Ian Bell

Ian Bell

England
2004 - 2015
  • Date of Birth 1982-4-11
  • Role top-order batter
  • Batting Style right-hand bat
  • Bowling Style right-arm medium
Debut Matches
Format Match Date
TEST ENG vs WI 2004-08-19
ODI ZIM vs ENG 2004-11-28
T20 ENG vs PAK 2006-08-28
vs 1970-01-01

Recent Performances

ENG Champs vs IND Champs
2025-07-27
Batting: 54
Bowling: -
ENG Champs vs SA Champs
2025-07-24
Batting: 7
Bowling: -
WI Champs vs ENG Champs
2025-07-22
Batting: 5
Bowling: -
ENG Champs vs AUS Champs
2025-07-19
Batting: 1
Bowling: -
PAK Champs vs ENG Champs
2025-07-18
Batting: 51*
Bowling: -
Eng Masters vs SA Masters
2025-03-03
Batting: -
Bowling: -
WI Masters vs Eng Masters
2025-02-27
Batting: 1
Bowling: -
ENG Champs vs WI Champs
2024-07-09
Batting: 97
Bowling: -
PAK Champs vs ENG Champs
2024-07-07
Batting: 11
Bowling: -
ENG Champs vs AUS Champs
2024-07-06
Batting: 45
Bowling: -

Batting Statistics

Matches 118
Innings 205
Runs 7727
Average 42.69
Strike Rate 49.46
Highest Score 235
100s 22
50s 46
Fours 919
Sixes 39
Catches 100

Bowling Statistics

Matches 118
Innings 6
Wickets 1
Average 76
Economy 4.22
Strike Rate 108
Best Figure 1/33
4 Wickets 0
5 Wickets 0
Balls Bowled 108
Runs Conceded 76

Batting Statistics

Matches 161
Innings 157
Runs 5416
Average 37.87
Strike Rate 77.16
Highest Score 141
100s 4
50s 35
Fours 525
Sixes 32
Catches 54

Bowling Statistics

Matches 161
Innings 6
Wickets 6
Average 14.66
Economy 6
Strike Rate 14.6
Best Figure 3/9
4 Wickets 0
5 Wickets 0
Balls Bowled 88
Runs Conceded 88

Batting Statistics

Matches 8
Innings 8
Runs 188
Average 26.85
Strike Rate 115.33
Highest Score 60*
100s 0
50s 1
Fours 23
Sixes 2
Catches 4

Bowling Statistics

Matches 8
Innings -
Wickets -
Average -
Economy -
Strike Rate -
Best Figure -
4 Wickets -
5 Wickets -
Balls Bowled -
Runs Conceded -

Batting Statistics

Matches 318
Innings 301
Runs 11130
Average 41.22
Strike Rate
Highest Score 158
100s 13
50s 79
Fours
Sixes
Catches 109

Bowling Statistics

Matches 318
Innings
Wickets 33
Average 34.48
Economy 5.29
Strike Rate 39
Best Figure 5/41
4 Wickets 0
5 Wickets 1
Balls Bowled 1290
Runs Conceded 1138

Batting Statistics

Matches 107
Innings 103
Runs 2790
Average 30.65
Strike Rate 124.11
Highest Score 131
100s 1
50s 18
Fours 270
Sixes 70
Catches 37

Bowling Statistics

Matches 107
Innings 10
Wickets 3
Average 62
Economy 8.45
Strike Rate 44
Best Figure 1/12
4 Wickets 0
5 Wickets 0
Balls Bowled 132
Runs Conceded 186
Ian Bell, much admired by the purists, who could swoon over his cover drive when he was in full flow, filled English cricket with elegance in a career that brought him over 13,000 runs from a little under 300 international games, and a stack of first-class runs for Warwickshire.
A former England Under-19 captain, Bell was earmarked for greatness well before he was drafted onto the England tour of New Zealand in 2001-02 - where he didn't get a game. When he made his Test debut in 2004, he was in the middle of a county season where he made nearly 1500 runs. The expectation that he would do great things persisted when he made a fine start in national colours, with 17 scores of over 50 in his first 25 Tests - despite just 171 in ten innings against Australia in the landmark 2005 series.
Soon, though, criticism grew that Bell's most fluent early efforts tended to come when the pressure was off. In South Africa in 2009-10, he set about changing those perceptions. A perfectly paced century while batting at No. 6 in Durban set England up for an innings victory that was among their finest overseas performances for a generation, and he surpassed that effort in the next Test, in Cape Town, with a back-to-the-wall 78 that saved the match and ensured a share of the series. On the 2010 tour of Australia, he continued to save his best for when the chips were down; he finished the tour on a high with his maiden Ashes hundred in Sydney and a reputation transformed.
After he averaged more than 65 in five successive series, including the 2010-11 Ashes, he was brought back down to earth by Pakistan's Saaed Ajmal in 2012 in the UAE, where he managed only 51 runs in six innings. That year was a largely forgettable one in Tests for Bell and England, though pride was salvaged with a first series win in India in over 25 years. That victory was sealed in Nagpur, where Bell's second-innings hundred made certain of the requisite draw.
In 50-over cricket, Bell made an immaculate transition to opener in 2012, having been tried in the position in 2008 with less than spectacular results. That success continued into 2013, with his third ODI hundred in lofty Dharamsala, although England were thwarted in their attempts to win global silverware in the Champions Trophy final, and Bell was a casualty of their grim World Cup campaign in 2015, when he seemed unable to translate his talent into the bold strokeplay required.
His reputation for not quite producing when England needed him in Test cricket, meanwhile, was all but banished by a series-defining performance in the Ashes of 2013 where he scored centuries in each of England's three wins, and was the Player of the Series.
However, Bell struggled to maintain his form in the return Ashes series in 2013-14, when England were monstered by Mitchell Johnson, and averaged just 26.11. In 2015, he then endured a run where he passed 1 only three times in ten Test innings, and he averaged about 26 again in the 2015 Ashes. After the year-end tour to the UAE he was dropped, following which he was appointed captain of Warwickshire.
Though England recognition did not come again, Bell enjoyed a fruitful start to his county captaincy, guiding the club to the Royal London One-Day Cup in 2016, before claiming another T20 trophy with Perth Scorchers in the Big Bash. He did not make a Championship century as Warwickshire were relegated in 2017, and he stepped down as captain towards the end of that season. The next year, as if freed by the lack of pressure to get back into the England side, he made over 1000 runs in Warwickshire's promotion season - including five hundreds, two of which came in a match against Glamorgan at Edgbaston. The next season was lost to injury, and 2020 was Bell's last.