Tom Blundell

Tom Blundell

New Zealand 🇳🇿

Personal Information

  • Born: Aug 31, 1990
  • Role: Batter
  • Batting Style: Right Handed Bat
  • Bowling Style: Right-arm off-break

Cricket Rankings

TestOdiT20
All---
Batting22--
Bowling---

Career Information

Tom Blundell

Batting Career Summary

MInnNORunsHSAvgBFSR100504s6s
FORD TROPHY66-1405823.3315590.32-1124
TEST40697213813834.48401453.2651125716
SUPER SMASH33-141714792153.26-2145
ODI121222666826.630786.64-2272
T20I982913015.1719478.95--10-

Bowling Career Summary

MInnBRunsWktsBBIBBMEconAvg5W10W
FORD TROPHY6----------
TEST4011813-0/130/134.33---
SUPER SMASH3----------
ODI12----------
T20I9----------

Career Information

  • Test debut: New Zealand vs West Indies, 1st Test
  • ODI debut: New Zealand vs India, 1st ODI
  • T20 debut: New Zealand vs Bangladesh, 3rd T20I

About Tom Blundell

Having made his first class debut for Wellington in 2013, Tom Blundell for long had been waiting to get a call-up for the national side. Though the wait was long, it did come eventually when he replaced an injured Luke Ronchi for the last T20I against Bangladesh in January, 2017. Not just the T20I, he soon was inducted into the ODI squad for the Chappell-Hadlee trophy as well.

It all started for Blundell in 2010 where he shared the dressing room with Tom Latham, James Neesham and Doug Bracwell during the Under-19 World Cup. Most of his peers went on to play for New Zealand and, although much later, Blundell too was lucky to get the New Zealand cap. All this could be possible due to his string of good scores in the domestic circuit, particularly in the Super Smash 2016-17 where he emerged as the highest run-scoring wicketkeeper-batsman with 243 runs.

It was in December 2017 that Blundell finally got a chance in National colors when he replaced an injured BJ Watling for the series against West Indies at home. He made it count with a fine century and looked quite composed in his stay at the crease. Still early days in his career but he does look a fine prospect with his keeping skills and proactive batting skills. The Kiwis definitely have a backup in store in case the likes of Watling or Latham need a breather across formats.

 

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