being dogged by a foot injury—but with his county form improving,
he was selected for the Twenty20 match
against Australia at
Southampton
, making 34 from 18 balls and taking three catches
as England won by 100 runs.
In the
triangular ODI series against Australia and Bangladesh, Pietersen
did not get to bat in the first match at The Oval
as England won by 10 wickets, but scored 91 off 65
balls in the match in Bristol
against Australia. In the remainder of the
triangular series, Pietersen scored quickly, although without other
half-centuries. He finished the seven-match series with a total of
278 runs at an average of 46.33.
Pietersen's performances sparked speculation over whether he would
be brought into the Test side for
The
Ashes later in the summer. A
BBC poll of 10
respected cricketers resulted in a minor preference for playing
Pietersen and
Ian Bell in the
middle order, with
Graham Thorpe missing out.
Later in July, Pietersen played in all three matches of the (ODI)
NatWest Challenge against Australia. In the final match he was the
top scorer for England with 74 runs; however, he was forced off the
field in the third over of Australia's reply with a groin
injury.
2005 Ashes triumph
Speculation over when Pietersen would play for the Test team was
ended in July with the announcement by the England chairman of
selectors,
David Graveney, that
Pietersen had been selected ahead of Thorpe.
He made his debut in
the first Ashes Test at Lord's
, becoming the 626th player to play for the national
side. Pietersen scored 57 and 64 not out as England
collapsed to a heavy defeat, becoming only the fourth player to top
score in both innings on debut for England, the eighth England
player to score a half-century in each innings on his debut, and
the third cricketer to do so at Lord's. In the second Test at
Edgbaston he scored 71 in the first innings and 20 in the second,
with England narrowly winning by 2 runs.
In the drawn third Test, Pietersen struggled with 21 and 0, then
scored 45 and 23 in the fourth as England went 2–1 up.
Under pressure to
post a large score in the final Test at The Oval
, Pietersen did not contribute significantly in the
first innings with 14. In the second innings, Pietersen was
dropped twice before reaching double figures, and with England in
real trouble at 7 wickets down, went on to score his maiden Test
century with a mesmerising 158, helping to secure the return of the
ashes to England for the first time since the late 1980s. His
innings included seven sixes, breaking Ian Botham's record for the
most sixes by an English player in an Ashes innings. Pietersen was
named
Man of the Match for his
efforts, and finished the series as top scorer, with 473 runs over
the five Tests, an average of 52.55. However, he had a less
successful series in the field, dropping six catches in the five
Tests, a point he made wryly when questioned about the Australians
dropping him three times on the final day. Pietersen was given an
ECB "central
contract" to reflect his place in the national side.
Less rewarding winter tour
Pietersen had a less successful time in the three Test matches
against
Pakistan,
which England lost 2–0. He made little impact in the first and
third Tests, his highest score being 34. He fared better in the
second, however, making his second Test century in the first
innings. He was also performing well in the one-day series with two
explosive innings of 56 from 39 balls to help England win the first
ODI, and 28 from 27 balls in the second. The quick-scoring innings
in the second ODI was to be Pietersen's last on the tour. A rib
injury sustained in the first ODI proved too painful throughout the
second, and Pietersen returned to England to recover fully for the
tour of India.
In March 2006, Pietersen played in the three Tests against
India, which England drew 1–1.
His 87 in the second innings of the first match came during
England's acceleration period, helping push the required target
over 300. England then declared overnight, and India successfully
batted out the final day to secure a draw. This half-century was
followed by another in the first innings of the second Test. The
second innings was not so good, facing just 13 balls before being
given out
caught behind off a
Harbhajan Singh delivery. The unhappy
Pietersen was later fined 30 percent of his match fee for shaking
his head and showing signs of dissent. "Replays demonstrated that
the ball that had dismissed him had brushed his forearm, not his
glove, before ballooning up into the hands of
Rahul Dravid at slip. But umpire
Darrell Hair gave him out for 4 as England
collapsed on the fourth afternoon." Pietersen posted scores of 39
and 7 in the final Test, a match England won comfortably after a
dismal 100 all out in India's second visit to the crease.
In the one-day series, which England lost 5–1, he was top scorer
for England in four out of the five matches he played, and had the
highest average of any player with 58.20. His 71 in the second ODI
took him past 1,000 ODI runs, equalling
Viv
Richards' record of 21 innings to reach this total.
