Pawandeep Rajan

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Pawandeep Rajan (born 27 July 1996)[1] is an Indian singer and music composer. He is known for his work in Hindi, Punjabi, Bengali and Assamese music industries. He was the winner at the television singing reality show 2015 The Voice India and 2020-21 Indian Idol.[2][3]

Pawandeep Rajan
 
Background information
Born (1996-07-27) 27 July 1996 (age 28)
Champawat, Uttarakhand, India
Occupation(s)
  • Singer
  • composer
  • actor
Years active2015–present
Musical career
Genres
Instruments
Labels
Sony Music

Himesh Reshammiya Melodies Zee Music Merchant Records Octopus Entertainment

Early life

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Born to a musical family. His father Suresh Rajan is a renowned folk singer. Pawandeep learned music from his father in his early age.[4][5][6]

He did his schooling from University Senior Secondary School, Chmapawat. and, completed his graduation from Kumaun University of Nainital, Uttrakhand.[7][8]

Career

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Pawandeep started his singing career through television debut. He participated in television singing reality show The Voice India season 1, in 2015. and, won the competition.[9][10]

He later participated in Indian Idol season 12 in 2020-21. and, won the reality show. [11][12]

He is a member of the band Rait, based in Chandigarh. Where he performs as the lead vocalist.[13][14]

Discography

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Film songs

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As singer

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Year Film Song Music Lyrics Co-singer(s) Language Notes
2017 Romeo-N-Bullet "Tere liye" Gufy Shailendra Sharma Mamta Rawat Hindi
2019 Kidnap "Oi Dekche Aakash" Jeet Gannguli Raja Chanda Bengali

As composer

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Year Film Song Lyrics Singer(s) Language Notes
2022 Prem Geet 3 "Koi Na Koi Nata Hai"[15] Ruby Fulara, Subhash Kale Jubin Nautiyal Hindi

Non-film songs

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Year Album/Single Song Music Lyrics Co-singer(s) Language Notes
2021 Fursat "Fursat" Kashi Kashyap Arafat Mehmood, Mukesh Mishra Arunita Kanjilal Hindi ft. Pawandeep Rajan
2021 Himesh Ke Dil Se "O Saiyyonii"[16] Himesh Reshammiya Himesh Reshammiya Arunita Kanjilal Hindi Studio Version
2022 Tere Naina "Tere Naina" Himself, Rahul Dayal Rahul Dayal Arunita Kanjilal Hindi ft. Pawandeep Rajan
2023 Is Dil Ko "Is Dil Ko" Jeet Gannguli Manoj Samprasadr Arunita Kanjilal Hindi ft. Pawandeep Rajan
2021 Manzoor Dil "Manzoor Dil"[17] Himself, Ashish Kulkarni Arafat Mehmood Arunita Kanjilal Hindi ft. Pawandeep Rajan
2021 Moods with Melodies Vol.1 "Tere Bagairr" Himesh Reshammiya Sameer Anjaan Arunita Kanjilal Hindi ft. Pawandeep Rajan
2022 Ishq Badhta Gaya "Ishq Badhta Gaya"[18] Jeet Gannguli Rashmi Virag Hindi
2022 Keh Do "Keh Do" Salim Sulaiman Shraddha Pandit Arunita Kanjilal Hindi ft. Pawandeep Rajan
2015 Yakeen "Yakeen" Satish Chakraborty Puneet Sharma Hindi ft. Pawandeep Rajan
2022 Dekha Tujhe To Laga "Dekha Tujhe To Laga"[19] Himesh Reshammiya Himesh Reshammiya Arunita Kanjilal Hindi Studio Version
2021 Terii Umeed "Terii Umeed" Himesh Reshammiya Himesh Reshammiya Arunita Kanjilal Hindi Studio Version
2024 Lakeer "Lakeer" Nimma Virk Ashok Bhaura Iqbaldeep, Suman Bhatti Punjabi
2021 Pogola Fagun "Pogola Fagun" Bibhuti Gogoi Mondeep Gogoi Assamese
2024 Piya O Piya "Piya O Piya"[20] Salim Sulaiman Shraddha Pandit Arunita Kanjilal Hindi ft. Pawandeep Rajan
2024 Yeh Honsla "Yeh Honsla" (Reprise)[21] Salim Sulaiman Mir Ali Hussain Hindi ft. Pawandeep Rajan
2024 Yeh Love Nahin Toh Kya Hai "Yeh Love Nhi Toh Kya Hai"[22] Salim Sulaiman Shraddha Pandit Arunita Kanjilal Hindi ft. Pawandeep Rajan

