Rachin Ravindra (born 18 November 1999) is a New Zealand international
cricketer.[1] He made his international debut for the
New Zealand cricket team in September 2021.
Rachin Ravindra was born in
Wellington on 18 November 1999 to
Hindu parents of South Indian origin from
Bangalore. His father Ravi Krishnamurthy, a
software architect, played club-level cricket in
Bangalore before settling in
New Zealand in 1997.[3][4] Rachin Ravindra's first name was reported to be a
portmanteau of the first names of
Rahul Dravid and
Sachin Tendulkar,[5][4][6] but his father, while acknowledging the portmanteau, dismissed it as coincidence.[7] His grandfather Balakrishna Adiga is a renowned educationist in India.[8] Rachin began his cricket journey after being influenced by Sachin Tendulkar since childhood.[9]
Rachin Ravindra began playing cricket in Wellington at the age of five,[10] and traveled to Bangalore every year to play club cricket.[4][11][12]
Career
Rachin Ravindra was a part of New Zealand's squads for the
2016 and the
2018 under-19 World Cups.[13][14] Following the conclusion of the 2018 edition, the
International Cricket Council (ICC) named Rachin Ravindra as one of the rising stars of the competition.[15] In June 2018, he was awarded a contract with
Wellington for the 2018–19 season.[16]
Rachin Ravindra made his
List A debut for
New Zealand A against
Pakistan A in October 2018.[17] He made his
first-class debut for New Zealand A against the same side later in the month.[18][19] In November 2019, batting for Wellington against
Auckland in the
2019–20 Ford Trophy, Rachin Ravindra scored his first century in List A cricket.[20] In March 2020, in round six of the
2019–20 Plunket Shield season, he scored his maiden century in first-class cricket.[21]
In June 2020, Rachin Ravindra was offered a contract by Wellington ahead of the 2020–21 domestic cricket season.[22][23] In November, he was named in the
New Zealand A cricket team for practice matches against the
touring West Indies team.[24][25] In the first practice match, he scored a century, with 112 runs.[26]
In November 2021, Rachin Ravindra was named in New Zealand's Test squad for their series
against India.[32] He made his Test debut on 25 November 2021, for New Zealand against
India.[33] In June 2022, Rachin Ravindra was signed by
Durham County Cricket Club to play in the
County Championship in England.[34] Later that month, on his debut for Durham, Rachin Ravindra scored a century against
Worcestershire.[35] He went on to convert that into his maiden double century, scoring 217 runs.[36] He made his ODI debut for New Zealand against
Sri Lanka, on 25 March 2023.[37]
2023 proved to be a breakthrough season for Rachin Ravindra, amassing 3 centuries and 578 runs at the 2023 World Cup, ending the year with 820 ODI runs at 41, with a strike rate of 108.03, and winning the 2023
ICC Men's Emerging Cricketer of the Year award.[38]
In February 2024, during the first Test of
South Africa's tour of New Zealand, batting at No. 4, Rachin Ravindra scored 240, his maiden Test century. It is the highest maiden Test century by a New Zealand batter.[39]
Rachin Ravindra was named in New Zealand's squad for the
2023 World Cup. Rachin was not officially in contention to make it into the final squad for the 2023 World Cup, but he found his way into the 15 man squad replacing injured
Michael Bracewell. Rachin was not a first choice option for New Zealand going into the World Cup preparations in full swing, as he was predominantly used by New Zealand team as a spin bowling all-rounder who could bat way down the order. However, a fitness concerns to New Zealand skipper Kane Williamson brought about a
paradigm shift approach within the team management which opted to promote Rachin to bat at number three position in New Zealand's opening match against England. Prior to the start of the World Cup, he didn't bat at a position higher than number 6 slot in the sporadic ODI appearances he featured for the Black Caps.[40]
In the
opening match against England, batting at no. 3 in place of Williamson, he became only the fourth Kiwi player to hit a century on World Cup debut by scoring 123* runs off just 96 balls. It was also coincidentally his maiden ODI century.[41] This was also the fastest century by a New Zealand player in World Cup, reaching 100 in 82 balls. He also became the youngest New Zealand player to score a World Cup century at the age of 23 years and 321 days.[42] Also, along with
Devon Conway, he registered the fourth highest partnership in World Cup history, and helped his team beat the defending champions.[43][44] On 28 October 2023, during a group stage match against Australia, Rachin scored his second century and gave New Zealand a glimmer of hope in a high scoring runchase of 389 at Dharamsala which New Zealand agonisingly lost by 5 runs,[45] a match which became a runfest aggregating whopping 771 runs to become the World Cup match with the highest aggregate involving the combination of both team's totals.[46][47] He became only the second batter in World Cup history after Sachin Tendulkar to have scored 2 centuries in World Cups at the age of 23.[48]
On 4 November 2023, during a group stage match against Pakistan, Rachin Ravindra became the second youngest batter after
Sachin Tendulkar in the ODI World Cup history to complete 500 runs.[49] He also broke Tendulkar's record of most World Cup centuries before the age of 24 years when he completed his century against Pakistan.[50][51] He also became the first batter in World Cup history to score three centuries on World Cup debut.[52] He also became the first New Zealander batter to score three World Cup centuries and set the record for most World Cup centuries scored by a player for New Zealand in World Cup history.[53][54][55]
On 9 November 2023, during a group stage match against Sri Lanka, he broke
Jonny Bairstow's record for having scored the most number of runs by a player in his debut World Cup with 550 runs.[56][57] He also surpassed Tendulkar's record for having scored the most runs in a single edition of the World Cup before turning 25 with a tally of 550 runs in 9 matches.[58]
^
abcVivan, Sridhar (9 October 2023).
"Batsman with taste". Bangalore Mirror.
Archived from the original on 22 October 2023. Retrieved 13 October 2023.