List of One Day International cricket hat-tricks

A hat-trick in cricket is when a bowler takes three wickets on consecutive deliveries, dismissing three different batsmen. It is a relatively rare event in One Day International (ODI) cricket with only 49 occurrences in 4222 matches since the first ever ODI match between Australia and England on 5 January 1971. The first ODI hat-trick was taken by Pakistan's Jalal-ud-Din against Australia in Hyderabad, Sindh, in September 1982. The most recent player to achieve this feat is Kuldeep Yadav of India against West Indies in December 2019.[1]

Sri Lanka's Lasith Malinga is the only cricketer to have taken three ODI hat-tricks.

The only bowler to have taken three ODI hat-tricks is Sri Lanka's Lasith Malinga. Five other bowlers Pakistan's Wasim Akram and Saqlain Mushtaq, Sri Lanka's Chaminda Vaas, New Zealand's Trent Boult and India's Kuldeep Yadavhave taken two hat-tricks in the format. Hat-tricks are dominated by spinners.[2] Vaas is the first and only bowler to claim a hat-trick on the first three balls of any form of international cricket; he achieved the feat against Bangladesh during the 2003 World Cup. Malinga is the only player to claim four wickets in consecutive balls; he achieved the feat against South Africa in the 2007 World Cup. Four players have taken a hat-trick on their ODI debuts: Bangladesh's Taijul Islam against Zimbabwe in 2014,[3] South Africa's Kagiso Rabada against Bangladesh in 2015,[4] Sri Lanka's Wanidu Hasaranga against Zimbabwe in 2017,[5] and Sri Lanka's Shehan Madushanka against Bangladesh in 2018.[6] India's Chetan Sharma was the first cricketer to take a hat-trick in a World Cup match. Eleven hat-tricks have been taken in World Cup matches.

Pakistani's Wasim Akram and Mohammad Sami are the only players to have taken hat-tricks in ODIs and Tests.[7] Brett Lee (Australia), Malinga and Thisara Perera (both Sri Lanka) are the only players to have taken hat-tricks in ODIs and Twenty20 matches.

Hat-tricks

Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium is involved in both most number ODI of hat-tricks (5) as well as most number of hat-tricks by debutants (3)

Key

Symbol Meaning
WHat-trick taken in a World Cup match
DHat-trick taken by a debutant player
(b)Bowled
(c)Caught
(c & b)Caught and bowled
(lbw)Leg before wicket
(st)Stumped
Wicket-keeper


List of Hat-tricks in One Day Internationals[8]
ODI №BowlerForAgainstWicketsVenueDate
1.158[9] Jalal-ud-Din  Pakistan Australia

 Rod Marsh (b)
 Bruce Yardley (c Wasim Bari)
 Geoff Lawson (b)

Niaz Stadium, Hyderabad20 September 1982
2. [H]359[10] Bruce Reid  Australia New Zealand

 Bruce Blair (c Greg Matthews)
 Ervin McSweeney (c Allan Border)
 Stu Gillespie (b)

Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney29 January 1986
3.474[11] Chetan Sharma  India New Zealand

 Ken Rutherford (b)
 Ian Smith (b)
 Ewen Chatfield (b)

Vidarbha Cricket Association Ground, Nagpur31 October 1987 W
4.570[12] Wasim Akram  Pakistan West Indies

 Jeff Dujon (b)
 Malcolm Marshall (b)
 Curtly Ambrose (b)

Sharjah Stadium, Sharjah14 October 1989
5.[A]631[13]  Australia

 Merv Hughes (b)
 Carl Rackemann (b)
 Terry Alderman (b)

Sharjah Stadium, Sharjah4 May 1990
6. [H]661[14] Kapil Dev  India Sri Lanka

 Roshan Mahanama (c Kiran More)
 Rumesh Ratnayake (lbw)
 Sanath Jayasuriya (c Sanjay Manjrekar)

Eden Gardens, Calcutta4 January 1991
7.[B]685[15] Aaqib Javed  Pakistan India

 Ravi Shastri (lbw)
 Mohammad Azharuddin (lbw)
 Sachin Tendulkar (lbw)

Sharjah Stadium, Sharjah25 October 1991
8. [H]896[16] Danny Morrison  New Zealand

