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Sean Williams (cricketer)

Zimbabwean cricketer (born 1986)


Zimbabwean cricketer (born 1986)

FieldValue
nameSean Williams
countryZimbabwe
fullnameSean Colin Williams
birth_date
birth_placeBulawayo, Zimbabwe
battingLeft-handed
bowlingSlow left arm orthodox
roleAll-Rounder
familyCollin Williams (father)
Patricia McKillop (mother)
Michael McKillop (halfbrother)
Matthew Williams (brother)
internationaltrue
internationalspan2005–present
testdebutdate20 March
testdebutyear2013
testdebutagainstWest Indies
testcap86
lasttestdate7 August
lasttestyear2025
lasttestagainstNew Zealand
odidebutdate25 February
odidebutyear2005
odidebutagainstSouth Africa
odicap86
odishirt14
lastodidate21 December
lastodiyear2024
lastodiagainstAfghanistan
T20Idebutdate28 November
T20Idebutyear2006
T20IdebutagainstBangladesh
T20Icap11
lastT20Idate12 May
lastT20Iyear2024
lastT20IagainstBangladesh
T20Ishirt14
club1Matabeleland Tuskers
year12004–present
club2Westerns
year22006–2009
columns4
column1Test
matches118
runs11,431
bat avg144.71
100s/50s15/4
top score1154
deliveries12,356
wickets125
bowl avg149.96
fivefor10
tenfor10
best bowling13/20
catches/stumpings116/–
column2ODI
matches2162
runs24,986
bat avg238.06
100s/50s28/35
top score2174
deliveries24,792
wickets283
bowl avg247.54
fivefor20
tenfor20
best bowling24/43
catches/stumpings259/–
column3T20I
matches381
runs31,691
bat avg323.48
100s/50s30/11
top score366
deliveries31,188
wickets348
bowl avg328.62
fivefor30
tenfor30
best bowling33/15
catches/stumpings329/–
column4FC
matches475
runs45,699
bat avg445.23
100s/50s415/28
top score4178
deliveries46,767
wickets498
bowl avg435.11
fivefor43
tenfor41
best bowling46/47
catches/stumpings473/–
date7 August 2025
sourcehttp://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/content/player/55870.html ESPNCricInfo

Patricia McKillop (mother) Michael McKillop (halfbrother) Matthew Williams (brother)

| 100s/50s1 =5/4 | catches/stumpings1 = 16/– | 100s/50s2 = 8/35 | catches/stumpings2 = 59/– | 100s/50s3 = 0/11 | catches/stumpings3 = 29/– | 100s/50s4 = 15/28 | catches/stumpings4 = 73/–

Sean Colin Williams (born 26 September 1986) is a Zimbabwean international cricketer who is a former captain of the national team in Test cricket. He plays Tests and One Day Internationals, and formerly T20Is, primarily as a batting all-rounder. In September 2019, Zimbabwe Cricket named him as Zimbabwe's captain, after Hamilton Masakadza retired from international cricket. Later the same month, Williams captained Zimbabwe for the first time, in the opening Twenty20 International (T20I) match of the 2019–20 Singapore Tri-Nation Series, against Nepal. He is the current holder of the longest international career record in men's cricket (20 years and 58 days).

Under-19s career

In the Under-19 World Cup in 2004 he was the pick of Zimbabwe's batsmen with 157 runs at 31.40, as well as five wickets. He led the Under-19 side in the World Cup in Sri Lanka in February 2006, the highlight being a win over England.

Domestic and T20 career

In first-class cricket, Williams plays for Matabeleland Tuskers. He made his highest domestic score for Westerns against Centrals in 2006–07, when he top-scored in both innings with 76 and 129 in a 77-run victory.

In October 2018, he was named in Tshwane Spartans' squad for the first edition of the Mzansi Super League T20 tournament. In December 2020, he was selected to play for the Tuskers in the 2020–21 Logan Cup.

He was also named in Durdanto Dhaka's squad in 2024 Bangladesh Premier League

International career

He was expected to be called up at the time of the players' strike in April 2004. Almost a year later, and with just one first-class match, he was drafted into the Zimbabwe squad to tour South Africa.

He turned down a central contract the following month, opting to look for a more settled career overseas, although he again changed his mind, returning to play for Zimbabwe three months later. Dogged by injuries, the on-off farrago resurfaced in 2008 when he again quit for a contract in South Africa, only to return weeks later.

He scored 178 for a Zimbabwe XI against Ireland in the ICC Intercontinental Cup in 2010–11.

He was ruled out of the Cricket World Cup 2011 due to a fractured thumb.

In 2013, in second Test at Roseau, he made his Test debut against West Indies, scoring 31 and 6.

In September 2013, he made himself unavailable for the first Test against Pakistan because of the payments issue and was satisfied with an offer made to him and was committed to the country in future.

On 19 February 2015, he scored an unbeaten 76 runs in the Cricket World Cup against the United Arab Emirates. When he came to the crease, Zimbabwe was in deep trouble on 177/5. But finally he guided the team to victory with 76 runs off 65 balls with 7 fours and one six.