Sri Lanka and Pakistan in England, 2006
In May 2006, Pietersen matched his highest Test score of 158 in the
first match against
Sri
Lanka, and followed it with 142 in the second Test. This took
him past the milestone of 1,000 Test runs, in his 12th Test match,
and he became the first batsman since
Graham Gooch in 1990 to score a century in
three successive Test innings on English soil. This performance
moved Pietersen into the top ten of the
ICC cricket ratings, as he was named the
England (Test Match) Player of the Series.On the first day of the
third Test against Pakistan, Pietersen reached his fifth Test
century with an overnight score of 104. Although Pietersen retired
hurt shortly after reaching three figures, due to cramp, he
returned to the crease the next morning and went on to top score in
England's first innings total of 515 with 135 runs from 169
balls.
Pietersen bowled his first delivery in Test match cricket on 4
June, against Sri Lanka. His first Test wicket came against
Pakistan later in the
summer when
Kamran Akmal got a thin
edge through to
Geraint Jones.
Later in June, Pietersen scored 17 in the
Twenty20 International as England lost by 2 runs to
Sri Lanka. The twenty
over match
against Pakistan was no better, Pietersen being
bowled by
Mohammad Asif
for a
golden duck as Pakistan helped
themselves to a five-wicket victory.
England in Australia, 2006–07
In the much-anticipated Ashes series in Australia, Pietersen was
widely judged to be England's best player, scoring 490 runs in the
five matches and averaging over fifty, despite Australia's obvious
targeting of him. "I was interested to see how he would get on in
Australia in 2006–07 on pitches with more bounce," wrote Warne,
"because bowlers had tried to test him with the short ball. He was
still England's best batsman."
He
started well, with a defiant 92 in the First Test, despite losing
by 277 runs, and then backed up his good form with a century in the
Second Test in Adelaide
,sharing a 310-run partnership for the fourth
wicket with Paul Collingwood. When he was eventually run out, his
first reaction was to "giggle" because it was the third time in his
Test career that he had scored exactly 158 runs, which was, at that
point, his highest Test score. Even Pietersen seemed disheartened
by the end of the series, however, England losing five–nil.
In the tour's sole Twenty20 match, Pietersen was run out on eleven
as England lost by 77 runs. Remarkably, for a powerful hitter,
Pietersen has not yet posted a large score in the specialised
twenty-over format, in which he averages 15.50.
In the first one-day
international of the 2006–07 Commonwealth Bank Series, on 12
January at the Melbourne Cricket Ground
, Pietersen was injured when a ball bowled by
Glenn McGrath hit him on the
ribs. Despite continuing his innings in some discomfort,
making 82,
X-rays revealed a fracture, and
Pietersen was forced to miss the rest of the series.
Career in 2007
2007 World Cup
In the
2007 Cricket World
Cup, Pietersen crafted 104 runs off 122 balls against Australia
in the
Super
Eight stage of the tournament. It was the first World Cup
century by an Englishman since 1996, and the first ever against
Australia. He made three half-centuries, scoring 60 runs from 92
balls against
New
Zealand, 56 runs from 72 balls against
Kenya, and 58 runs from 80 balls
against
Sri Lanka.
His efforts in the World Cup helped him achieve the status of
International Cricket
Council number-one ranked batsman in the world for ODIs;
however, England did not reach the semi-finals. In England's final
match of the World Cup against the
West Indies, Pietersen made 100
from 91 balls, and effected the run-out of retiring captain
Brian Lara. This century took him past
2,000 ODI runs, in doing so equalling the record 51 matches set by
Zaheer Abbas. He finished the
tournament with 444 runs, at an average of 55.5, and was described
as shining in the England team "like a 100 watt bulb in a room full
of candles".
West Indies in England
Having
scored a century in the first Test against the West Indies at
Lord's
, Pietersen posted his highest score of 226 in the
second Test at Headingley
(it was scored in 262 balls, with 24 fours and 2
sixes), surpassing his previous best of 158 which he had achieved
three times. With this score, Pietersen moved ahead of
Everton Weekes and
Viv Richards to be the batsman with the
second-highest run-total out of his first 25 Tests (behind
Don Bradman). It is also the highest Test score
for England since
Graham Gooch scored
333 against
India in 1990. This
innings subjected the West Indies to an innings and 283 runs
defeat, their largest against any team. Pietersen, the Man of the
Match, said, "I believe the recipe for success is hard work. I've
been criticised for throwing my wicket away, and I tried to make it
count here".