 Kapil Dev (b)
 Salil Ankola (b)
 Nayan Mongia (b)

McLean Park, Napier25 March 1994
9.[A]966[17] Waqar Younis  Pakistan New Zealand

 Chris Harris (b)
 Chris Pringle (b)
 Richard de Groen (b)

Buffalo Park, East London19 December 1994
10.[C]1,136[18] Saqlain Mushtaq  Zimbabwe

 Grant Flower (c Moin Khan)
 John Rennie (c Moin Khan)
 Andy Whittall (c Saleem Malik)

Arbab Niaz Stadium, Peshawar3 November 1996
11.[D] [H]1,158[19] Eddo Brandes  Zimbabwe England

 Nick Knight (c Andy Flower)
 John Crawley (lbw)
 Nasser Hussain (c Andy Flower)

Harare Sports Club, Harare3 January 1997
12.1,164[20] Anthony Stuart  Australia Pakistan

 Ijaz Ahmed (c Ian Healy)
 Mohammad Wasim (c Ian Healy)
 Moin Khan (c Mark Taylor)

Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne16 January 1997
13.[A]1,479[21] Saqlain Mushtaq  Pakistan Zimbabwe

 Henry Olonga (st Moin Khan)
 Adam Huckle (st Moin Khan)
 Pommie Mbangwa (lbw)

The Oval, London11 June 1999 W
14.[E]1,776[22] Chaminda Vaas  Sri Lanka

 Stuart Carlisle (c Suresh Perera)
 Craig Wishart (lbw)
 Tatenda Taibu (lbw)

Sinhalese Sports Club Ground, Colombo8 December 2001
15.[A]1,808[23] Mohammad Sami  Pakistan West Indies

 Ridley Jacobs (lbw)
 Corey Collymore (b)
 Cameron Cuffy (b)

Sharjah Stadium, Sharjah15 February 2002
16.[C][D][F]1,950[24] Chaminda Vaas  Sri Lanka Bangladesh

 Hannan Sarkar (b)
 Mohammad Ashraful (c and b)
 Ehsanul Haque (c Mahela Jayawardene)

Pietermaritzburg Oval, Pietermaritzburg14 February 2003W
17.[D]1,990[25] Brett Lee  Australia Kenya

 Kennedy Otieno (b)
 Brijal Patel (c Ricky Ponting)
 David Obuya (b)

Kingsmead, Durban15 March 2003 W
18.[A]2,026[26] James Anderson  England Pakistan

 Abdul Razzaq (c Marcus Trescothick)
 Shoaib Akhtar (c Chris Read)
 Mohammad Sami (b)

The Oval, London20 June 2003
19.[A]2,164[27] Steve Harmison  India

 Mohammad Kaif (c Geraint Jones)
 Lakshmipathy Balaji (c Andrew Flintoff)
 Ashish Nehra (c and b)

Trent Bridge, Nottingham1 September 2004
20.[A]2,243[28] Charl Langeveldt  South Africa West Indies

 Ian Bradshaw (b)
 Daren Powell (b)
 Corey Collymore (lbw)

Kensington Oval, Barbados11 May 2005
21.2,394[29] Shahadat Hossain  Bangladesh Zimbabwe

 Tafadzwa Mufambisi (c Khaled Mashud)
 Elton Chigumbura (lbw)
 Tawanda Mupariwa (c Khaled Mashud)

Harare Sports Club, Harare2 August 2006
22.2,432[30] Jerome Taylor  West Indies Australia

 Michael Hussey (b)
 Brett Lee (lbw)
 Brad Hogg (b)

Brabourne Stadium, Mumbai18 October 2006
23.2,474[31] Shane Bond  New Zealand

 Cameron White (c Craig McMillan)
 Andrew Symonds (c Brendon McCullum)
 Nathan Bracken (b)

Bellerive Oval, Hobart14 January 2007
24.[G][H]2,556[32] Lasith Malinga  Sri Lanka South Africa

 Shaun Pollock (b)
 Andrew Hall (c Upul Tharanga)
 Jacques Kallis (c Kumar Sangakkara)
 Makhaya Ntini (b)