He scored his first Test century in his third Test. Playing against New Zealand at Bulawayo in July 2016, he batted at number eight in the second innings and scored 119 off 148 balls. His first century was the fastest ever by any Zimbabwean in Test Cricket. In April 2019, in the ODI series against the United Arab Emirates, Williams scored the fastest century for a Zimbabwe batsman in an ODI match, doing so from 75 balls.

In January 2020 Williams played his first Test series as Zimbabwe Captain in a two match home series against Sri Lanka. He made his second Test century in the second Test match, making 107 before being bowled by Dhananjaya De Silva in a drawn match, Zimbabwe's first home draw since 2017. Sri Lanka won the series 1-0.

In June 2023, Williams scored Zimbabwe's fastest ever ODI century, a record which was broken only two days later by Sikandar Raza. In the same World Cup Qualifier tournament, Williams went on to score 174 off 101 balls against USA to help Zimbabwe reach its highest ever ODI total of 408. In that match, USA were all-out for 104 , and Zimbabwe won the match by 304 runs, registering the second biggest win in all men's ODIs.

On 12 May 2024, he announced his retirement from Twenty20 Internationals (T20Is).

Williams made his best Test match score to date in the first of a two-match series against Afghanistan in December 2024, compiling 154 from 174 balls including 10 fours and three sixes.

Personal life

He attended Falcon College in Esigodini, Zimbabwe and Petra High School in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. His father is Collin Williams, a former first-class cricketer and a national field hockey coach, and his brother Matthew Williams has played first-class cricket in Zimbabwe for Matabeleland Tuskers. His mother Patricia McKillop, was a field hockey player, who was a member of the Zimbabwe national team that won the gold medal at the 1980 Summer Olympics His step brother, Michael McKillop is also a first-class cricketer and a field hockey player who played for Matabeleland and also served as the captain of the Zimbabwe men's national field hockey team.

He married Chantelle Dexter in Bulawayo in April 2015.

References

References

  1. "Hamilton's last supper". The Herald (Zimbabwe).
  2. "Hamilton Masakadza to retire after T20I tri-series in Bangladesh". ESPN Cricinfo.
  3. "Zimbabwe aim to make it a memorable farewell for Hamilton Masakadza". ESPN Cricinfo.
  4. (27 September 2019). "Singapore T20I Tri-series 2019, Singapore vs Nepal vs Zimbabwe – Statistical Preview". CricTracker.
  5. (23 April 2025). "Sean Williams now has the longest active career in men’s international cricket". [[Wisden]] Cricket Facebook page.
  6. "Westerns v Centrals 2006–07".
  7. "Mzansi Super League - full squad lists". Sport24.
  8. "Mzansi Super League Player Draft: The story so far". Independent Online.
  9. "Logan Cup first class cricket competition gets underway". The Zimbabwe Daily.
  10. "Logan Cup starts in secure environment". The Herald.
  11. "Zimbabwe XI v Ireland 2010–11".
  12. (5 March 2011). "Sean Williams, ICC World Cup 2011". Cricket Archives.
  13. "8th Match, Pool B: United Arab Emirates v Zimbabwe at Nelson, Feb 19, 2015 – Cricket Scorecard – ESPN Cricinfo".
  14. "Zimbabwe v New Zealand 2016".
  15. "Fastest test century by Zimbabwean".
  16. "Dominant Zimbabwe aim for clean sweep". International Cricket Council.
  17. "Match Preview Zimbabwe vs Sri Lanka, 1st Test 2020 {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  18. "Recent Match Report - Zimbabwe vs Sri Lanka 2nd Test 2020 {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  19. "Zimbabwe vs Sri Lanka: Zimbabwe 'have to enjoy' first home Test since 2017 - Times of India".
  20. "Recent Match Report - Zimbabwe vs Sri Lanka 2nd Test 2020 {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  21. "Remarkable Raza hits Zimbabwe's fastest ODI century".
  22. "Zimbabwe record their highest-ever total in ODI cricket history".
  23. (26 June 2023). "Zimbabwe records second-biggest ODI win, beats USA by 304 runs in World Cup qualifiers".
  24. "Sean Williams retires from T20Is". Cricbuzz.
  25. "ZIM vs AFG: Zimbabwe sets new record, registers its highest total in Test matches". Sportstar.
  26. "Williams hopes to 'lead by action' for Zimbabwe's future cricketers to learn from". ESPNCricinfo.
  27. "She powered Zim to Olympics glory". DailyNews Live.
  28. (12 April 2015). "Golden Girl Buckle on Moscow 1980". Zimpapers (1980) LTD.
  29. "Willaims' Olympic pain". Zimbabwe Daily.
  30. (11 April 2015). "Sean Williams to tie the knot in Bulawayo". Bulawayo24 News.
  31. Kumar, Abhishek. (2015-09-26). "Sean Williams: 8 interesting things to know about the Zimbabwean". Cricket Country.
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