His knock of 99 in the
Irani Trophy helped secure a place for him in the Indian team in a tour of
Pakistan a few weeks later. He subsequently made his ODI debut during the
tour of Pakistan on 13 October 1978, scoring 11 out of a total team score of 79 all out. He went to England in 1979 as a part of the team that played in the
World Cup. He did not play in any of the matches during the 1979 World Cup butappeared in
three Test series that followed. He scored 884 runs at an average of 58 in the tour matches. His form in England assured him of a Test place in the next few games. After scoring a pair against
Australia in the
Kanpur Test, Sharma scored his first Test hundred in the very next match. He missed out on another century as he scored an unbeaten 85 runs off 117 balls in the next Test at
Calcutta, but with 3.4 overs still left before the end of the Test, he unsuccessfully appealed against light. He made his highest first class score against
Victoria in 1980–81, a 465-minute 201*. In the
Adelaide Test of that series, Sharma hit 47 in a 147-run partnership with
Sandeep Patil. This was his only innings of some consequence in the tour and he was soon dropped from the team. On his comeback, at
Madras in 1981–82, he hit 140 against England. He batted through the full second day of the match with
Gundappa Viswanath and their third-wicket partnership contributed 316 runs. At
Port of Spain next year, he was struck on the head by
Malcolm Marshall and forced to retire. However, he came back to bat in the same innings and scored a fifty. After a few ordinary performances, Sharma was picked for the Indian team for the
1983 World Cup. In the opening match of the tournament, he top scored with 89 as India caused
West Indies their first defeat in a World Cup match. The West Indies had been favourites to win at odds of 66–1. Sharma very much won the day for them, and he recounted that he had a volley of marks on his chest from Malcolm Marshall's short-pitched bowling. A Bollywood film,
83, was made about this World Cup triumph. The part of Marshall was played by Marshall's son, Mali. In the semifinal against
England he again top scored with 61 – a flick over square leg for six off a near yorker from
Bob Willis being a memorable shot. He was part of the Indian team which won its maiden World Cup tournament which eventually came during the 1983 campaign. He was also the second leading run scorer for India during the 1983 World Cup with 240 runs in eight matches. ==Retirement==