Full Name

Mitchell Ross Marsh

Born

October 20, 1991, Attadale, Perth

Age

32y 222d

Batting Style

Right hand Bat

Bowling Style

Right arm Medium

Playing Role

Allrounder

RELATIONS

(father),

(brother)

Mitchell Marsh player profile

Mitchell Marsh, one of the most well-known surnames in Australian cricket, had been an alluring prospect for many years but struggled to cement a place across formats. However, that has changed in recent years, starting in T20 and then taking in ODIs and, perhaps most significantly, Test cricket.

The first of the breakthroughs came when he was elevated to No. 3 in the T20I side and went on to play a vital role in winning the 2021 World Cup. Then he became a more settled, and increasingly dominating prospect, in the one-day team which brought more glory at the 2023 ODI World Cup in India.

Earlier that same year during the Ashes in England he had made a remarkable return to the Test side at Headingley with a powerful opening-day century at Headingley. A productive home summer followed and in early 2024 he was named the Allan Border Medalist, while a few months later was named T20I captain.

Marsh was earmarked for high honours, alongside his brother Shaun, ever since he captained Australia Under-19s to victory in the 2010 World Cup in New Zealand. He played state cricket at just 17, and made his T20I debut at 19 in 2011. He was also a promising junior Australian Rules footballer, and hails from a prolific sporting family - his father is Geoff Marsh, the Australia opener, and later coach and selector; his sister, Melissa, was a professional basketballer.

In 2018, Marsh was appointed Australia Test vice-captain in the wake of the ball-tampering scandal, but he was then dropped from all formats and lost his national contract due to a string of failures, at Test level in particular. In 2020 he returned to the T20I fold and the following year, starred on two tours of West Indies and Bangladesh then produced a stunning 77 not out off 50 balls in the T20 World Cup final.

Marsh made it to the Test side over Shane Watson on the 2015 Ashes tour and was given time to settle into the No. 6 role, although his bowling was arguably the stronger feature of his game at the time. That had not been the case in his debut Test series, against Pakistan in the UAE the previous year, when he scored 87 and 47 in his second Test. He never quite settled until a big century at the WACA in the third Test of the 2017-18 Ashes. He followed that with another, in Sydney - brought up amid emotional scenes with his brother at the crease - and then made a pivotal match-winning 96 in a Test win in Durban before Australian cricket plunged into crisis.

It was the start of a period of decline for Marsh too. He only played one Test during the 2018-19 home summer, failing twice with the bat against India at the MCG. He returned as part of the Ashes squad in 2019, at The Oval, where he took his maiden five-wicket haul. Later that year, he broke his hand thumping the dressing-room wall at the WACA following a dismissal in the Sheffield Shield, disrupting his career again before the revival began.

Mitchell Marsh IPL factfile

- For all his big-hitting prowess, Mitchell Marsh has had an underwhelming IPL career so far. Injuries haven't helped. Marsh has been involved in the IPL since 2010 but is yet to have a season where he has played all the games for his franchise.

- Marsh has turned out for five franchises in the IPL - Deccan Chargers, Pune Warriors, Rising Pune Supergiant, Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) and Delhi Capitals (DC).

- Marsh was first picked in 2010 by Chargers as a 19-year-old. He managed just 28 runs in three games and picked up two wickets. Warriors then splurged US$290,000 for Marsh in the 2011 auction. He played two seasons for Warriors in 2011 and 2013 (he missed the 2012 season because of a back injury).

- Between 2014 and 2021, Marsh was part of the IPL in just two seasons. He played three games for Supergiant in 2016, and then a solitary match for SRH in 2020 before getting injured.

- Marsh has been more regular since being picked in the IPL 2022 mega auction for a hefty sum of INR 6.5 crore (US$866,000) by DC. He had his best season with the bat in 2022 when he scored 251 runs in eight matches with a top score of 89.

- Marsh had an underwhelming IPL 2023 with the bat but picked up 12 wickets at 14.16 - the most for a DC bowler that season. He returned home mid-way through the 2024 season to recover from an injury.

Mitchell Marsh Career Stats

Batting & Fielding

FormatMatInnsNORunsHSAveBFSR100s50s4s6sCtSt
Tests42737201018130.45354256.743926430220
ODIs8985112672177*36.10277896.1831824589350
T20Is545210143292*34.091058135.340911866250
FC11519918620721134.291071757.91132885990610
List A150143244536177*38.11477994.91630404142660
T20s176166364228100*32.523184132.78126312195710

Bowling

FormatMatInnsBallsRunsWktsBBIBBMAveEconSR4w5w10w
Tests426832851922485/467/8640.043.5168.4110
ODIs896921892009565/335/3335.875.5039.0110
T20Is5425300387173/243/2422.767.7417.6000
FC115156922752661686/849/15631.343.4254.9720
List A150107367132991055/335/3331.415.3934.9320
T20s17610915552189854/64/625.758.4418.2300
Mitchell Ross Marsh

Explore Statsguru Analysis

Test
ODI
T20I

Recent Matches of Mitchell Marsh

MatchBatBowlDateGroundFormat
Australia vs Namibia18--28-May-2024Port of SpainOTHERT20
DC vs KKR01/3703-Apr-2024VisakhapatnamT20
DC vs CSK180/1431-Mar-2024VisakhapatnamT20
DC vs RR23--28-Mar-2024JaipurT20
DC vs PBKS200/5223-Mar-2024MullanpurT20

Videos of Mitchell Marsh

Photos of Mitchell Marsh

Australia T20I captain Mitchell Marsh poses in their new jersey for the T20 World Cup
Aussies at the IPL - Mitchell Marsh, Mitchell Starc, and David Warner in action
Mitchell Marsh the first on the night to knocked over by Matheesha Pathirana
Mitchell Marsh got Delhi Capitals off to a quick start
Mitchell Marsh scored a half-century under pressure
Mitchell Marsh targeted anything short and wide