Filmography

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Year Title Role Language Notes
2017[23] FU: Friendship Unlimited Billy[24] Marathi
2021 1962: The War in the Hills Nodo Tana/Radar Hindi Television drama series on Disney+ Hotstar

Recognition

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After winning Indian Idol 12, He was appointed as the youth ambassador and the brand ambassador of Uttarakhand for culture, tourism & sports by the state government.[25][26]

Emami Temple

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The Jagannath Temple(also known as Emami Jagannath Temple) is a Hindu temple dedicated to the god Jagannath, It is located in Remuna in the state of Odisha.

Jagannath Temple
 
Emami Jagannath Temple
Religion
AffiliationHinduism
DistrictBalasore
DeityJagannatha
FestivalsRathyatra
Location
LocationRemuna
StateOdisha
CountryIndia
 
 
Location in Odisha
 
 
Perfectodefecto/sandbox (India)
 
 
Perfectodefecto/sandbox (Asia)
Geographic coordinates21°32′10″N 86°49′49″E / 21.53611°N 86.83028°E / 21.53611; 86.83028
Architecture
TypeKalinga architecture
CreatorShri Raghunath Mohapatra
Completed2015
Website
https://shreejagannathmandir.org

Khaira

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Khaira is a town in Baleswar district in the Indian state of Odisha.

Khaira
Town
 
 
Khaira
Location in Odisha, India
 
 
Khaira
Khaira (India)
Coordinates: 21°16′25″N 86°28′43″E / 21.27361°N 86.47861°E / 21.27361; 86.47861
Country  India
StateOdisha
DistrictBalasore
Population
 (2011)
 • Total139,777[27]
Languages
 • OfficialOdia
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
756048
Telephone code06788
Vehicle registrationOD-01
Sex ratio1000:929 /
Websiteodisha.gov.in

Oupada

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Oupada is a town in Baleswar district in the Indian state of Odisha.

Oupada
Town
 
 
Oupada
Location in Odisha, India
 
 
Oupada
Oupada (India)
Coordinates: 21°22′40″N 86°33′15″E / 21.37778°N 86.55417°E / 21.37778; 86.55417
Country  India
StateOdisha
DistrictBalasore
Population
 (2011)
 • Total39,759[28]
Languages
 • OfficialOdia
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
PIN
756049
Telephone code06782
Vehicle registrationOD-01
Sex ratio1000:825 /
Websiteodisha.gov.in

Sahil Chauhan

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Sahil Chauhan is an Indian-origin Estonian cricketer. He currently holds the record of fastest century in Twenty20 International.

Sahil Chauhan
Personal information
Born (1992-02-19) 19 February 1992 (age 32)
Pinjore, Haryana, India
BattingRight-handed
BowlingRight-arm medium
International information
National side
T20I debut (cap 28)30 September 2023 v Gibraltar
Last T20I19 June 2024 v Cyprus
Career statistics
Competition T20I T20
Matches 8 8
Runs scored 315 315
Batting average 63.00 63.00
100s/50s 1/1 1/1
Top score 144* 144*
Balls bowled 48 48
Wickets 4 4
Bowling average 14.00 14.00
5 wickets in innings 0 0
10 wickets in match 0 0
Best bowling 4/19 4/19
Catches/stumpings 2/– 2/–
Source: Cricinfo, 19 June 2024

Personal life

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Sahil completed his schooling from DAV Senior Public School, Surajpur. then, he did his graduation from Panjab University, and later, he completed his postgraduation from a private university, in Mohali.[29]

He currently works as a manager in a chain of restuarants, in Estonia.[30][31]

