Glenn Maxwell announced his retirement from ODI cricket today, June 2, 2025. Considered one of the greatest limited-overs batters of his time, Maxwell certainly had o massive peaks, which were curtailed by his sheer inconsistency.
Despite that, Maxwell’s cricketing career will be remembered because he played some of the greatest innings in cricketing history, like his spectacular double-hundred against Afghanistan in the 2023 ODI World Cup. Here are Glenn Maxwell’s career stats and an overview of his time playing cricket at the highest level.
Glenn Maxwell Stats: Batting
Format | Matches | Ins. | Runs | B.F. | H.S. | Avg. | S/R | N.O. | 4s | 6s | 50s | 100s | 200s |
Tests | 07 | 14 | 339 | 570 | 104 | 26.07 | 59.47 | 01 | 33 | 07 | 00 | 01 | 00 |
ODIs | 149 | 136 | 3990 | 3149 | 201* | 33.81 | 126.70 | 18 | 382 | 155 | 23 | 03 | 01 |
T20Is | 116 | 106 | 2664 | 1719 | 145* | 29.93 | 154.97 | 17 | 224 | 137 | 11 | 05 | 00 |
IPL | 141 | 135 | 2819 | 1817 | 95 | 23.89 | 155.15 | 17 | 237 | 161 | 18 | 00 | 00 |
Check Out: Glenn Maxwell Retires From ODI
Glenn Maxwell Stats: Bowling
Format | Matches | Ins. | Balls | Wics. | Runs | B.Fig | Avg. | Econ. | S/R | 4w | 5w | 10w |
Tests | 07 | 09 | 462 | 08 | 341 | 4/127 | 42.62 | 4.42 | 57.7 | 01 | 00 | 00 |
ODIs | 149 | 119 | 4002 | 77 | 3644 | 4/40 | 47.32 | 5.46 | 51.9 | 04 | 00 | 00 |
T20Is | 116 | 76 | 985 | 43 | 1321 | 3/10 | 30/72 | 8.04 | 22.9 | 00 | 00 | 00 |
IPL | 141 | 78 | 1022 | 41 | 1413 | 2/15 | 34.46 | 8.30 | 24.93 | 00 | 00 | 00 |
Glenn Maxwell Stats: Fielding
Format | Matches | Catches |
Tests | 32 | 05 |
ODIs | 55 | 91 |
T20Is | 21 | 52 |
IPL | 117 | 52 |
Check Out: Glenn Maxwell ODI
Glenn Maxwell Career Overview
Glenn Maxwell was born on October 14, 1988, in Melbourne, Australia, making him 36 years old. First playing top-level domestic cricket at the age of 21, Maxwell garnered attention for being one of the fastest run scorers in the country, scoring half-centuries in less than 20 deliveries on occasion. For the next few years came solid performances in Australia and England.
In 2012, he was bought in the Big Bash and the IPL before making his Australian Cricket Team debut that very year against Afghanistan in the UAE in the ODIs. A month later, he made his T20I debut against Pakistan. Then, in March 2013, he played his first Test match against India.
By this time, Maxwell had developed an image as a limited-overs specialist, which resulted in the Mumbai Indians purchasing him for over a million dollars that year. He won the IPL that season, but his first massive achievement came as part of the Australian Team as they won the 2015 ODI World Cup.
In 2014, the Australian player ignited the IPL for the Kings XI Punjab, establishing himself as one of the world’s most renowned sloggers. He stopped playing Test cricket after 2017 and made his limited-overs return after a year out of the team in 2018. While known for his inconsistency across formats, Maxwell was still kept on many teams and was very dangerous, seeing that he could change the complexion of a match on his own.
This is something he did against Afghanistan in the 2023 ODI World Cup. In what was a lost cause for the Aussies, ‘Maxi’ scored arguably the greatest double-century in ODI cricket to drag his team to victory. That match kept Australia in the tournament, which they would go on to win. Two years before this, he was also in the squad that won the 2021 T20 World Cup.
Today, Glenn Maxwell is a regular in T20Is for the Australian Cricket Team and plays in franchise cricket leagues around the world. He retired from ODI Cricket on June 2, 2025.
Check Out: Glenn Maxwell ODI Stats
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