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Rishabh Rajendra Pant is an Indian international cricketer who plays as a wicket-keeper batsman. Known for his aggressive left-handed batting and counter-attacking style, Pant represents India across all three formats and plays domestic cricket for Delhi. In the Indian Premier League (IPL), he has been associated with the Delhi Capitals franchise, which he has also captained. He is regarded as one of the most successful Indian wicket-keeper batsmen in Test cricket.
| Full name | Rishabh Rajendra Pant |
|---|---|
| Date of birth | 4 October 1997 |
| Place of birth | Roorkee, Uttarakhand, India |
| Role | Wicket-keeper batsman |
| Batting style | Left-handed |
| Domestic team | Delhi |
| IPL team | Delhi Capitals |
| Test debut | August 2018, vs England, Nottingham |
| ODI debut | October 2018, vs West Indies |
| T20I debut | February 2017, vs England |
Pant was born in Roorkee, Uttarakhand, and moved to Delhi as a child to pursue cricket more seriously. He trained under coach Tarak Sinha at the Sonnet Cricket Club in Delhi, an academy known for producing several India internationals. He came up through the Delhi age-group system and played for Rajasthan at junior level before settling into the Delhi Ranji Trophy setup.
Pant first attracted national attention during the 2016 ICC Under-19 Cricket World Cup held in Bangladesh, where he was a leading run-scorer for the India side captained by Ishan Kishan. In domestic first-class cricket for Delhi, he announced himself with a triple century against Maharashtra in the Ranji Trophy in 2016, becoming one of the youngest Indians to score a first-class triple hundred.
Pant made his Test debut against England at Trent Bridge in August 2018, scoring a six off the first ball he faced in Test cricket. He scored his maiden Test century at The Oval later in the same series. In the 2018–19 tour of Australia, he scored 159 not out at Sydney, becoming the first Indian wicket-keeper to score a Test hundred in Australia. During India's 2020–21 tour of Australia, his counter-attacking innings of 97 at Sydney and an unbeaten 89 at the Gabba in Brisbane were central to India's series-winning chase, and the Brisbane innings is widely regarded as among the great Test knocks by an Indian batter abroad. In 2022, he scored a century against England at Edgbaston in the rescheduled fifth Test of the 2021–22 series.
Pant made his T20I debut in February 2017 against England and his ODI debut against the West Indies in October 2018. He has been part of India's squads at multiple ICC events, including the 2019 ICC Cricket World Cup in England and the T20 World Cup tournaments. He has scored centuries in ODI cricket and has been used flexibly across the middle order.
Pant was signed by the Delhi Daredevils (later renamed Delhi Capitals) and quickly became a core player for the franchise with his aggressive stroke play. In the 2018 IPL season he was the second-highest run-scorer of the tournament. He was later appointed captain of Delhi Capitals, leading them in multiple seasons.
On 30 December 2022, Pant was involved in a serious road accident on the Delhi–Dehradun highway near Roorkee when his car collided with a road divider and caught fire. He sustained multiple injuries, including ligament damage to his knee, and underwent extensive surgery and rehabilitation. He missed the entirety of the 2023 international season and the 2023 IPL. He returned to competitive cricket in the 2024 IPL season for Delhi Capitals and was subsequently recalled to the India side, including for the 2024 ICC Men's T20 World Cup held in the West Indies and the United States, which India won.
Pant is known for an unorthodox, attacking left-handed batting approach, with a strong record against pace and spin in away conditions, particularly in Australia and England. As a wicket-keeper he has improved steadily, and he has held several catches and stumpings of note in Test cricket.
Pant is considered a transformative wicket-keeper batsman for India, succeeding the long line of keepers led by M. S. Dhoni in the Test format. His performances in Australia in 2018–19 and 2020–21, and at Edgbaston in 2022, are frequently cited as defining moments of the modern Indian Test era. His comeback after a life-threatening road accident has also been widely noted in Indian sport.