Abhay Sharma

Abhay Sharma (born 30 April 1969) is an Indian former first-class cricketer who played for Delhi, Railways and Rajasthan. As of January 2016, he works as the fielding coach of India A and India Under-19s.

Abhay Sharma
Personal information
Born (1969-04-30) 30 April 1969
Delhi, India
BattingRight-handed
RoleWicket-keeper
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1987/88–1990/91Delhi
1991/92–2003/04Railways
1996/97Rajasthan
Career statistics
Competition FC List A
Matches 89 40
Runs scored 4,105 780
Batting average 35.38 23.63
100s/50s 9/20 0/1
Top score 188 69*
Balls bowled 151 24
Wickets 0 0
Bowling average
5 wickets in innings
10 wickets in match n/a
Best bowling
Catches/stumpings 145/34 20/11
Source: ESPNcricinfo, 20 January 2016

Playing career

Sharma played as a right-handed wicket-keeper batsman, representing teams such as Delhi, Railways, Rajasthan, Central Zone, India under-19s and the Board President's XI. In a career that spanned 1987/88 to 2003/04, he appeared in 89 first-class and 40 List A matches. He was part of the Delhi team that won the 1988–89 Ranji Trophy. He finished his career with Railways, scoring more than 4000 runs at an average of 35.38 and making 179 dismissals in first-class matches.

Coaching career

Sharma was the Railways cricket team coach for seven years starting from 2007. Having completed coaching courses in batting, fielding and wicket-keeping in England, he was assigned to coach in the National Cricket Academy as well as India B in the Challenger Trophy. In 2013, he became the fielding and wicket-keeping coach of India A.[1] He was appointed as the head coach of Himachal Pradesh in 2014 ahead of the 2014–15 Ranji Trophy.[2] He became the fielding coach of India Under-19s in 2015.[3]

He had picked a 19-year old Karn Sharma in the Railways squad for 2007–08 Ranji Trophy. After Karn scored a century on his first-class debut that season, Abhay trained him on his leg spin bowling and has been his coach since then.[4][5]

He was named fielding of coach of India national cricket team for Zimbabwe tour in June 2016. He worked under interim head coach Sanjay Bangar.[6]

gollark: Often I just use computer cases, though.
gollark: Which makes it MILDLY less annoying.
gollark: Being able to program microcontrollers is mildly cool, but it also means I have to wait for an electronics assembler, they can't interact with external components, and they're very irritating to debug (apparently *deliberately?!*). CC computers boot fairly quickly anyway.
gollark: CC workflow for setting up a computer to do things:- (auto)craft computer- place computer- write code/download code onto computer as startupOC workflow:- figure out what cards/other components it needs- queue autocrafting for everything- wait a while while autocrafting runs, and possibly converts some coal into diamonds- pull autocrafted stuff out of ME network, put into computers, be sure to get the right items- find openOS disk, disk drive- install openOS- write/download code- either move code to `boot` or work out how `rc` works
gollark: I play on servers. I can't just edit the recipes.

References

  1. Bhattacharya, Aditya. "Interview: Abhay Sharma's coaching chronicles". Times of India. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
  2. "Abhay moves to Himachal, Harvinder to coach Railways". Business Standard. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
  3. "Rahul Dravid helping us prepare technically, mentally: U-19 captain Ricky Bhui". Zee News. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
  4. Ramakrishnan, Vineet. "Karn Sharma an asset to India: Coach". Cricbuzz. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
  5. Rizvi, Taus. "Years of hard work has finally paid for Karn Sharma with Test call-up". DNA India. Retrieved 20 January 2016.
  6. Bangar named India coach for Zimbabwe tour
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