Name

Lasith Malinga



Thumb
Player Thumbnail
Image Source Creative Commons logo

User Rating
(0 users)
Data Complete 70%
15%

Born
1983 (42 years old)
Shiny National flag Galle, Sri Lanka

Position
Pace Bowler

Status
Active

Ethnicity

Team Number


Outfitter

Kit
Side
Right

Wage Year

Player Cutout
No Cutout thumb

Archive


Full Body Render
Player render

Sport
Player sport icon Cricket

Team
Mumbai Indians

2nd Team


League
Indian Premier League

Creative Commons Artwork
Creative Commons logo Yes


Description English Flag icon

Separamadu Lasith Malinga (Sinhala: සෙපරමාදු ලසිත් මාලිංග; born 28 August 1983) is a Sri Lankan cricketer and current T20 international captain of Sri Lanka. He captained the Sri Lankan 2014 T20 World Cup winning side. He is a right-arm fast bowler that is commonly used as a specialist death bowler, and is well known for his distinctive round-arm action, sometimes referred to as a sling action, which leads to his nicknames, 'Slinga Malinga'.

Considered as one of the greatest limited-overs bowlers of all time, Malinga's unorthodox action and dipping slower ball yorkers are credited with much of his success. He is best known for his ability to take consecutive wickets, with in-swinging yorkers: he is the only bowler in the world to have two World Cup hat-tricks, the only bowler to have taken three hat-tricks in ODIs and the only player to have taken four wickets in four consecutive balls in any form of international cricket, which he has done twice.

On 22 April 2011, he announced his retirement from Test cricket. He has been named as the official event ambassador for the World Twenty20 Championships by ICC. On 26 July 2019, he retired from One Day International cricket after the first ODI against Bangladesh.

In September 2019, during the series against New Zealand, Malinga became the first bowler to take 100 wickets in Twenty20 International cricket. Malinga took a hat-trick to become the first bowler to claim two T20I hat-tricks, and four wickets with four balls, in the third over of his spell, while becoming the second bowler in the world to take four wickets in four consecutive balls in T20I history after Rashid Khan during the process. He was the first bowler to take four wickets in four consecutive balls twice in international cricket, after previously doing so against South Africa in the 2007 Cricket World Cup. He also became the first bowler to take five hat-tricks across all formats of international cricket and thus holds the record for producing most number of hat-tricks in international cricket.
wiki icon creative commons icon



Trophies search icon


Milestones


Former Youth Teams search icon



Former Senior Teams search icon


Former Club Staff search icon


Contracts search icon



Fanart search icon
no fanartno fanartno fanartno fanart

Player Poster
No Poster thumb

Banner



News Reports
None found...

Collections
None found...


Statistics search icon
None Found...


Other Links
Wikidata Icon
WikiData