Providence Stadium, Georgetown28 March 2007 W
25.2,833[33] Andrew Flintoff  England West Indies

 Denesh Ramdin (b)
 Ravi Rampaul (lbw)
 Sulieman Benn (b)

Beausejour Stadium, Gros Islet, Saint Lucia3 April 2009
26.2,999[34] Farveez Maharoof  Sri Lanka India

 Ravindra Jadeja (lbw)
 Praveen Kumar (b)
 Zaheer Khan (c Kumar Sangakkara)

Rangiri Dambulla International Stadium, Dambulla22 June 2010
27.[H]3,073[35] Abdur Razzak  Bangladesh Zimbabwe

 Prosper Utseya (c Naeem Islam)
 Ray Price (lbw)
 Christopher Mpofu (lbw)

Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, Mirpur3 December 2010
28.[A]3,112[36] Kemar Roach  West Indies Netherlands

 Pieter Seelaar (lbw)
 Bernard Loots (lbw)
 Berend Westdijk (b)

Feroz Shah Kotla, New Delhi28 February 2011W
29.[H]3,113[37] Lasith Malinga  Sri Lanka Kenya

 Tanmay Mishra (lbw)
 Peter Ongondo (b)
 Shem Ngoche (b)

R Premadasa Stadium, Colombo1 March 2011 W
30.3,184[38]  Australia

 Mitchell Johnson (b)
 John Hastings (lbw)
 Xavier Doherty (b)

22 August 2011
31.3,253[39] Dan Christian  Australia Sri Lanka

 Thisara Perera (c Michael Hussey)
 Sachithra Senanayake (lbw)
 Nuwan Kulasekara (lbw)

Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne2 March 2012
32.3,275[40] Thisara Perera  Sri Lanka Pakistan

 Younis Khan (c Kumar Sangakkara)
 Shahid Afridi (c Dinesh Chandimal)
 Sarfraz Ahmed (c Mahela Jayawardene)

R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo16 June 2012
33.[D]3,415[41] Clint McKay  Australia England

 Kevin Pietersen (lbw)
 Jonathan Trott (c Aaron Finch)
 Joe Root (c Shane Watson)

Sophia Gardens, Cardiff14 September 2013
34.3,423[42] Rubel Hossain  Bangladesh New Zealand

 Corey Anderson (b)
 Brendon McCullum (c Shamsur Rahman (sub))
 Jimmy Neesham (c Mushfiqur Rahim)

Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, Mirpur29 October 2013
35.3,518[43] Prosper Utseya  Zimbabwe South Africa

 Quinton de Kock (c Tendai Chatara)
 Rilee Rossouw (c John Nyumbu)
 David Miller (lbw)

Harare Sports Club, Harare29 August 2014
36.[H][I]3,559[44] Taijul Islam  Bangladesh Zimbabwe

 Tinashe Panyangara (b)
 John Nyumbu (lbw)
 Tendai Chatara (b)

Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, Mirpur1 December 2014 D
37.[A]3,600[45] Steven Finn  England Australia

 Brad Haddin (c Stuart Broad)
 Glenn Maxwell (c Joe Root)
 Mitchell Johnson (c James Anderson)

Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne14 February 2015W
38.[H]3,640[46] JP Duminy  South Africa Sri Lanka

 Angelo Mathews (c Faf du Plessis)
 Nuwan Kulasekara (c Quinton de Kock)
 Tharindu Kaushal (lbw)

Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney18 March 2015 W
39.[I]3,663[4] Kagiso Rabada  Bangladesh

 Tamim Iqbal (b)
 Litton Das (c Farhaan Behardien)
 Mahmudullah Riyad (lbw)

Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, Mirpur10 July 2015 D
40.[H]3,769[47] James Faulkner  Australia Sri Lanka

 Kusal Perera (lbw)
 Angelo Mathews (c Moises Henriques)
 Thisara Perera (b)

Premadasa Stadium, Colombo24 August 2016
41.[A]3,856[48] Taskin Ahmed  Bangladesh

 Asela Gunaratne (c Soumya Sarkar)
 Suranga Lakmal (c Mustafizur Rahman)
 Nuwan Pradeep (b)

