• is considered as one of the most decorated all-rounders of all time.
V. E. Walker of
Middlesex, playing for
England versus Surrey at
The Oval on 21, 22 & 23 July 1859, took all ten wickets in the Surrey first innings and followed this by scoring 108 in the England second innings, having been the not out batsman in the first (20*). He took a further four wickets in Surrey's second innings. England won by 392 runs. • On 15 August 1862,
E. M. Grace carried his bat through the entire
MCC innings, scoring 192 not out of a total of 344. Then,
bowling underarm, he took all 10 wickets in the Kent first innings for 69 runs. However, this is not an official record as it was a 12-a-side game (though one of the Kent batsmen was injured). • The first player to perform the
double of 1000 runs and 100 wickets in an English season was W. G. Grace in 1873. He scored 2139 runs at 71.30 and took 106 wickets at 12.94. Grace completed eight doubles to 1886 and it was not until 1882 that another player (
C. T. Studd) accomplished the feat. • In the
1906 English cricket season,
George Hirst achieved the unique feat of scoring over 2000 runs and taking over 200 wickets. He scored 2385 runs including six centuries at 45.86 with a highest score of 169. He took 208 wickets at 16.50 with a best analysis of 7/18. In the same season, Hirst achieved another unique feat when he scored a century in both innings and took five wickets in both innings of the same match. Playing for
Yorkshire versus Somerset at Bath, Hirst scored 111 and 117 not out, and took 6/70 and 5/45. is the only All-rounder in the history of the game to score more than 10,000
runs and take over 250 wickets in both ODI and Test match cricket. is considered one of the best all-rounders of all time. He is the only all-rounder in history of the game to score more than 14000 runs and take over 700 wickets.
George Giffen (1886, 1893 and 1896) and
Warwick Armstrong (1905, 1909 and 1921) achieved the double in an English season three times, the most by members of touring teams. •
Betty Wilson was the first player, male or female, to score a century and take ten wickets in a Test match. She scored 12 and 100 and took 7/7 and 4/9 against
England at the
Junction Oval in Melbourne in 1958. •
Alan Davidson was the first male player to take ten wickets and score one hundred runs in a Test match, though without scoring a century. Playing for Australia against West Indies at Brisbane in 1960–61, he took 5/135 and 6/87, and scored 44 and 80 in what became the first
Tied Test. He was playing throughout with a broken finger. • Twenty-seven players, on a total of 40 occasions, have taken five wickets in an innings and scored a century in the same Test match.
Ian Botham achieved this feat five times,
Ravichandran Ashwin four times,
Enid Bakewell and
Betty Wilson three times, while
Jacques Kallis,
Garfield Sobers,
Mushtaq Mohammed, and
Shakib Al Hasan have all done so twice.
Imran Khan,
Ben Stokes,
Mushtaq Mohmmad,
Garfield Sobers, and
Denis Atkinson are the only captains to have done so. • Betty Wilson (see above), Enid Bakewell, Ian Botham,
Imran Khan and Shakib Al Hasan are the only players who have achieved the feat of scoring a century and taking 10 wickets in a Test match. • In 2013, Bangladesh's
Sohag Gazi became the first, and so far only, player to score a century and take hat-trick in same Test match against
New Zealand. •
Kapil Dev is the only player to score 5000 runs and take 400 wickets in Test cricket. He is also the youngest player to score 1000 runs and reach the 100, 200 and 300 wicket mark in men's Test cricket. •
Viv Richards,
Paul Collingwood and
Rohan Mustafa are the only male players to have taken a 5-wicket haul and scored a hundred in the same One Day International. Fourteen more players have taken a 5-wicket haul and scored a half century in the same game in the format.
Shahid Afridi is the only player to achieve this feat thrice in his career and
Yuvraj Singh and Shakib Al Hasan are the only cricketers to do so in a
World Cup match. •
Amelia Kerr, for
New Zealand against
Ireland in Dublin in 2018, scored 232* (the highest score in women's ODI history), sharing a second-wicket stand of 295 (the second highest in women's ODI history) with
Leigh Kasperek, and took 5/17 in the second innings. • Jacques Kallis, Shahid Afridi and Shakib Al Hasan are the only three all-rounders in the history of international cricket to reach 10,000 runs and take 500 wickets across all three formats. • In 2015, Shakib Al Hasan of Bangladesh became the first, and so far only, cricketer in history to be ranked the No. 1 all-rounder by ICC in its Player Rankings in all three formats of the game (Test, ODI and T20I). • In 2024, Shakib Al Hasan of Bangladesh became the first, and so far only, cricketer in history to achieve both 14000+ runs and 700+ wickets in international cricket. • Shakib Al Hasan is the only all-rounder to cross 100 wickets and 1000 runs in every format. •
Moeen Ali and Shakib Al Hasan are the only players to have taken at least 25 wickets in
T20Is, 100 wickets in both
Tests and
ODIs, while also scoring over 1000 runs in every format. •
Shane Watson is the only player with a century and four -wicket haul in every format. ==See also==