England cricket team in India in 2012–13 | |||
---|---|---|---|
India | England | ||
Dates | 30 October 2012 – 27 January 2013 | ||
Captains | MS Dhoni | Alastair Cook (Tests & ODIs) Eoin Morgan (T20Is) | |
Test series | |||
Result | England won the 4-match series 2–1 | ||
Most runs | Cheteshwar Pujara (438) | Alastair Cook (562) | |
Most wickets | Pragyan Ojha (20) | Graeme Swann (20) | |
Player of the series | Alastair Cook (Eng) | ||
One Day International series | |||
Results | India won the 5-match series 3–2 | ||
Most runs | Suresh Raina (277) | Ian Bell (234) | |
Most wickets | Ravindra Jadeja (9) | James Tredwell (11) | |
Player of the series | Suresh Raina (Ind) | ||
Twenty20 International series | |||
Results | 2-match series drawn 1–1 | ||
Most runs | MS Dhoni (62) | Alex Hales (98) | |
Most wickets | Yuvraj Singh (6) | Tim Bresnan (3) Luke Wright (3) | |
Player of the series | Yuvraj Singh (Ind) |
The England cricket team toured India from 30 October 2012 to 27 January 2013. The tour consisted of four Test matches, five One Day Internationals and two Twenty20 International matches. A three-day training camp was held from 26 to 28 October at the International Cricket Council Global Cricket Academy in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, before the tour. The England team returned to the United Kingdom after the Twenty20 series and returned in the new year for the One Day International series. [1] During the intervening period, India hosted Pakistan for two T20Is and three ODIs. At the conclusion of the tour, the English team travelled to New Zealand.
England's 2–1 Test series win was their first series victory in India since the 1984–85 tour. [2] The former England captain Michael Vaughan said that the series victory was bigger than the 2010–11 Ashes series victory in Australia. [3] He said of Alastair Cook that "he has led England to probably their biggest achievement in many, many years". [3]
This was the last time India lost a test series at home until 2024.
On 23 December 2012, Sachin Tendulkar announced his retirement from ODI cricket. [4]
Tests | T20Is | ODIs | |||
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India [5] | England [6] [7] | India [8] | England [9] [10] | India [11] | England [9] |
v | ||
v | Delhi 295/4 (48.3 overs) | |
15–19 November 2012 Scorecard |
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23–27 November 2012 Scorecard |
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58/0 (9.4 overs) Nick Compton 30* (28) |
13–17 December 2012 Scorecard |
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Statistic | India | England | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Most series runs | Cheteshwar Pujara | 438 | Alastair Cook | 562 |
Highest innings | Cheteshwar Pujara | 206* | Alastair Cook | 190 |
Most centuries | Cheteshwar Pujara | 2 | Alastair Cook | 3 |
Most fifties | Gautam Gambhir Ravichandran Ashwin MS Dhoni | 2 | Kevin Pietersen Matt Prior | 2 |
Most wickets | Pragyan Ojha | 20 | Graeme Swann | 20 |
Most five-wicket hauls | Pragyan Ojha | 2 | Monty Panesar | 2 |
Best innings figure | Pragyan Ojha | 5/45 | Monty Panesar | 6/81 |
Best match figure | Pragyan Ojha | 9/165 | Monty Panesar | 11/210 |
Most catches (wicket-keepers excluded) | Virender Sehwag | 5 | Graeme Swann Jonathan Trott | 5 |
Most stumpings | MS Dhoni | 10 | Matt Prior | 7 |
Source: [16] |
Statistic | India | England |
---|---|---|
Highest team innings | 521/8d | 523 |
Lowest team innings | 80/1 | 41/3 |
Tosses won | 3 | 1 |
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