International career

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Sahil made his international debut against Gibraltar in September, 2023. After early failures, he scored a blistering knock of unbeaten 144 runs off 41 balls against Cyprus, when his team was struggling to chase a mammoth total of 192. Through his marathon innings, he broke multiple records. He registered the century in 27 balls, which is the fastest century in T20 cricket, broke the record of fastest century in T20Is and T20 cricket which previously held by Jan Nicol Loftie-Eaton and Chris Gayle respectively. His 18 sixes in this innings is the highest for any batter in T20Is and joint-highest in T20 cricket.[32][33][34][35][36][37][38]

Domestic career

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Sahil represents Tallinn United in ECS Estonia T10 league tournament. He has hit a consecutive six sixes in an over, in the same T10 league competition.[39][40]

Shyaam Nikhil

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Shyaam Nikhil P.(Tamil: ஷ்யாம் நிகில் பி.) is an Indian Chess Player.

Shyaam Nikhil P
 
Nikhil in 2012
CountryIndia
Born (1992-03-21) March 21, 1992 (age 32)
Nagercoil, Tamilnadu, India
TitleIM (2010)
FIDE rating2442 (August 2024)
Peak rating2502 (May 2012)

Career

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He started playing chess tournaments at the age of 11 years. In 2007, He won the World Youth Chess Olympiad while representing India-U16, with Adhiban Baskaran, R. Ashwath, S. Nitin, and Swayams Mishra.[41] In 2009, He participated in Asian Youth Chess Championship in Under-18 category, where he narrowly missed the Gold.[42]

In September 2011, He made his maiden GM norm while competing in the 4th Mayor’s Cup International Chess Tournament, in Mumbai.[43] He got his second GM norm in the following month while competing in National Premier Chess Championship, 2011.[44]

Nikhil won the 26th National Youth Under-25 Chess Championship in 2017, where he scored 8 points over 9 rounds.The event included 122 International Masters(IM).[45]

In 2022, He won the Commonwealth Chess Championship, in Sri Lanka.[46]

In May 2024, Nikhil became a Grandmaster after securing his final norm.[47]The title will be awarded later by FIDE.

Gaprindashvili Trophy

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The trophy, named after the former women's World Champion Nona Gaprindashvili(1961-78) and it was created by FIDE in 1997. The Trophy is awarded to the nation that has the highest total number of match points in the open and women's divisions combined.

Year Nation
1998   Russia
2000
2002
2004
2006   China
2008   Ukraine
2010   Russia
2012
2014   China
2016   Ukraine
2018   China
2022   India

Most Runs off an over(T20s)

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Runs Sequence Batsman Team Bowler Opposition Team Venue Season
39 (N+4)-W-6-4-6-4-6-W-6 Elton Chigumbura   Sheikh Jamal Alauddin Babu   Abahani Ltd Mirpur 2013-14
38 Elton Chigumbura   Sheikh Jamal Alauddin Babu   Abahani Ltd Mirpur 2013-14
37 6-6-6-6-2-(N+4)-6 JP Duminy   Cape Cobras Eddie Leie   Knights Cape Town 2017-18
36 6–6–6–6–6–6 Herschelle Gibbs   South Africa Daan van Bunge   Netherlands St. Kitts 2006–07
Jaskaran Malhotra   United States Gaudi Toka   Papua New Guinea Al Amerat Cricket Stadium Turf 2 2021–22
Thisara Perera   SL Army Sports Club Dilhan Cooray   BCAC Army Ground, Panagoda 2020-21
Last updated: 28 November 2022[48]
Key: *N – No ball *W – Wide

Speed Chess Championship

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Speed Chess Championship is an annual event organized by the Chess.com, where the world's top speed chess players compete against each other at blitzspeed chess controls.

The current champion is GM Magnus Carlsen who beat GM Hikaru Nakamura in 2023.

Results

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Year Final
Champion Score Runner-up
2017[49]   Magnus Carlsen 18.0-9.0   Hikaru Nakamura
2018[50]   Hikaru Nakamura 15.5-12.5   Wesley So
2019[51]   Hikaru Nakamura 19.5-14.5   Wesley So
2020[52]   Hikaru Nakamura 18.5-12.5   Maxime Vachier-Lagrave
2021[53]   Hikaru Nakamura 23.0-8.0   Wesley So
2022[54]   Hikaru Nakamura 14.5-13.5   Magnus Carlsen
2023[55]   Magnus Carlsen 13.5-12.5   Hikaru Nakamura

ESPNcricinfo Awards

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The ESPNcricinfo Awards are an annual set of sports awards for international cricket, which recognise and honour the best individual batting and bowling performances in cricket over the previous calendar year. The awards were introduced by ESPNcricinfo in 2007.

