India
India
Afghanistan
Australia
Bangladesh
England
Ireland
New Zealand
Pakistan
South Africa
Sri Lanka
West Indies
Zimbabwe
Born
Jan 14, 1989 (35 years)
Birth Place
Role
Batter
Batting Style
Right-Hand-Bat
Bowling Style
Right-Arm Bowl
Matches
Innings
Runs
Highest Score
Not Out
Strike Rate
50's
100's
200's
Average
Balls
300's
4's
6's
Ducks
Matches
Innings
Wickets
Balls
Runs
Overs
Economy
Maidens
BBI
4W
5W
10W
Hattricks
Average
Strike Rate
West Indies, Windward Islands, West Indies A, Sagicor High Performance Centre, St Lucia, Antigua Hawksbills, Saint Lucia Kings/St Lucia Stars/St Lucia Zouks, West Indies Board President's XI, Rangpur Riders, Jamaica Tallawahs, Nangarhar Leopards, Rajshahi Kings, Multan Sultans, Barbados Royals/Barbados Tridents, Sylhet Thunder, Jaffna Stallions, Comilla Victorians, Sharjah Warriors
Born on January 14, 1989, Johnson Charles is a right handed batsman and an occasional wicket-keeper. He comes from the tiny Windward Island, a small nation which is noted for providing some of the better West Indian players like opener Devon Smith, former great Winston Davies, Cameron Cuffy, Rawl Lewis and Darren Sammy. Johnson Charles has also represented the West Indies 'A' side as well as playing for St. Lucia in the domestic circuit. Despite average performances at the domestic level, Charles was drafted into the experimental squad of West Indies for the 2-match T20 series against England in September, 2011. He performed creditably despite struggling to score at a brisk rate. He made a name for himself in the World T20 tournament in 2012, when he scored a nifty 84 against England. With impressive performances in the World T20 and also in the Caribbean T20 tournament, he was fast-tracked to the ODI side in 2012. In February 2013, he scored consecutive ODI centuries, his first coming against Australia and second against Zimbabwe 12 days later. Since then, Charles has been trying to tone down his aggressive batting style and focus on being a responsible opening partner to Chris Gayle in limited overs cricket. However, with Dwayne Smith rising to snatch the opening slot, Charles has fallen behind in the three-way race. With Gayle ruled out of the tour to New Zealand owing to injury, Charles gained his opportunity but failed to deliver. Charles was also named in the squad for West Indies' T20 Cup defence in Bangaldesh but did not get a look in. It wasn't that Charles was kept completely out of West Indies set-up, he was named in the squad for the 2015 World Cup, but got to feature in just a couple of games. Despite being not able to nail a permanent position in the batting line-up, Charles kept himself in notice with useful knocks - particularly during the home tri-series in 2015, also featuring Australia and South Africa. However it was followed by a series of low scores against Pakistan and Zimbabwe - resulting in his axing from the 50-over squad. In a team that boasts of several big-hitters, Johnson has fallen behind the pack after the return of Chris Gayle and the emergence of Evin Lewis. He was a part of the 2016 World Cup winning West Indies team and chipped in useful contributions - none more bigger than the 52 which helped West Indies knock India out of their own party. He followed it up with yet another sparkling innings against India in Lauderhill, but three cheap dismissals soon afterwards led to his exclusion from future West Indian T20 teams.
View More
Mitchell Marsh Returns to Big Bash League with Perth Scorchers After Test Snub
3 hours ago
'It Was My Fault': Sam Konstas Admits Provoking Jasprit Bumrah, Leading to Usman Khawaja's Dismissal
3 hours ago
Jasprit Bumrah Likely to Miss England's White-Ball Series as BCCI Holds Back on Injury Grade Ahead of Champions Trophy
1 day ago
Rohit Sharma's Test Career in pending After the Sydney Test
3 Jan 2025
Bumrah win Over Sam Konstas After Heated Exchange, Dismissing Usman Khawaja in the Process: "A Tough Lesson Learned"
3 Jan 2025