Rangiri Dambulla International Stadium, Dambulla28 March 2017
42.[A][I]3,899[49] Wanindu Hasaranga  Sri Lanka Zimbabwe

 Malcolm Waller (b)
 Donald Tiripano (lbw)
 Tendai Chatara (b)

Galle International Stadium, Galle2 July 2017 D
43.3,912[50] Kuldeep Yadav  India Australia

 Matthew Wade (b)
 Ashton Agar (lbw)
 Pat Cummins (c MS Dhoni)

Eden Gardens, Kolkata21 September 2017
44.[A][H][I]3,967[51] Shehan Madushanka  Sri Lanka Bangladesh

 Mashrafe Mortaza (c Kusal Mendis)
 Rubel Hossain (b)
 Mahmudullah (c Upul Tharanga)

Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, Mirpur27 January 2018 D
45.[H]4,050[52] Imran Tahir  South Africa Zimbabwe

 Sean Williams (st Heinrich Klaasen)
 Peter Moor (lbw)
 Brandon Mavuta (b)

Mangaung Oval, Bloemfontein3 October 2018
46.4,066[53] Trent Boult  New Zealand Pakistan

 Fakhar Zaman (b)
 Babar Azam (c Ross Taylor)
 Mohammad Hafeez (lbw)

Sheikh Zayed Cricket Stadium, Abu Dhabi7 November 2018
47.[A]4,169 [54] Mohammed Shami  India Afghanistan

 Mohammad Nabi (c Hardik Pandya)
 Aftab Alam (b)
 Mujeeb Ur Rahman (b)

The Rose Bowl, Southampton22 June 2019 W
48.[A]4,178[55] Trent Boult  New Zealand Australia

 Usman Khawaja (b)
 Mitchell Starc (b)
 Jason Behrendorff (lbw)

Lord's Cricket Ground, London29 June 2019 W
49.4,222[56] Kuldeep Yadav  India West Indies

 Shai Hope (c Virat Kohli)
 Jason Holder (st Rishabh Pant)
 Alzarri Joseph (c Kedar Jadhav)

ACA–VDCA Cricket Stadium, Visakhapatnam18 December 2019

By teams

Hat-tricks by teams
TeamsHat-tricks
 Sri Lanka 9
 Pakistan 8
 Australia 6
 Bangladesh 5
 India
 England 4
 New Zealand
 South Africa
 West Indies 2
 Zimbabwe
Total49

By players

Players with multiple hat-tricks
PlayersHat-tricks
Lasith Malinga 3
Wasim Akram 2
Saqlain Mushtaq
Chaminda Vaas
Trent Boult
Kuldeep Yadav

By grounds

Grounds involved in multiple hat-tricks
GroundHat-tricks
Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium, Mirpur 5
R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo 4
Sharjah Cricket Stadium, Sharjah
Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne 3
Harare Sports Club, Harare
Eden Gardens, Kolkata 2
Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney
The Oval, London
Dambulla Cricket Stadium, Dambulla

See also

Notes

A. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Last three wickets of the innings

