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[PICTURES/VIDEOS] Ryan Rickelton: Wicketkeeper batter leading with aggression and consistency

FearlessRoar

T20I Star
Joined
Sep 11, 2023
Runs
30,521
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Ryan Rickelton, a versatile athlete excelling in rugby, squash, and weight-lifting, channeled his talents into cricket. Coached by his father and inspired by Matthew Hayden and Adam Gilchrist, he developed an aggressive yet consistent batting style. Named CSA's U-15 Player of the Year in 2012, Rickelton climbed the ranks despite missing the 2014 U-19 World Cup.

His breakout came in 2021-22 with a stellar domestic season, earning a Test debut against Bangladesh and a prolific stint at Northamptonshire. Despite an ankle injury, he roared back with four centuries in five weeks for the Lions. Strong List A and T20 performances secured his ODI debut in 2023 and a spot in the 2024 T20 World Cup squad.
 
Under the immense pressure of Test cricket's ultimate stage, Ryan Rickelton delivered a masterclass, reaching a sublime maiden Test century of 101 off 250 balls for the Proteas against Sri Lanka in the 1st innings of the 2nd Test.

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Given a different role to cover for the injured Tony de Zorzi, he scored a fifty in the first innings of the 2nd Test against Pakistan.

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Ryan Rickelton notches up his 2nd Test ton, a solid replacement for the injured Tony de Zorzi, scoring a crucial hundred on Day 1 of the 2nd Test against Pakistan.

He is a talented player. South Africa has made significant progress over the past year or two and now boasts a wealth of options.

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150* up for Rickelton, following the footsteps of Harry Brook against Pakistan in the 2nd Test.
 
He is well on his way to a 200. Looking pretty solid against Pakistan in the 2nd test.
 
Fantastic knock by Ryan. Converted his 100 into 200. Took the chance with both hands...
 
A huge score for a wicket keeper batsman.
 
Poor old DeZorzi

Rickleton has booked his slot for the WTC final
 
250 for Ryan Rickelton on Day 2 of second Test against Pakistan

Sensational batting!! He becomes only the 8th South African to breach 250 in Test Cricket. Only one among those 8 managed to get to 300.

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Huge relief for Pakistan, but he had already played a significant role for South Africa on Day 2 of the second Test

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InshaAllah he has a poor IPL season and is unsold next year so that the PSL picks him up.


Love this player!
 
Ryan Rickelton, during an interview with a sports media outlet:

"I grew up wanting to be a Test player and thought that in T20, you can just whack a few, but T20 cricket is flipping hard. It's different, but it is harder."

"Test cricket is very hard, but with T20s, there's a lot more pressure on every delivery. In Test cricket, you can bide your time and work your way through it at a lower intensity. In T20s, you've got to score [off] every ball. There's always pressure on you, internally, externally, there's more detailed analysis on you as a player, and against your opposition. They're always trying to hit your weaknesses. There's a lot more to it than it seems."

"To get 250 [The 259 at Newlands against Pakistan] is definitely not something I would have thought of, but as I walked off, KG [Rabada] gave me a hug and he said, 'This is so massive. This is huge.' And I told him I actually [didn't] understand it. Maybe you don't know what it really means until late in your career," Rickelton says. "It has maybe increased my profile and it was incredible to be part of history. I can't remember too much, but I can remember the roar for both the hundred and the double. It was spectacular."
 
Rickelton excited for Champions Trophy challenge after blockbuster start to 2025

Mastering all trades in international cricket is becoming a rarity but Ryan Rickelton hopes to prove he has what it takes to buck the trend.

The in-form South African has shown his class in both the shortest and longest forms of the game in recent times, starting 2025 with a magnificent 259 against Pakistan in a Test at Newlands and quickly translating that form into the SA20 to help his MI Cape Town side lift the trophy.

Rickelton’s next challenge comes in the ODI format as the Proteas go for glory at the returning ICC Men’s Champions Trophy 2025.

The 28-year-old has a strong domestic 50-over record and is relishing the challenge of switching formats once more, boosted by advice from a South African legend, in a bid to help his country succeed.

“The three-format player thing has faded away, it’s really difficult to fire on all three at the same time,” he said.

“But if you can ID a method and a way you want to play, especially in the two white-ball groups, that will give you the best chance.

“If you look at the guys doing it really well, your Travis Heads, your Rohit Sharmas, they play consistently in the same way across all formats – especially Travis, he is probably the leader at the moment in terms of three-format play.

“I’ve worked a lot with Hashim Amla in the last few years and he has been a phenomenal coach for me.

“He was a master of off-side play and he says sometimes when I get a bit excited, I look too leg-side. He’s always encouraging me to open up the off-side a bit more, so he always gets excited when he sees me cover drive.

“He’ll notice things in the nets, he’ll ask me why I was thinking certain things, all the stuff you don’t see on TV.”

Rickelton’s first tour as part of the senior South African squad came in Pakistan in 2021 and he returns hoping for an opportunity at the top of the order in a line-up packed with firepower.

He is fresh from 336 runs at a strike rate of 178.72 in the SA20, form he will hope to take forward to Pakistan, and is set to battle it out with Tony de Zorzi to partner captain Temba Bavuma.

“This ODI team has been a really difficult one to get in to over the past couple of years,” he said.

“Quinny (Quinton de Kock) retiring has opened the door for me to hopefully get a few games as the rest of the order is pretty locked in. It’s a very experienced squad, the guys have played a lot of international cricket together.

“I am sure the guys will be confident and it could potentially be the last one for a lot of the guys, so there’s no doubt they are up for it.”