In the
third Test at Old Trafford
, scoring 68 in the second innings, Pietersen lost
his wicket in a bizarre dismissal when West Indian all-rounder
Dwayne Bravo delivered a bouncer which knocked Pietersen's helmet
off his head and onto his stumps. He is only the fourth
batsman in Test cricket to be dismissed "
hit
wicket" as a result of headgear falling onto the stumps. This
score took him past the 8,500 first-class runs mark, and 2,500 runs
in Test cricket.
In contrast, Pietersen's batting was poor in the following single
innings matches; he scored a total of 77 runs in five matches (two
Twenty20 and three ODI), recording a second-ball duck in the final
ODI. He subsequently fell to second in the official One Day
International batting rankings, behind
Ricky Ponting. Pietersen himself commented
that his lack of form was a result of "fatigue", and reiterated his
calls for a less "hectic" match schedule.
India tour and Twenty20 Championship
Pietersen found some form in the first Test against
India, with a knock of 134 in
the second innings to set up a potential England victory. Pietersen
described this as his best century, in very testing conditions.
After two low scores in the second Test, Pietersen scored his 10th
Test century in the third and final Test at the Oval, helping
England to draw the game with 101.
Pietersen was also picked for and played in the Twenty20
Championship in South Africa. In England's first game against
Zimbabwe on 13 September, Pietersen hit 79 runs off 37 balls, his
highest Twenty20 score, including four sixes and seven fours in an
English total of 188–9. England won the match by 50 runs; however,
this was to be Pietersen's largest contribution in the competition.
He scored another 99 runs over four more matches, ending the series
with an average of 35.60. He also scored the most England fours
(17) and jointly held the record for the most England sixes (6)
with
Owais Shah. He also held the highest
strike rate of any England batsman.
Sri Lanka 2007
Pietersen scored 50 in England's opening game in Sri Lanka against
the Sri Lankan Cricket XI, but it took until the fourth ODI for
Pietersen to find form, scoring 63 not out as England won their
first series in Sri Lanka. This form was still fluctuating in the
warm-up matches for the Test series, scoring 4, 1 and 59 against
the Sri Lankan Cricket XI. This run continued in the Test matches,
the only highlight being 45 not out to secure a draw in the 2nd
Test. In the first innings, Pietersen's dismissal was to be the
source of much controversy. He edged his fifth ball to
Chamara Silva at slip, who flicked the ball up
for wicketkeeper
Kumar Sangakkara
to complete the catch. The two on-field umpires conferred over the
validity of the catch, as it was unclear whether the ball had
touched the ground
prior to Silva flicking the ball up.
Daryl Harper, standing at the bowler's
end gave the decision that the wicket had been taken, but while
walking off the field, Pietersen saw a replay on the big screen and
questioned the validity of the decision. This led for calls for
similar catches to be referred to the third (TV) umpire, but this
can only take place if the on-field umpires have not made a
decision. Pietersen passed 3,000 Test runs during the series,
becoming the fastest player (by time) to do so, but only averaged
25.20, and failed to score a half century in a series for the first
time.
Career in 2008
New Zealand tours (home and away)
On England's tour against
New
Zealand, Pietersen averaged 33.00 in the ODI series, with one
score of 50 in the tied fourth match; England lost the series 3–1.
He also made a top score of 43 in the first of two comfortable
Twenty20 matches. Pietersen
had a quiet first two Test matches, making little impression with
the bat.
However, in the first innings of the
Napier
Test he
rescued England from a disastrous start of 3–4, guiding them to 259
with 129, his 11th Test century.
New Zealand then came to tour England and Pietersen again struggled
in the first two Test matches, scoring single figures in the first
match. In the second, he scored 26 in the first innings, then ran
himself out on 42 having looked well set. He struck a century in
the third Test, forming a valuable partnership with
Tim Ambrose, making a crucial 115. Pietersen hit
a winning 42 not out in the Twenty20 match.