ESPNcricinfo Awards
Awarded forThe best individual performances in International cricket over the previous calendar year.
Presented byESPNcricinfo
First awarded19 December 2007 (2007-12-19)
WebsiteESPNcricinfo

Men's Awards

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Men's Test batting performance of the year

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Year Player Performance
2007   Kumar Sangakkara 192 v   Australia in Hobart
2008   Virender Sehwag 201* v   Sri Lanka in Galle
2009   Virender Sehwag 293 v   Sri Lanka in Mumbai
2010   VVS Laxman 96 v   South Africa in Durban
2011   Sachin Tendulkar 146 v   South Africa in Cape Town
2012   Kevin Pietersen 186 v   India in Mumbai
2013   Shikhar Dhawan 187 v   Australia in Mohali
2014   Brendon McCullum 302 v   India in Wellington
2015   Kane Williamson 242* v   Sri Lanka in Wellington
2016   Ben Stokes 258 v   South Africa in Cape Town
2017   Steve Smith 109 v   India in Pune
2018   Cheteshwar Pujara 123 v   Australia in Adelaide
2019   Kusal Perera 153* v   South Africa in Durban
2020   Ajinkya Rahane 112 v   Australia in Melbourne
2021   Rishabh Pant 89* v   Australia in Brisbane

Men's Test bowling performance of the year

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Year Player Performance
2007   Zaheer Khan 5/75 v   England in Trent Bridge
2008   Dale Steyn 5/67 v   Australia in Melbourne
2009   Jerome Taylor 5/11 v   England in Kingston
2010   Dale Steyn 7/51 v   India in Nagpur
2011   Doug Bracewell 6/40 v   Australia in Hobart
2012   Vernon Philander 5/30 v   England in London
2013   Mitchell Johnson 7/40 v   England in Adelaide
2014   Mitchell Johnson 7/68 v   South Africa in Centurion
2015   Stuart Broad 8/15 v   Australia in Nottingham
2016   Stuart Broad 6/17 v   South Africa in Johannesburg
2017   Nathan Lyon 8/50 v   India in Bengaluru
2018   Jasprit Bumrah 6/33 v   Australia in Melbourne
2019   Kemar Roach 5/17 v   England in Bridgetown
2020   Josh Hazlewood 5/8 v   India in Adelaide
2021   Kyle Jamieson 5/31 v   India in Southampton

Men's ODI batting performance of the year

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Year Player Performance
2007   Adam Gilchrist 149 v   Sri Lanka in Bridgetown
2008   Sanath Jayasuriya 125 v   India in Karachi
2009   Sachin Tendulkar 175 v   Australia in Hyderabad
2010   Sachin Tendulkar 200* v   South Africa in Gwalior
2011   Kevin O'Brien 113 v   England in Bengaluru
2012   Virat Kohli 133* v   Sri Lanka in Hobart
2013   Rohit Sharma 209 v   Australia in Bengaluru
2014   Rohit Sharma 264 v   Sri Lanka in Kolkata
2015   AB de Villiers 149 v   West Indies in Johannesburg
2016   Quinton de Kock 178 v   Australia in Centurion
2017   Fakhar Zaman 114 v   India in London
2018   Ross Taylor 181* v   England in Dunedin
2019   Ben Stokes 84* v   New Zealand in London
2020   Glenn Maxwell 108 v   England in Manchester
2021   Fakhar Zaman 193 v   South Africa in Johannesburg

