Journey of Rohit Sharma

Rohit Sharma (born 30 April 1987) is an Indian international cricketer and the captain of the India national team in ODIs. He is also a former captain in Tests and T20Is. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest T20I opening batters of all time.He is a right-handed batsman who plays for Mumbai Indians in Indian Premier League and for Mumbai in domestic cricket. After the team's victory at the 2024 Men's T20 World Cup, he announced his retirement from T20Is.
He was also a member of the teams that won the 2007 T20 World Cup, the 2013 ICC Champions Trophy and the 2025 ICC Champions Trophy.

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His Carrier

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Sharma holds several batting records which include most runs in T20 Internationals, most sixes in international cricket, most double centuries in ODI cricket (3), most centuries at Cricket World Cups (7) and joint most hundreds in Twenty20 Internationals (5).He also holds the world record for the highest individual score (264) in a One Day International (ODI) and also holds the record for scoring most hundreds (five) in a single Cricket World Cup, for which he won the ICC Men's ODI Cricketer of the Year award in 2019. He is the first and only captain to lead a team in all ICC tournament finals.

* Youth Carrier

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Sharma made his List A debut for West Zone against Central Zone in the Deodhar Trophy at Gwalior in March 2005. Batting at number eight, he scored 31 not out as West Zone won by 3 wickets with 24 balls remaining. Cheteshwar Pujara and Ravindra Jadeja made their debuts in the same match. It was Sharma's unbeaten innings of 142 in 123 balls against North Zone at the Maharanna Bhupal College Ground in Udaipur in the same tournament that brought him into the limelight. He visited Abu Dhabi and Australia with the India A squad and was then included among India's 30-member probable's list for the upcoming ICC Champions Trophy tournament, although he did not make the final squad.

Sharma made his first-class debut for India A against New Zealand A at Darwin in July 2006. He scored 57 and 22 as India won by 3 wickets. He made his Ranji Trophy debut for Mumbai in the 2006–07 season and scored 205 off 267 balls against Gujarat. Mumbai went on to win the tournament with Sharma scoring a half-century (57) in his second innings in the final against Bengal.

Sharma has spent his entire domestic first-class career at Mumbai. In December 2009, he made his highest career score of 309 not out in the Ranji Trophy against Gujarat.[31] In October 2013, upon the retirement of Ajit Agarkar, he was appointed team captain ahead of the 2013–14 season.

Aside playing for Indian Team

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He formerly captained Mumbai Indians and the team has won five Indian Premier League titles in 2013, 2015, 2017, 2019 and 2020 under him, making him the most successful captain in IPL history, sharing this record with MS Dhoni.
He has received two national honours, the Arjuna Award in 2015 and the prestigious Khel Ratna Award in 2020 by the Government of India. Under his captaincy, India won the 2018 Asia Cup and the 2023 Asia Cup, the seventh and eighth time the country won the title, both in ODI format as well as the 2018 Nidahas Trophy, their second overall and first in T20I format.

Personal life

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Sharma married his longtime girlfriend, Ritika Sajdeh on 13 December 2015 whom he first met in 2008. They welcomed their first child, a daughter born on 30 December 2018. Sharma is a practitioner of the meditation technique Sahaj Marg. Rohit and Ritika welcomed their second child, a son on 15 November 2024.
He practices an eggetarian diet.

Commercial endorsements
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Sharma has been sponsored by several brands including CEAT and the Swiss watchmaker Hublot.
In his career, Sharma has endorsed many other brands including Maggi, Glow & Lovely, Lay's, Nissan, energy drink Relentless, Nasivion nasal spray, Aristocrat by VIP Industries, Adidas and Oppo mobiles.

Retirement
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Rohit, who was most recently seen in the Mumbai Indians colours in the recently concluded Indian Premier League (IPL) 2025 season, retired from Tests in May 2025, just days before the squad announcement for the England tour.
 
