Quinton De Kock Pics, Family, Sister, Biography, Wiki

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Quinton De Kock 10 Personal Facts, Biography, Wiki

South African cricketer
Born: December 17, 1992 (age 28 years), Johannesburg, South Africa
Height: 1.7 m
Spouse: Sasha Hurly (m. 2016)

Batting: Left-handed
Parents: Ernest de Kock
Nickname: Quinny
Siblings: Dalean de Kock

BORN December 17, 1992
HEIGHT 5 ft 7 in (1.70 m)
NATIONALITY South African
ROLE Wicket Keeper / Left hand Batsman
RELATION(S) Sasha Hurly (Spouse), Ernest de Kock (Father)

Quinton De Kock 10 Pics, Photos, Pictures

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Quinton De Kock 10 Fast Facts, Biography, Wiki

De Kock married his girlfriend, Sasha Hurly, in September 2015.

Quinton de Kock has emerged as one of the most promising young wicket keepers of this decade, thanks to his flamboyant batting coupled with the efficient display behind the stumps.

His incredible exploits at the start of his career have already compelled the cricketing experts to mark him as one of the future greats.

De Kock went to King Edward VII High school, the same as of his compatriots Graeme Smith and Neil Mckenzie. He made a name for himself during the ICC U-19 World Cup in Australia where he was the leading run scorer for his team with 284 runs from six matches.

In the Champions League T20 in 2012, Kock played a match-winning innings for Highveld Lions, helping him in get a national call-up.

The Southpaw made his debut for the national T20 team against the visiting New Zealand in 2012 in absence of the regular keeper AB de Villiers. De Kock made a reasonable impression on his debut by scoring a 28 off 23 balls while chasing .

Things didn’t go well in the debut ODI series in January 2013 against the Kiwis, and after a mediocre performance against Sri Lanka in July 2013, he was eventually dropped from the team.

After returning to the ODI team in November 2013, he announced himself onto the big stage by scoring an aggressive century against Pakistan.

The best of him was yet to come, as he plundered three successive hundreds against a shell-shocked Indian team in December 2013.

In the following year, he made his debut in Tests against Australia at Port Elizabeth, scoring seven and 34 runs in two innings. However, he became a permanent member of the test team later that year on tour of Sri Lanka.

De Kock tore his ankle ligaments in a warm-up match against West Indies in December 2014, which also jeopardized his participation in the 2015 ICC Cricket World Cup.

Though he managed to recover in time for the event, he struggled to get back to his old form and got meager runs throughout the tournament.

This, coupled with his struggles in Bangladesh ultimately forced him out of the side and he was demoted to South Africa A side later on.

On the back of some encouraging performances, the wicketkeeper-batsman made a strong comeback to ODI side and scored two centuries in away ODI series against India in 2015, helping his side win the series 3-2.

Despite his dominance in the limited overs format, Quinton, however, failed to nail a permanent spot in test eleven, evidenced by Dane Vilas being preferred over him in series against India in 2015.

However, the year 2016 witnessed the emergence of a metamorphosed De Kock who seemed intent on setting his Test record straight.

He became the fifth South African batsman to score five consecutive fifty-plus scores in tests, eventually leading his team to a series-clinching victory against Australia at Hobart with an aggressive hundred.

This also invoked the comparison of the then 24-year old to the legendary Australian wicket-keeper Adam Gilchrist.

His run-scoring spree continued in ODIs as well with the 113-ball 178 against Australia at Centurion enhancing his reputation as a match winner.

Impressed by De Kock’s free-flowing knocks in international cricket, Indian Premier League franchise Sunrisers Hyderabad bought him on board for the 2013 edition. He didn’t exactly set the stage on fire and was bought by Delhi Daredevils in 2014.

With imposing records piled on by youngster thus far, De Kock remains one of the most interesting youngsters to look forward to in the future.

The baby-faced Quinton de Kock was one of those men who made a quick graduation from under-19 to the senior level (though some would argue that he still belongs to that level).

Aggressive at the top of the order, de Kock has helped reduce the burden on AB de Villiers’ shoulders in ODIs.

He made his ODI debut for South Africa in 2012-13, and grabbed eyeballs in the ODIs against India next season. He scored three centuries in a row (in a three-match series, to boot) to enter the record books as only the fifth batsman to ever do so.

The performance only intensified calls for him to be included in the Test side and allow de Villiers to only play as a batsman. After a short wait, he made his Test debut against Australia at Port Elizabeth.

As de Villiers’ burden is likely to increase with time, de Kock, with ample time and talent on his side, will definitely be one for the future of South African cricket.