Men's ODI bowling performance of the year

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Year Player Performance
2007   Lasith Malinga 4/54 v   South Africa in Providence
2008   Ajantha Mendis 6/13 v   India in Karachi
2009   Shahid Afridi 6/38 v   Australia in Dubai
2010   Umar Gul 6/42 v   England in London
2011   Mitchell Johnson 6/31 v   Sri Lanka in Pallekele
2012   Thisara Perera 6/44 v   Pakistan in Pallekele
2013   Shahid Afridi 7/12 v   West Indies in Georgetown
2014   Lasith Malinga 5/56 v   Pakistan in Mirpur
2015   Tim Southee 7/33 v   England in Wellington
2016   Sunil Narine 6/27 v   South Africa in Providence
2017   Mohammad Amir 3/16 v   India in London
2018   Kuldeep Yadav 6/25 v   England in Nottingham
2019   Matt Henry 3/37 v   India in Manchester
2020   Blessing Muzarabani 5/49 v   Pakistan in Rawalpindi
2021   Saqib Mahmood 4/42 v   Pakistan in Cardiff

Men's T20I batting performance of the year

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Year Player Performance
2007   Yuvraj Singh 70 v   Australia in Durban
2008 N/A -
2009   Chris Gayle 88 v   Australia in London
2010   Michael Hussey 60* v   Pakistan in St. Lucia
2011 N/A -
2012   Marlon Samuels 78 v   Sri Lanka in Colombo
2013 N/A -
2014   Alex Hales 116* v   Sri Lanka in Chattogram
2015   Rohit Sharma 106 v   South Africa in Dharamshala
2016   Carlos Brathwaite 34* v   England in Kolkata
2017   Evin Lewis 125 v   India in Kingston
2018   Glenn Maxwell 103* v   England in Hobart
2019   Glenn Maxwell 113* v   India in Bengaluru
2020   Jonny Bairstow 86* v   South Africa in Cape Town
2021   Jos Buttler 101* v   Sri Lanka in Dubai

Men's T20I bowling performance of the year

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Year Player Performance
2007   RP Singh 4/13 v   South Africa in Durban
2008 N/A -
2009   Umar Gul 5/6 v   New Zealand in London
2010   Tim Southee 5/18 v   Pakistan in Auckland
2011 N/A -
2012   Lasith Malinga 5/31 v   England in Pallekele
2013 N/A -
2014   Rangana Herath 5/3 v   New Zealand in Chattogram
2015   David Wiese 5/23 v   West Indies in Durban
2016   Mustafizur Rahman 5/22 v   New Zealand in Kolkata
2017   Yuzvendra Chahal 6/25 v   England in Bengaluru
2018   Kuldeep Yadav 5/24 v   England in London
2019   Lasith Malinga 5/6 v   New Zealand in Pallekele
2020   Lockie Ferguson 5/21 v   West Indies in Auckland
2021   Shaheen Afridi 3/31 v   India in Dubai

Men's Associate batting performance of the year

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Year Player Performance
2016   Mohammad Shahzad 118* v   Zimbabwe in Sharjah
2017   Kyle Coetzer 109 v   Zimbabwe in Edinburgh
2018   Calum MacLeod 140* v   England in Edinburgh
2019   George Munsey 127* v   Netherlands in Dublin
2020 N/A -
2021   Gerhard Erasmus 53* v   Ireland in Sharjah

Men's Associate bowling performance of the year

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Year Player Performance
2016   Mohammad Nabi 2/16 v   Bangladesh in Mirpur
2017   Rashid Khan 7/18 v   West Indies in St. Lucia
2018   Safyaan Sharif 5/33 v   Zimbabwe in Bulawayo
2019   Bilal Khan 4/23 v   Hong Kong in Dubai
2020 N/A -
2021   Ruben Trumpelmann 3/17 v   Scotland in Abu Dhabi

Men's Debutant of the year

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Year Player
2013   Mohammed Shami
2014 N/A
2015   Mustafizur Rahman
2016   Mehedi Hasan
2017   Kuldeep Yadav
2018   Sam Curran
2019   Jofra Archer
2020   Kyle Jamieson
2021   Ollie Robinson

Women's Awards

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Women's batting performance of the year

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Year Player Performance
2016   Hayley Matthews 66 v   Australia in Kolkata
2017   Harmanpreet Kaur 171* v   Australia in Derby
2018   Harmanpreet Kaur 103 v   New Zealand in Providence
2019   Meg Lanning 133* v   England in Chelmsford
2020   Alyssa Healy 75 v   India in Melbourne
2021   Beth Mooney 125* v   India in Mackay