Rohit Sharma (born 30 April 1987) is an Indian international cricketer and the captain of the India national team in ODIs. He is also a former captain in Tests and T20Is. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest T20I opening batters of all time.He is a right-handed batsman who plays for Mumbai Indians in Indian Premier League and for Mumbai in domestic cricket. After the team's victory at the 2024 Men's T20 World Cup, he announced his retirement from T20Is.
He was also a member of the teams that won the 2007 T20 World Cup, the 2013 ICC Champions Trophy and the 2025 ICC Champions Trophy.

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His Carrier

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Sharma holds several batting records which include most runs in T20 Internationals, most sixes in international cricket, most double centuries in ODI cricket (3), most centuries at Cricket World Cups (7) and joint most hundreds in Twenty20 Internationals (5).He also holds the world record for the highest individual score (264) in a One Day International (ODI) and also holds the record for scoring most hundreds (five) in a single Cricket World Cup, for which he won the ICC Men's ODI Cricketer of the Year award in 2019. He is the first and only captain to lead a team in all ICC tournament finals.

* Youth Carrier

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Sharma made his List A debut for West Zone against Central Zone in the Deodhar Trophy at Gwalior in March 2005. Batting at number eight, he scored 31 not out as West Zone won by 3 wickets with 24 balls remaining. Cheteshwar Pujara and Ravindra Jadeja made their debuts in the same match. It was Sharma's unbeaten innings of 142 in 123 balls against North Zone at the Maharanna Bhupal College Ground in Udaipur in the same tournament that brought him into the limelight. He visited Abu Dhabi and Australia with the India A squad and was then included among India's 30-member probable's list for the upcoming ICC Champions Trophy tournament, although he did not make the final squad.

Sharma made his first-class debut for India A against New Zealand A at Darwin in July 2006. He scored 57 and 22 as India won by 3 wickets. He made his Ranji Trophy debut for Mumbai in the 2006–07 season and scored 205 off 267 balls against Gujarat. Mumbai went on to win the tournament with Sharma scoring a half-century (57) in his second innings in the final against Bengal.

Sharma has spent his entire domestic first-class career at Mumbai. In December 2009, he made his highest career score of 309 not out in the Ranji Trophy against Gujarat.[31] In October 2013, upon the retirement of Ajit Agarkar, he was appointed team captain ahead of the 2013–14 season.

Aside playing for Indian Team

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He formerly captained Mumbai Indians and the team has won five Indian Premier League titles in 2013, 2015, 2017, 2019 and 2020 under him, making him the most successful captain in IPL history, sharing this record with MS Dhoni.
He has received two national honours, the Arjuna Award in 2015 and the prestigious Khel Ratna Award in 2020 by the Government of India. Under his captaincy, India won the 2018 Asia Cup and the 2023 Asia Cup, the seventh and eighth time the country won the title, both in ODI format as well as the 2018 Nidahas Trophy, their second overall and first in T20I format.

Personal life

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Sharma married his longtime girlfriend, Ritika Sajdeh on 13 December 2015 whom he first met in 2008. They welcomed their first child, a daughter born on 30 December 2018. Sharma is a practitioner of the meditation technique Sahaj Marg. Rohit and Ritika welcomed their second child, a son on 15 November 2024.
He practices an eggetarian diet.

Commercial endorsements
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Sharma has been sponsored by several brands including CEAT and the Swiss watchmaker Hublot.
In his career, Sharma has endorsed many other brands including Maggi, Glow & Lovely, Lay's, Nissan, energy drink Relentless, Nasivion nasal spray, Aristocrat by VIP Industries, Adidas and Oppo mobiles.

Retirement
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Rohit, who was most recently seen in the Mumbai Indians colours in the recently concluded Indian Premier League (IPL) 2025 season, retired from Tests in May 2025, just days before the squad announcement for the England tour.
Oh wow, what a monumental legacy we’re talking about here. Rohit Sharma isn’t just a cricketer—he’s a chapter in the history book of Indian cricket. Scratch that—he’s an entire volume. And reading through this recap of his journey? It’s not just nostalgic—it’s spine-tingling.