The switch-hit
In the first ODI of the NatWest series, Pietersen hit two sixes by
"switch-hitting" en route to 110 not out. While facing the bowling
of medium pace
Scott Styris, Pietersen
turned his body around and switched hands (effectively batting as a
left-hander) hitting two sixes over
cover and long off. Because Pietersen not
only reversed his hand position (as some batsman do while playing
the
reverse sweep),
but changed his stance by rotating his body, these "switch-hit"
shots were immediately followed by calls to outlaw them from the
game. Although a similar shot was played when Pietersen
reverse-swept
Muttiah
Muralitharan for six in Sri Lanka in 2006, he only switched
hands and executed "the switch" after the ball was bowled, and not
before, as in this case.
Several commentators claim that because Pietersen changed from
being a right-handed to a left-handed batsman as the bowler
approached his delivery stride, he was gaining an unfair advantage.
Gideon Haigh said that "A bowler must
advise a batsman when he's changing direction, why should the
batsmen not; given that where the bowler's aiming will depend on
the placement of the off stump".
Ian Healy
seconded this by saying "It just should be outlawed straightaway.
If you want to hit to one side of the field, you've got to do it in
a cross fashion, and not swap the way you're facing or your grip.
Otherwise you are going to start to allow the bowlers to go round
the wicket, over the wicket, and keep swapping during their
run-ups." This ideal was echoed by former fast-bowler
Michael Holding, who rather than calling for
the shot to be banned, advocated the latter scenario whereby
bowlers do not have to inform the umpire, or batsman, of a change
of delivery.
Pietersen countered these claims by saying:
"That's ridiculous, absolutely stupid.
The reverse-sweep has been part of the game for however
long.
I am just fortunate that I am able to hit it a bit
further.
Everybody wants brand new ideas, new inventions and new
shots.
That is a new shot played today and people should be
saying it's a new way to go.
There are new things happening for cricket at the
moment and people shouldn't be criticising it all the
time."
Another citation for the shot being outlawed was that the
possibility of being out LBW ("a player is out LBW if...the ball
pitches in line between wicket and wicket or on the off side of the
striker's wicket") is removed, as the off side become the leg side
and vice versa. The shots were considered by the
MCC, governors of the game, who came
to the conclusion that the shot was legal, believing that the LBW
law (which continues "The off side of the striker's wicket shall be
determined by the striker's stance at the moment the ball comes
into play for that delivery") adequately covers the scenario. They
cited the variations bowlers can make, such as bowling a googly or
a slower ball, and also the inherent risk in the shot to the
batsman, in the justification of their decision.
There are still calls for further review of the stroke, with
Jonathan Agnew giving a scenario in
which a right-handed batsman can take his stance as a left-hander,
then switch stance as the bowler runs in, thus being able to kick
away any balls that land outside his now off stump. He also calls
for the wide law to be adjusted in one-day cricket, as bowlers are
penalised for most deliveries that pass down the leg side.
England captaincy
Success against South Africa
Pietersen captained England in the fourth ODI against New Zealand
after
Paul Collingwood was banned
for four games for a slow over-rate during the previous match.
England's unofficial vice-captain since Collingwood's appointment
in June 2007, Pietersen was named as the stand-in captain for three
further matches in August.
the third Test against South Africa, Pietersen was criticized for
throwing his wicket away attempting a six to complete a century.
Jonathan Agnew and
Alec Stewart called the stroke "irresponsible"
and Agnew continued, suggesting that Pietersen therefore ruled
himself out of the potential reckoning for the England captaincy
with
Vaughan's place in the starting
line-up in doubt after failing to score runs. In the event, having
lost the match, Vaughan resigned and Pietersen was made the
permanent captain of both the Test and ODI sides (
Paul Collingwood relinquished the ODI
captaincy at the same time).Following the news that he had been
made England Test and ODI captain, Pietersen paid tribute to both
outgoing captains but announced that he would look to captain the
team in his own style. He scored a century in his debut match as
captain in the
dead rubber fourth Test,
and went on to defeat South Africa 4–0 in the ODI matches.
Derailment against India
Pietersen continued to lead the team during a 5–0 defeat to India
in ODI matches; the series was supposed to consist of seven
matches, but was abandoned after the fifth due to the
2008 Mumbai attacks. Pietersen's men
returned to England before resuming the tour amid unprecedented
security, to play a two-Test series. Pietersen was highly vocal in
regards to the resumption of the tour, citing a need to stand up to
terrorism. England were defeated in the first, however the team
recovered to draw the second with Pietersen scoring 144.