Women's bowling performance of the year

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Year Player Performance
2016   Leigh Kasperek 3/13 v   Australia in Nagpur
2017   Anya Shrubsole 6/46 v   India in London
2018   Natalie Sciver 3/4 v   South Africa in Gros Islet
2019   Ellyse Perry 7/22 v   England in Canterbury
2020   Poonam Yadav 4/19 v   Australia in Sydney
2021   Kate Cross 5/34 v   India in Taunton

Mixed Awards

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Captain of the Year

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Year Winner
2015   Brendon McCullum
2016   Virat Kohli
2017   Heather Knight
2018   Meg Lanning
2019   Eoin Morgan
2020 N/A
2021   Kane Williamson

Awards by Years

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ESPN World Fame 100

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ESPN World Fame 100 is an Annual Ranking of the Biggest Names in Sports. Ben Alamar, ESPN's director of sports analytics, devised a formula that combines salary and endorsements with social media following and Google search popularity.

The Portuguese Footballer Cristiano Ronaldo tops the list in every year since its inception. The last update was published in 2019.

Methodology

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The ESPN World Fame 100 is an annual attempt to create a ranking, through statistical analysis, of the 100 most famous athletes on the planet.

It started with Forbes' annual list of the highest-paid athletes and expanded the pool from there using a variety of domestic and international sources to make sure it didn't overlook any legitimate candidates. It also took input from ESPN journalists around the world, including bureaus in Australia, South Africa, Argentina, Brazil, China, India, Mexico and the United Kingdom.

The data for each athlete in the pool was then fed into a formula created by ESPN director of sports analytics Ben Alamar that weighs athletes' endorsements, their following on the social media Big Three (Facebook, Twitter and Instagram) and Google search popularity, producing a comparative ranking system. The analysis includes five categories: endorsement money, Twitter followers, Instagram followers, Facebook followers and Google Trends score. For special situations (esports and China) it used two additional categories: other social media -- for when the athlete was more relevant on a platform outside the Big Three (Twitch, for example, although no gamers made the top 100) -- and, in China's case, Baidu search score, because Google is blocked there.

Salary is not used as a factor because of differences among sports. For example, players in a league with a salary cap would be at an unfair disadvantage when measured against players in uncapped leagues. Endorsement dollars, however, reflect the ability to draw attention -- which is a good way to define fame.

Endorsement amounts were compiled by ESPN researchers. All currency figures were converted to U.S. dollars. The social media followings and Google Trend scores , Which show relative popularity based on how often names are searched on a scale of 0 to 100.

World fame 100 lists

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Below is the top 10 for each year since the list's inception.

Rank Athlete Sport
1   Cristiano Ronaldo Football
2   LeBron James Basketball
3   Lionel Messi Football
4   Neymar Jr Football
5   Roger Federer Tennis
6   Kevin Durant Basketball
7   Tiger Woods Golf
8   Virat Kohli Cricket
9   James Rodriguez Football
10   Rafael Nadal Tennis
Rank Athlete Sport
1   Cristiano Ronaldo Football
2   LeBron James Basketball
3   Lionel Messi Football
4   Roger Federer Tennis
5   Phil Mickelson Golf
6   Neymar Jr Football
7   Usain Bolt Track and Field
8   Kevin Durant Basketball
9   Rafael Nadal Tennis
10   Tiger Woods Golf
Rank Athlete Sport
1   Cristiano Ronaldo Football
2   LeBron James Basketball
3   Lionel Messi Football
4   Neymar Jr Football
5   Roger Federer Tennis
6   Tiger Woods Golf
7   Kevin Durant Basketball
8   Rafael Nadal Tennis
9   Stephen Curry Basketball
10   Phil Mickelson Golf
Rank Athlete Sport
1   Cristiano Ronaldo Football
2   LeBron James Basketball
3   Lionel Messi Football
4   Neymar Jr Football
5   Conor McGregor MMA
6   Roger Federer Tennis
7   Virat Kohli Cricket
8   Rafael Nadal Tennis
9   Stephen Curry Basketball
10   Tiger Woods Golf