B. 1 Aaqib Javed ended with 7–37, then the best bowling figures in an ODI.[57]

C. 1 2 Four wickets in five deliveries

D. 1 2 3 4 First three wickets of the innings

E. 1 Vaas took 8–19; this is the only time (as of 11 December 2013) that a bowler has taken eight wickets in an ODI.[57]

F. 1 First three deliveries of the match

G. 1 Four wickets in four deliveries

H. 1 2 3 4 5 Hat-trick spanned two overs

I. 1 2 3 4 Hat-trick on debut

References

General
  • "One Day Internationals – Hat-tricks". Cricinfo. Retrieved 22 August 2011.
Specific
  1. "India vs West Indies: Kuldeep Yadav becomes first Indian to take 2nd international hat-trick". Times of India. Retrieved 18 December 2019.
  2. "Vaughan confident over Cup fitness". Daily Telegraph. 20 February 2007. Retrieved 12 July 2009.
  3. "Bangladesh's Tailjul Islam first bowler to take hat-trick on ODI debut". The guardian. theguardian.com. 1 December 2014. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  4. "South Africa tour of Bangladesh, 1st ODI: Bangladesh v South Africa at Dhaka, Jul 10, 2015". Cricinfo. Retrieved 10 July 2015.
  5. "Sri Lanka vs Zimbabwe, 2nd ODI: Wanidu Hasaranga becomes youngest player to take hat-trick on debut". Indian Express. Retrieved 2 July 2017.
  6. Scott, Matthew (27 January 2018). "Shehan Madushanka's debut hat-trick helps Sri Lanka beat Bangladesh, clinch tri-series title". Hindustan Times. Retrieved 15 September 2019.
  7. "Test matches – Hat-tricks". Cricinfo. Retrieved 10 July 2009.
  8. Records/ One Day International/ Hat-tricks, ESPNCricinfo, retrieved 24 October 2018
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  10. "13th Match: Australia v New Zealand at Sydney, Jan 29, 1986". Cricinfo. Retrieved 11 July 2009.
  11. "24th Match: India v New Zealand at Nagpur, Oct 31, 1987". Cricinfo. Retrieved 11 July 2009.
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  32. "26th Match, Super Eights: South Africa v Sri Lanka at Providence, Mar 28, 2007". Cricinfo. Retrieved 11 July 2009.
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  34. "6th match: 2010 Asia Cup, Jun 22, 2010". Cricinfo. Retrieved 22 June 2010.
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  38. "Australia in Sri Lanka ODI Series in 2011 – 5th ODI at Colombo (RPS) , Aug 22, 2011". Cricinfo. Retrieved 22 August 2011.
  39. "12th Match: Australia v Sri Lanka at Melbourne, Mar 2, 2012". Cricinfo. Retrieved 2 March 2012.
  40. "4th ODI: Sri Lanka v Pakistan at Colombo (RPS), Jun 6, 2012". Cricinfo. Retrieved 16 June 2012.
  41. "4th Match: Australia v England at Cardiff, September 14, 2013". Cricinfo. Retrieved 14 September 2013.
  42. "New Zealand tour of Bangladesh, 1st ODI: Bangladesh v New Zealand at Dhaka, Oct 29, 2013". Cricinfo. Retrieved 10 October 2013.
  43. "Zimbabwe Triangular Series, 3rd Match: Zimbabwe v South Africa at Harare, Aug 29, 2014". Cricinfo. Retrieved 29 August 2014.
  44. "Zimbabwe tour of Bangladesh, 5th ODI: Bangladesh v Zimbabwe at Dhaka, Dec 1, 2014". Cricinfo. Retrieved 1 December 2014.
  45. "ICC Cricket World Cup, 2nd Match, Pool A: Australia v England at Melbourne, Feb 14, 2015". Cricinfo. Retrieved 14 February 2015.
  46. "ICC Cricket World Cup, 1st Quarter-Final: South Africa v Sri Lanka at Sydney, Mar 18, 2015". Cricinfo. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
  47. "Australia tour of Sri Lanka, 2016". Cricinfo. Retrieved 24 August 2016.
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  49. "Zimbabwe tour of Sri Lanka, 2nd ODI: Sri Lanka v Zimbabwe at Galle, Jul 2, 2017". Cricinfo. Retrieved 2 July 2017.
  50. "2nd ODI (D/N), Australia tour of India at Kolkata, Sep 21 2017". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 21 September 2017.
  51. "Final (D/N), Bangladesh Tri-Nation Series at Dhaka, Jan 27 2018". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 27 January 2018.
  52. "2nd ODI (D/N), Zimbabwe tour of South Africa at Bloemfontein, Oct 03 2018". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 3 October 2018.
  53. "1st ODI (D/N), New Zealand tour of United Arab Emirates at Abu Dhabi, Nov 7 2018". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 22 June 2019.
  54. "28th match, ICC Cricket World Cup at Southampton, Jun 22 2019". ESPNCricinfo. Retrieved 22 June 2019.
  55. "37th match, ICC Cricket World Cup at Lord's, Jun 29 2019". ESPNCricinfo. Retrieved 29 June 2019.
  56. "2nd ODI (D/N), West Indies tour of India at Visakhapatnam, Dec 18 2019". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 18 December 2019.
  57. "ODI Career Best Innings Bowling". Cricinfo. Retrieved 10 July 2009.

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