In January 2009, following England's losses in India, the media
reported that Pietersen had asked the
England and Wales Cricket
Board (ECB) to hold emergency meetings to discuss Moores'
coaching role with the team. Days later, Pietersen made remarks to
the media about there being an 'unhealthy situation' that needed to
be resolved in the England camp. The media speculated that Moores
would shortly be replaced if there was a Pietersen–Moores rift.
Moores and Pietersen were believed to be in disagreement on several
issues, including the team's training regimen, and the possible
selection of former England captain
Michael Vaughan for the upcoming
tour of the West
Indies. On 7 January 2009, Moores was removed as England's
coach by the ECB, and Pietersen unexpectedly resigned as captain.
In the immediate aftermath of Pietersen's resignation, several
commentators connected with English cricket indicated that they
believed that Pietersen had miscalculated by openly advocating for
the removal of Moores, particularly in making their dispute public.
In an interview several days after his resignation, Pietersen
revealed that he had not intended to resign as captain, but was
told by ECB officials that he was resigning. .
Dennis Amiss, the vice-chairman of the ECB,
went on record backing up Pietersen in his statement that the story
of the rift with Moores had not been leaked to the media by him,
saying, "We don't believe Kevin Pietersen leaked the information,
we understand his frustration at it being leaked by other parties."
Pietersen was captain for three Test matches, and 10 One Day
International matches. It was announced that
Andrew Strauss would take over the
captaincy.
2009
Indian Premier League
In February 2009,
Royal
Challengers Bangalore of the
Indian Premier League bought Pietersen
for USD1,550,000. This made him the highest-paid IPL player along
with
Andrew Flintoff surpassing
Mahendra Singh Dhoni's
USD1,500,000. On 22 March, the owner
Vijay
Mallya announced that Pietersen would succeed
Rahul Dravid as the Bangalore captain.
Pietersen won two out of his six matches in charge before leaving
to fulfil his international commitments with England;
Anil Kumble took over the captaincy and led the
Bangalore team to the IPL final.
West Indies and the World Twenty20
Pietersen began 2009 with questions over his form, where many
pundits viewed him to be in a slump. He was dismissed first ball in
the first Test against the touring West Indies side but in the
second Test made a quick 49 before falling to an attacking shot. He
then suffered what seemed only a minor right Achilles injury and
was subsequently ruled out of the ODI series, which England also
won. In June 2009, Pietersen played in England's World Twenty20
warm-up match against
Scotland, registering an unbeaten 53
in a six-wicket England victory. He also appeared in the news after
accidentally hitting a 15-year old school boy with a cricket ball
from a straight-drive after the boy had bowled to him. Pietersen
left the boy, from
Suffolk, with a signed
bat as compensation.
Pietersen broke down again ahead of England's first Twenty20 match,
against the
Netherlands not long
after. "It was a huge shock for me," he reported the day after his
come-back against Pakistan, "and a huge shock for everybody,
because everything had been going according to plan. I'd played
pain-free on Tuesday and Wednesday, and, on Thursday, I had a long
training session, but I woke up in the morning [on Friday], and I
couldn't walk down the steps of my house." He went on:
I'm as frustrated as anybody because I hate missing any
games of cricket.
I love playing cricket for England; there's
nothing better than playing for England and being in such a huge
tournament here in the UK
: it's
huge.
I didn't want to miss Friday, and I certainly wasn't
going to miss last night.
I was going to play even if I was only fifty per cent
fit because I want to play for England — I love playing for England
— and I didn't want us to get knocked out of the
tournament.
In Pietersen's absence, England duly incurred a historic loss
against the Dutch. He returned for the second match against
Pakistan and top scored with 58 in the 48 run victory, he also top
scored in the three run win over India later in the competition.
Despite missing the first match Pietersen ended the tournament as
England's leading runscorer with 154 at an average of 38.50.
2009 Ashes
Pietersen joined the England Ashes squad in June 2009 for the
upcoming
2009 Ashes series.
Despite failing to
surpass single figure scores during a warm-up match against
Warwickshire, he helped England to a score over 400 on July 8
during the first day of the first Test at the SWALEC
Stadium
, Cardiff
with 69 before being dismissed by Nathan Hauritz, top-edging a sweep to a ball
outside off stump; the dismissal was heavily criticised, as was his
second-innings dismissal, bowled for 8 after leaving a straight
ball from Ben Hilfenhaus.
