Anjum Chopra

Anjum Chopra
Chopra in 2009
Personal information
Full name
Anjum Chopra
Born (1977-05-20) 20 May 1977
New Delhi, NCT of Delhi, India
BattingLeft-handed
BowlingRight-arm medium
RoleBatter
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 47)17 November 1995 v England
Last Test29 August 2006 v England
ODI debut (cap 42)12 February 1995 v New Zealand
Last ODI16 March 2012 v Australia
T20I debut (cap 2)5 August 2006 v England
Last T20I23 March 2012 v Australia
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1992/93–1995/96Delhi
1996/97–2004/05Air India
2006/07–2011/12Delhi
Career statistics
Competition WTest WODI T20I WLA
Matches 12 127 18 225
Runs scored 548 2,856 241 5,521
Batting average 30.44 31.38 17.21 35.85
100s/50s 0/4 1/18 0/0 1/34
Top score 98 100 37* 100
Balls bowled 258 601 661
Wickets 2 9 18
Bowling average 44.00 46.00 30.27
5 wickets in innings 0 0 0
10 wickets in match 0 0 0
Best bowling 1/9 2/9 3/11
Catches/stumpings 13/– 33/– 3/– 64/–
Medal record
Representing  India
Women's cricket
World Cup
Runner-up2005 South Africa

Anjum Chopra (born 20 May 1977) is an Indian cricket commentator and former cricketer. She represented India in over 150 international matches across formats over 18 years. Chopra was the first woman to reach 1,000 ODI runs for India. Since retirement, Chopra has worked as an English-language commentator covering professional cricket such as the Indian Premier League.


She played various sports at an early age, representing her school and college in athletics, basketball, and swimming. She was also a member of the Delhi State basketball team that competed at nationals.

Chopra made her debut in one-day internationals at the age of 17, on 12 February 1995 against New Zealand at Christchurch, New Zealand, and made her debut in Test cricket a few months later against England at Eden Gardens, Kolkata, on 17 November 1995. In only her second series for India the same year, she was awarded player of the series in the one-day internationals against the visiting England cricket team, scoring at an average of 67.5.

She played as a left-handed batter who bowled right-arm medium pace. She played in 12 Tests, 127 ODIs and 18 T20Is. She was coached by Sunita Sharma, Hardeep Dua and Tarak Sinha from Sonnet Club. She was the first woman to score 1,000 runs in ODIs for India.

Carving out a niche in the male-dominated sport in the country, Chopra has begun to be recognized as the face of women's cricket in India as a player, captain, consultant, commentator, motivational speaker, author, and actor.