Player Profile

Peter Kirsten

South Africa

Personal Information
BornMay 14, 1955 (69 years)
Birth PlacePietermaritzburg, Natal
Height-
RoleBatsman
Batting StyleRight Handed Bat
Bowling StyleRight-arm offbreak
ICC Rankings
Batting
Bowling
All-Rounder
FormatCurrent RankBest Rank
Test----
ODI----
T20I----

Batting Career Summary

FormatMInnNORunsHSAvgBFSR100200504s6s
Test1222262610431.3208430.041-467-
ODI4040512939736.94230856.02--9908
T20-------------
IPL-----0.0-0.0-----

Bowling Career Summary

FormatMInnBRunsWicketsBBIBBMEconAvgSR5w10w
Test1235430-0/50/133.330.00.0--
ODI40818315263/313/314.9825.3330.5--
T20------/--/------
IPL------/--/------

Profile Summary

Kirsten missed most of his prime owing to the fact that South Africa was omitted from playing international cricket on charges of 'Apartheid'. The half-brother of Gary Kirsten was close to 37 when he made his international Test debut for South Africa. He had lost most of his batting talents with advancing age but Kirsten did bat in a determined fashion in the few games that he managed to play for his country.

Born on May 14, 1955, Peter Kirsten was a right handed batsman and an occasional off-break bowler. He played for the Western Province and Derbyshire with distinction. He scored his lone Test century against England at Leeds in what was his penultimate Test in 1994. Kirsten was known for his doggedness, a trait he displayed in a losing cause against Australia in Adelaide, 1994. He scored 79 and 42 but South Africa lost the test and allowed the hosts to square the series.

Peter Kirsten short career was not short of controversies though. In the same Adelaide Test, he became the first player to be found guilty of breaching the ICC Code of Conduct twice in the same match. A Johannesburg radio station launched an appeal to cover his fine. He was also bizarrely 'mankaded' by Kapil Dev in an ODI match at Port Elizabeth during India's tour of South Africa 1992-93 after refusing to heed to Kapil Dev's earlier warnings not to back up too much at the non-striker's end.

By Pradeep Krishnamurthy