After scoring 32 and 44 in England's victory at Lord's, twice
making solid starts before being caught behind off
Peter Siddle, Pietersen was ruled out of the
rest of the series with an Achilles injury. This brought to an end
53 consecutive Test matches since his debut. As his recovery
slowed, Pietersen was not included in the
2009 ICC Champions Trophy and Andy
Flower speculated that due to an infection of the wound Pietersen
"may miss this winter's tour of SA because of slow progress in
recovery from surgery."
Achievements
Awards
Pietersen gained several awards for his performances in the 2005
season. He was named both the
ICC ODI Player of the Year and
Emerging Player of the Year in 2005, and was one of the five
Wisden Cricketers of the
Year (alongside team mates
Simon Jones and
Matthew Hoggard) for his role in the
successful
Ashes series against
Australia. Along with the rest of the England team, he was
decorated in the
2006 New
Year Honours list, being awarded the MBE for his role in the
successful Ashes series. He also played for the
ICC World XI in the
ICC Super Series 2005 against
Australia.
Test match performance
Records:
- He has the second highest run-total from his first 25 Tests
(behind Sir Don Bradman).
- Fourth Englishman to top score in both innings of debut
Test.
- He is one of only twenty-five players to have a peak ICC
batting rating over 900.
- He has more than 4,000 runs in Test Cricket.
- Become only the fourth player in test history to score 1,000
runs in a calendar year in three successive years.
Test centuries:
| Num |
Date |
Opponent |
Ground |
Score |
Result |
| 1 |
8 September 2005 |
Australia |
The
Oval , London |
158 |
Draw |
| 2 |
22 November 2005 |
Pakistan |
Iqbal Stadium , Faisalabad |
100 |
Draw |
| 3 |
11 May 2006 |
Sri Lanka |
Lord's , London |
158 |
Draw |
| 4 |
25 May 2006 |
Sri Lanka |
Edgbaston , Birmingham |
142 |
Won |
| 5 |
4 August 2006 |
Pakistan |
Headingley , Leeds |
135 |
Won |
| 6 |
1 December 2006 |
Australia |
Adelaide Oval , Adelaide |
158 |
Lost |
| 7 |
17 May 2007 |
West Indies |
Lord's, London |
109 |
Draw |
| 8 |
25 May 2007 |
West Indies |
Headingley, Leeds |
226 |
Won |
| 9 |
19 July 2007 |
India |
Lord's, London |
134 |
Draw |
| 10 |
9 August 2007 |
India |
The Oval, London |
101 |
Draw |
| 11 |
22 March 2008 |
New
Zealand |
McLean Park , Napier |
129 |
Won |
| 12 |
5 June 2008 |
New Zealand |
Trent Bridge , Nottingham |
115 |
Won |
| 13 |
10 July 2008 |
South Africa |
Lord's, London |
152 |
Draw |
| 14 |
8 August 2008 |
South Africa |
The Oval, London |
100 |
Won |
| 15 |
21 December 2008 |
India |
Punjab
Cricket Association Stadium , Mohali |
144 |
Draw |
| 16 |
10 March 2009 |
West Indies |
Queen's Park Oval , Trinidad |
102 |
Draw |
|
Career performance:
Statistics correct as of
2009-07-05.
Source: Howstat.
|
Batting |
Bowling |
| Opposition |
Matches |
Runs |
Average |
High Score |
100 / 50 |
Runs |
Wickets |
Average |
Best (Inns) |
| Australia |
12 |
1116 |
50.73 |
158 |
2 / 7 |
125 |
0 |
- |
- |
| India |
8 |
710 |
47.33 |
144 |
3 / 2 |
41 |
1 |
41.00 |
1/41 |
| New Zealand |
6 |
445 |
44.50 |
129 |
2 / 0 |
49 |
1 |
49.00 |
1/11 |
| Pakistan |
7 |
548 |
42.15 |
135 |
2 / 1 |
64 |
1 |
64.00 |
1/11 |
| South Africa |
4 |
421 |
60.14 |
152 |
2 / 1 |
52 |
1 |
52.00 |
1/0 |
| Sri Lanka |
6 |
486 |
48.60 |
158 |
2 / 0 |
80 |
0 |
- |
- |
| West Indies |
11 |
921 |
57.56 |
226 |
3 / 4 |
107 |
0 |
- |
- |

Pietersen's Test match batting career,
showing runs scored (red bars) and the average of the last ten
innings (blue line).