South Africa were runners-up at last year’s ICC Men’s T20 World Cup and, in the months after the Champions Trophy, have another shot at silverware when they take on Australia in the ICC World Test Championship Final at Lord’s – a prospect their hard-hitting wicketkeeper-batter is already eagerly eyeing up.

“To play Australia at Lord’s in a one-off final is something none of us would have ever thought possible growing up,” said Rickelton, who was also a promising rugby and squash player in his youth – as well as breaking a Gauteng weightlifting record at under-14 level.

“It will be incredible. Lots of my family and friends are all in London as well and I’m sure half of South Africa will be at that game – and probably half the Aussies as well.

“We are all looking forward to it but it’s still a while away and we have a hell of a lot of cricket to come.”

That starts with the ICC Men’s Champions Trophy – a competition South Africa won in 1998, when it was known as the ICC KnockOut Trophy.

Rickelton has played six ODIs in his career so far, earning a shot in the format after finishing as the leading run-scorer in South Africa’s domestic 50-over competition in 2022/23.

He averages a shade over 46 in List A cricket, with six centuries to his name, and hopes his country’s familiarity with the format will lead to a seamless transition.

“It might take a few days to get used to but growing up in South Africa, 50-over cricket is a format we play a lot of, so it’s just about tying back into that,” he said.

“I don’t think it’ll be too challenging in terms of adjusting the mindset. It’s just about trying to adjust to those conditions. There’s so much time in 50-over cricket and it's easy to forget that.

“The wickets in Pakistan can be quite good to bat on, it swings under lights and it gets quite skiddy. It will take a bit of time to adjust from the bouncier wickets here in South Africa but a lot of our guys have played plenty of times out there. We’ll have a chat, figure that out and get locked in.”
 
What a start to his ODI career— a maiden ODI century in an ICC event!

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South African Players to Score Century in Champions Trophy

141(134) Graeme Smith vs England, Centurion, 2009
116*(119) Herschelle Gibbs vs India, Colombo, 2002*
116(126) Herschelle Gibbs vs Kenya, Colombo, 2002
113*(100) Jacques Kallis vs Sri Lanka, Dhaka, 1998*
103(115) Hashim Amla vs Sri Lanka, The Oval, 2017
101(135) Herschelle Gibbs vs West Indies, The Oval, 2004
103(106) Ryan Rickelton vs Afghanistan, Karachi, 2025
 
How Proteas opener used T20 game to unleash Test match confidence

Hard-hitting Ryan Rickelton has opened up on how the game’s shortest formats has helped him refine his craft as a world-beating red ball opener ahead of the WTC25 Final.

In relative terms, Ryan Rickelton is fairly new on the international cricket scene. But his impact has been quite immediate.

With just 10 Test matches to his name, the 28-year-old brings the assertiveness to a South African side that’s fought their way to the pointy end of world cricket in the most recent World Test Championship cycle.

And against the high profile Aussie bowling attack that the Proteas will contend with at Lord’s in the WTC Final, lacking self belief can very quickly become a problem.

Luckily for South Africa, that reality isn’t something their star opener is shying away from.

“There's no doubt there'll be a lot of butterflies and stuff floating around, but I have my own methods and how I try to deal with it,” he told ICC Digital.

Part of Rickelton’s emergence has been adapting to different formats and being exposed to a variety of high pressure environments. And there are few bigger than a World Test Championship Final at Lord’s, against the defending champions.

Thankfully for the South African, his aggressive batting has presented regular opportunities in the shorter formats that will assist him in handling the occasion, despite how much less Test experience he has versus some of his Australian counterparts.

The Johannesburg native has been attempting to fast-track his ability to be comfortable in intense cricketing scenarios.

“I've taken a lot of confidence out of my T20 game actually and the experience and the exposure you get around the world of just playing T20 cricket,” he continued.

“Playing in India with full houses, where they live and die for the sport, really gives you that confidence that if you can walk out there and be in control of your mind and your body, you can take a lot of pride and, again, a lot of confidence going into other arenas.

“Coming (straight) from the IPL, having played against the best players in the world, both Indian and international, you just get a firsthand feel for it. High pressure moments frequently, a few times every week, lots of eyes on you all the time, lots of expectations from owners, teammates, fans, just people, people around you.

“I probably take a lot of confidence out of it that you can deal with the game at that pace, at that level. That skill set, it's chalk and cheese (from Test batting).

"Trying to marry the two of them for me opening the batting, but if you can take that mental confidence out of it, saying that ‘I can handle it here, what are the things that I need to rein in about myself to give myself the best chance of competing on a Test match level?’

"It's probably the most difficult challenge, but once you've worked through those technical attributes and the intricacies of cricket, you can find the way you move and the way you think about the game can be a lot more confident.

“(I'm) looking forward to obviously trying to take that confidence onto the field.”

Rickelton admitted that he, like almost any cricketer that’s had the privilege of playing a Test at Lord’s, dreams of having his name on the ground’s honour board. For him, as a dedicated batter, that would mean scoring a century.

But the left-hander was quick to zoom in on the mental challenge that’s required to pull off an individual achievement of that magnitude.

“It's really just trying to stay extremely present,” he continued.

“Naturally, it's easy to think ahead, to think about the past, but that doesn't benefit you the closer you get. That's probably where the mental battle lies for me… trying to make sure that I'm really switched on for the moment that's underfoot. And if I can do that, I generally give myself the best chance of having a good day out, provided that I've prepared well and you take confidence from that as well.”

He will open the batting for South Africa along with highly acclaimed right-hander Aidan Markram. Against the likes of Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood, the pair have a monumental task.

But, regardless of how it all unfolds at Lord’s, it’s quite clear Rickelton won’t lack the required self belief.

ICC
 
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