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Jacques Henry Kallis OIS (born 16 October 1975) is a South African cricket coach and former professional cricketer. Widely regarded as one of the greatest cricketers and all-rounders in the history of the game, he played as a right-handed batsman and right-arm fast-medium swing bowler for the South African national team. He is the only cricketer to have scored more than 10,000 runs and taken over 250 wickets in both One Day International (ODI) and Test match cricket.
| Full name | Jacques Henry Kallis |
|---|---|
| Date of birth | 16 October 1975 |
| Nationality | South African |
| Honours | Order of Ikhamanga in Silver (OIS) |
| Batting | Right-handed |
| Bowling | Right-arm fast-medium (swing) |
| Role | All-rounder |
| Tests played | 166 |
| Test runs | 13,289 |
| Test wickets | 292 |
| Test catches | 200 |
| Test centuries | 45 |
| ODI catches | 131 |
| Test retirement | December 2013 (vs India, Durban) |
| International retirement | 30 July 2014 |
| ICC Hall of Fame | August 2020 |
Kallis represented South Africa across all three formats and built a reputation as one of the most complete cricketers of his era. His Test batting average was over 55, and he is the fourth-highest run-scorer in the history of Test cricket. He won 23 Man-of-the-Match awards in Tests, the most by any player in the format's history.
Along with Wally Hammond and Sir Garry Sobers, Kallis is one of the few Test all-rounders whose Test batting average exceeds 50 and is more than 20 runs higher than his Test bowling average. Former players including Kevin Pietersen, Ricky Ponting and Daryll Cullinan have described him as the greatest cricketer to play the game.
Kallis's longevity and consistency in both batting and bowling, combined with his fielding record, place him in a small group of all-format all-rounders in cricket history. His statistical achievements—particularly the dual milestone of 10,000-plus runs and 250-plus wickets in both Tests and ODIs—remain unique in the sport. His role in South Africa's 1998 ICC KnockOut Trophy victory marked a defining moment for South African cricket, which had returned to international competition only in the early 1990s.