Man of the match awards:
One Day International performance
Records:
- Fastest batsman to reach 1,000 and 2,000 runs.
- Fastest century by an England player (69 balls) (v SA,
2005).
One Day International centuries:
Career performance:
Statistics correct as of
2009-07-05.
Source: Cricketarchive.
|
Batting |
Bowling |
| Opposition |
Matches |
Runs |
Average |
High Score |
100 / 50 |
Runs |
Wickets |
Average |
Best |
| Australia |
12 |
410 |
45.55 |
104 |
1 / 3 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| Bangladesh |
4 |
33 |
16.15 |
23 |
0 / 0 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| Canada |
1 |
5 |
5.00 |
5 |
0 / 0 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| India |
18 |
752 |
50.13 |
111* |
1 / 6 |
84 |
3 |
28.00 |
1/4 |
| Ireland |
1 |
48 |
48.00 |
48 |
0 / 0 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| Kenya |
1 |
56 |
- |
56* |
0 / 1 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| New Zealand |
11 |
358 |
35.80 |
110* |
1 / 2 |
2 |
0 |
- |
- |
| Pakistan |
7 |
198 |
33.00 |
56 |
0 / 1 |
39 |
0 |
- |
- |
| Scotland |
1 |
- |
- |
- |
- / - |
6 |
0 |
- |
- |
| South Africa |
13 |
592 |
98.66 |
116 |
3 / 2 |
22 |
2 |
11.00 |
2/22 |
| Sri Lanka |
9 |
259 |
32.37 |
73 |
0 / 3 |
26 |
0 |
- |
- |
| West Indies |
10 |
312 |
39.00 |
100 |
1 / 1 |
0 |
0 |
- |
- |
| Zimbabwe |
4 |
104 |
104.00 |
77* |
0 / 1 |
22 |
0 |
- |
- |

Pietersen's ODI batting career,
showing runs scored (red bars) and the average of the last ten
innings (blue line).
Man of the match awards:
| Date |
Opponent |
Ground |
Record/Scorecards |
| 1 December 2004 |
Zimbabwe |
Harare Sports Club , Harare |
Batting: 77* |
| 2 February 2005 |
South
Africa |
Goodyear Park , Bloemfontein |
Batting: 108* |
| 13 February 2005 |
South
Africa |
Centurion Park , Centurion, Gauteng |
Batting: 116 |
| 19 June 2005 |
Australia |
County Ground, Bristol |
Batting: 91* |
| 21 April 2007 |
West Indies |
Kensington Oval , Bridgetown |
Batting: 100 |
| 8 September 2007 |
India |
Lord's Cricket Ground , London |
Batting: 71* |
| 15 June 2008 |
New
Zealand |
Riverside Ground , Chester-le-Street |
Batting: 110* |
| 22 August 2008 |
South
Africa |
Headingley Stadium , Leeds |
Batting: 90*, Bowling: 2/22 |
Twenty20 International performance
Twenty20
debut: vs Australia,
Rose
Bowl
, 13 June 2005.
Statistics correct as of
2009-07-05.
Source: Cricketarchive.
|
Batting |
Bowling |
| Opposition |
Matches |
Runs |
Average |
High Score |
100 / 50 |
Runs |
Wickets |
Average |
Best |
| Australia |
3 |
66 |
22.00 |
34 |
0 / 0 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| India |
2 |
85 |
42.50 |
46 |
0 / 0 |
9 |
0 |
- |
- |
| New Zealand |
4 |
112 |
37.33 |
43 |
0 / 0 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| Pakistan |
2 |
58 |
58.00 |
58 |
0 / 1 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| South Africa |
2 |
34 |
17.00 |
19 |
0 / 0 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| Sri Lanka |
1 |
17 |
17.00 |
17 |
0 / 0 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| West Indies |
4 |
78 |
19.50 |
31 |
0 / 0 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| Zimbabwe |
1 |
79 |
79.00 |
79 |
0 / 1 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| Overall |
19 |
529 |
29.38 |
79 |
0 / 2 |
9 |
0 |
- |
- |
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External links