Joe Root has become England’s all-time leading run-scorer in all formats

Test captain Joe Root has indeed scored more runs for England throughout all forms than any other player; during the first day of the first Test against India in Nottingham, the 30-year-old broke Sir Alastair Cook’s prior record of 15,737 runs.

If you are a die-hard cricket freak who glues to the television as soon as the cricket season starts or even if you are someone who keep an eye on all latest cricket news on sites like playorbet, then you must be aware of the exciting and thrilling England vs India test series that is going on right now. And you must have probably heard of the record made by the England captain Joe Root.

England skipper Joe Root made history by becoming his country’s all-time leading run-scorer with a 64-run innings during the first day of the first Test against India in Nottingham. On Wednesday, August 4, Root, who has 15739 runs in his account, surpassed Sir Alastair Cook’s record of 15,737 runs.

England was 138-4 at the break, with Root on 52 not out after Bairstow was lbw for 29 to halt the Yorkshire duo’s 72-run partnership. Bairstow had appeared more confident in his first red-ball innings of the season until Shami’s nip-backer hit him in front of the wickets, requiring an India review to verify his departure. At tea, paceman Shami had 2-18 in 13.2 overs after dismissing opener Dom Sibley for a laborious 18 previously in the session.

Root broke departed former England skipper Alastair Cook’s milestone of 15,737 runs in 257 games across all forms when he smashed Mohammed Siraj through the offside for his fifth four. Root reached 49 with a lucky inside edge off Siraj that sailed for four before a fast single got him fifty in 89 balls.

Root demonstrated his potential as a rising batting great from the start of his maiden Test innings. Root made his first appearance in the fourth Test match of England’s tour of India in 2012-13, scoring 73 off 229 deliveries and demonstrating composure and endurance beyond his young age.

His first Test century occurred against New Zealand in 2013, while his first ODI century followed a year afterwards against the West Indies. Ever since, he has 36 hundred and 89 fifties at an outstanding aggregate of 48.70 across all three cricket forms. Cook’s 15,737 runs, on the other hand, occurred at an aggregate of 42.88 and a striking rate of 51.14. Throughout three forms, the former England captain amassed 38 centuries and 76 half-centuries.

Sachin Tendulkar (34,357 runs) is the all-time leading run-scorer in international cricket, followed by Kumar Sangakkara (28,016), Ricky Ponting (27,483), Mahela Jayawardene (25,957), and Jacques Kallis (25,534). Joe Root is rated 30th on this list right now. Virat Kohli is the greatest run-getter among current players, with 22,875 runs, putting him in seventh place.

Root is regarded as one of the big four, along with Kohli, Steve Smith, and Kane Williamson. His most recent accomplishment was a series triumph over Sri Lanka earlier this year, when he scored back-to-back hundreds, including a double century in the island nation. He was a member of England’s World Cup-winning side when he scored two century and three half-centuries. He was later nominated to the International Cricket Council’s (ICC) “Team of the Tournament” for the 2019 World Cup.

Root is still only 30 years old, so who knows how many more records he will own in the coming years. His purist batting approach has demonstrated that, regardless of the format of cricket, there will always be a place in the squad for technically accurate and sound performers.