Out of the Fab Four, it seems that Joe Root has taken a lead when it comes to runs and legacy in Test cricket. While an excellent player across formats, his ability to make massive runs while playing the anchor role best suits Test cricket.


Joe Root is one of the greatest cricketers of the 21st century and is certainly among the greatest English players of this millennium. Yorkshire’s very own is also in the conversation of being the greatest Test batter of all-time, seeing how he stands second in the list of runs in the format.


Joe Root Stats


Joe Root Stats: Batting






































































FormatMatchesIns.RunsB.F.H.S.Avg.S/RFull4s6s50s100s200s
Tests157286134092335926251.1757.4024143345663806
ODIs18016971268134166*49.1487.602457553421800
T20IS323089370790*35.72126.30059216050000


Joe Root Stats: Bowling


































































FormatMatchesIns.BallsWics.RunsB.FigAvg.Econ.S/R4w5W10w
Tests15716461707334505/847.263.3584.5020100
ODIs1807717552817323/5261.855.9262.6000000
T20IS320984061392/923.169.9214.0000000


Joe Root Stats: Fielding






























FormatMatchesCatches
Tests157212
ODIs18088
T20IS3218


Joe Root Career Overview


Joseph Edward Root was born on December 30, 1990, making him 34 years old might be Yorkshire’s finest player ever. Even being in that conversation would be a massive honour for any player. At the age of 17, he would make his county debut.


By 2012, the boy-faced batter would make his national team debut, playing his first ever Test in December 2012. Within six months, he would debut in all formats. Even when his international career was young, experts saw the next great English batter in him. But at that time, all English eyes were on Alastair Cook, who was coming into his own prime.







He played for the England Cricket Team in most limited overs competitions in the coming years, from the Champions Trophy in 2013, to the 2015 ODI World Cup, which might have been the darkest hour of English Cricket in the modern day.


While he did well in all formats, Root always excelled in Tests. Around the end of the 2010s and the start of the 2020s, it seemed that England were a sub-par Test side, and only Joe Root could be relied on for making consistent runs. This was statistically the best time of his career. From 2021 to 2022, he scored 11 Test centuries. It wasn’t until the start of the Bazball era that the England Cricket Team started performing in the longest format of the game.


And while they were struggling in Tests, they were doing well in limited-overs cricket. The Three Lions won the 2019 ODI World Cup, and Joe Root was the team’s highest run scorer, making 578 runs in 10 matches at an average of over 82.


A part of the Fab 4, today, Joe Root is seen as a modern-day great. However, it is in Tests where he excels. Root might have even surpassed the legacy of his former captain Cook in this format, and is the second-highest run scorer in the format today after the great Sachin Tendulkar


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