Let’s pause for a second and take it in. From a shy teenager debuting in the Deodhar Trophy to the calm, confident face of India’s ODI resurgence, Rohit Sharma’s story is a testament to what patience, perseverance, and pure class can build over two decades. His journey has had its fair share of hiccups—missed opportunities, late Test debut, form slumps—but he always came back. And not just came back—he conquered.




🏏 The Hitman Era: Style Meets Substance​


No discussion of Rohit Sharma can start without bowing to his unique batting style—graceful, almost lazy elegance paired with brutal efficiency. There are few sights in cricket as soothing as Rohit’s pull shot. It’s not just a shot; it’s a statement. That blend of timing and power has defined his career, and earned him the nickname “Hitman”—and boy, did he live up to it.


  • 264 runs in an ODI match? That’s not just a record. That’s mythology.
  • Five centuries in a single World Cup? That’s mastery.
  • Most sixes in international cricket? That’s pure swagger.

What’s beautiful is that Rohit’s career didn’t skyrocket immediately. He didn’t become a white-ball legend overnight. In fact, his Test debut came a full six years after his ODI debut. But he never complained, never threw a fit—he waited. And when the door opened, he walked through it like a king.




🧢 Captain Cool With a Twist​


People often say Rohit is "MS Dhoni Lite." Calm, composed, sharp with strategy. But make no mistake—Rohit Sharma is his own kind of leader. He’s not about yelling or posturing; he leads with clarity and calm aggression. Under his IPL captaincy, Mumbai Indians became a dynasty—five titles. That’s not luck. That’s legacy.


What stands out is his ability to spot talent. Be it backing Bumrah in his early days, trusting Suryakumar Yadav, or managing a high-profile dressing room—Rohit brought in the human touch. Not many leaders can balance pressure and people the way he does.


And of course, leading India in the 2024 T20 World Cup to victory—then gracefully retiring from the format on a high? That’s storytelling perfection. That’s knowing when to bow out—not because you’re tired, but because you’ve done enough.




🏆 An All-Format Giant​


He might be called a white-ball maestro, but Rohit’s Test numbers are nothing to scoff at. Opening the innings in Tests wasn’t easy, especially in tough overseas tours, but Rohit adapted. He scored big in India, anchored innings in England, and set the tone against top attacks.


What’s amazing is his evolution—he started as a middle-order finisher, became a top-order beast in ODIs, adapted to open in T20Is, and became the face of India’s Test batting renaissance. That kind of multi-dimensional career arc? Rare. Very rare.




🌱 The Man Behind the Milestones​


Beyond stats and trophies, Rohit Sharma’s story is grounded in discipline, humility, and heart.


  • His long-standing relationship and marriage with Ritika Sajdeh? A reminder that amidst the chaos of celebrity, some love stories stay grounded.
  • A doting father of two now, practicing Sahaj Marg meditation, and living a clean, eggetarian lifestyle—it’s the soft power side of a man who’s hammered 500+ international sixes.
  • And of course, his conservation efforts and quiet charity work—he’s not loud about it, but it’s there. The man has grace.



🎤 Brand Rohit: The Icon Beyond the Game​


Whether it’s CEAT, Hublot, or Lay’s, Rohit’s commercial success mirrors his cricketing journey—authentic and effortless. He’s never had to force the limelight—it came to him because he earned it. He’s that rare brand ambassador who doesn’t try to be cool—he just is.




🏁 A Fitting Farewell, A Living Legend​


As of May 2025, with his retirement from Tests, Rohit Sharma has closed a glorious chapter. But not without one last roar. His farewell wasn’t tear-soaked or dramatic—it was dignified. Just like him. And even though he may no longer walk out to bat, his impact will echo through the dressing rooms, the commentary boxes, and the hearts of every fan who learned patience, poise, and power from watching him.
 
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