Most Runs in an over

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Runs Sequence Batsman Team Bowler Opposition Team Venue Season
43 4-(N+6)-(N+6)-6-1-6-6-6 Brett Hampton/Joe Carter   Northern District Willem Ludick   Central District Hamilton 2018-19
6-6-6-6-(N+6)-6-6 Ruturaj Gaikwad   Maharashtra Shiva Singh   Uttar Pradesh Sardar Patel Stadium B Ground, Ahmedabad 2022-23
39 (N+4)-W-6-4-6-4-6-W-6 Elton Chigumbura   Sheikh Jamal Alauddin Babu   Abahani Ltd Mirpur 2013-14
37 6-6-6-6-2-(N+4)-6 JP Duminy   Cape Cobras Eddie Leie   Knights Cape Town 2017-18
36 6–6–6–6–6–6 Herschelle Gibbs   South Africa Daan van Bunge   Netherlands St. Kitts 2006–07
Jaskaran Malhotra   United States Gaudi Toka   Papua New Guinea Al Amerat Cricket Stadium Turf 2 2021–22
Thisara Perera   SL Army Sports Club Dilhan Cooray   BCAC Army Ground, Panagoda 2020-21
35 6–W–6–6–6–4–6 Thisara Perera   Sri Lanka Robin Peterson   South Africa Pallekele 2013-14
6-4-W-6-6-6-6 Raiphi Gomez   Hyderabad Dwaraka Ravi Teja   Kerala Indian Institute of Technology Chemplast Ground, Chennai 2009-10
Last updated: 28 November 2022[60]
Key: *N – No ball *W – Wide

2012 U19 Asia Cup

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2012 Under-19 Asia Cup
Dates23 June 2012 – 01 July 2012
Administrator(s)Asian Cricket Council (ACC)
Cricket format50-over
Tournament format(s)Round-robin, playoffs
Host(s)  Malaysia
Champions  India (3rd title)
  Pakistan (1st title)
Runners-upNone
Participants8
Matches15
Player of the series  Sami Aslam
Most runs  Sami Aslam (461)
Most wickets  Tharindu Kaushal (12)
  Mohammad Nawaz (12)
2003
2013

The 2012 Under-19 Asia Cup was the 3rd edition of ACC Under-19 Cup. The cricket tournament was played in Malaysia from 23 June 2012 to 01 July 2012. Eight teams contested in the tournament, including five full members and three qualified members.

Teams

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No. Teams Qualification method
1   India ICC Full Member
2   Pakistan
3   Bangladesh
4   Sri Lanka
5   Afghanistan
6   Qatar Qualifiers
7     Nepal
8   Malaysia

Group stage

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Points table

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Group A

Pos. Team M W L T NR Pts NRR
1   Pakistan 3 3 0 0 0 9 2.125
2   India 3 2 1 0 0 6 1.165
3     Nepal 3 1 2 0 0 3 -0.126
4   Malaysia 3 0 3 0 0 0 -3.057
Source:- ESPNcricinfo
  •   Advanced to Semifinal

Points table

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Group B

Pos. Team M W L T NR Pts NRR
1   Sri Lanka 3 3 0 0 0 9 1.509
2   Afghanistan 3 2 1 0 0 6 1.076
3   Bangladesh 3 1 2 0 0 3 1.946
4   Qatar 3 0 3 0 0 0 -4.810
Source:- ESPNcricinfo
  •   Advanced to Semifinal

Knockout stage

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Semi-finals Final
      
A1   Afghanistan 145
B2   Pakistan 296/3
B2   Pakistan 282/9
A2   India 282/8
B1   Sri Lanka 244/7
A2   India 247/4


Semi-final 1

28 June
10:00 AM
Scorecard
Pakistan  
296/3 (50 overs)
v
  Afghanistan
145 (40.5 overs)
Pakistan won by 151 runs.
Kinrara Academy Oval, Kuala Lumpur
Player of the match: Imam-ul-Haq


Semi-final 2

29 June
10:00 AM
Scorecard
Sri Lanka  
244/7 (50 overs)
v
  India
247/4 (47.1 overs)
India won by 6 wickets
Kinrara Academy Oval, Kuala Lumpur
Player of the match: Unmukt Chand

Final

01 July
10:00 AM
Scorecard
Pakistan  
282/9 (50 overs)
v
  India
282/8 (50 overs)
Match tied
Kinrara Academy Oval, Kuala Lumpur
Player of the match: Unmukt Chand, Sami Aslam

Reference

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