Mark Wood

Mark Wood

England
2015 - 2025
  • Date of Birth 1990-1-11
  • Role bowler
  • Batting Style right-hand bat
  • Bowling Style right-arm fast
Debut Matches
Format Match Date
TEST ENG vs NZ 2015-05-21
ODI IRE vs ENG 2015-05-08
T20 ENG vs NZ 2015-06-23

Recent Performances

England vs Australia
2025-11-21
Batting: 0 & 4*
Bowling: 0/21 & 0/23
Eng Lions vs England XI
2025-11-13
Batting: -
Bowling: 0/30
Afghanistan vs England
2025-02-26
Batting: 2*
Bowling: 0/50
England vs Australia
2025-02-22
Batting: -
Bowling: 1/75
India vs England
2025-02-12
Batting: 9
Bowling: 2/45
England vs India
2025-02-09
Batting: -
Bowling: 0/57
India vs England
2025-02-02
Batting: -
Bowling: 2/32
England vs India
2025-01-28
Batting: 10*
Bowling: 1/29
England vs India
2025-01-25
Batting: 5*
Bowling: 1/28
England vs India
2025-01-22
Batting: 1
Bowling: 0/25

Batting Statistics

Matches 38
Innings 64
Runs 811
Average 15.59
Strike Rate 70.95
Highest Score 52
100s 0
50s 1
Fours 108
Sixes 20
Catches 8

Bowling Statistics

Matches 38
Innings 71
Wickets 119
Average 30.79
Economy 3.32
Strike Rate 55.5
Best Figure 6/37
4 Wickets 3
5 Wickets 5
Balls Bowled 6610
Runs Conceded 3665

Batting Statistics

Matches 70
Innings 29
Runs 168
Average 12.92
Strike Rate 100.59
Highest Score 43*
100s 0
50s 0
Fours 16
Sixes 5
Catches 14

Bowling Statistics

Matches 70
Innings 69
Wickets 80
Average 40.82
Economy 5.58
Strike Rate 43.8
Best Figure 4/33
4 Wickets 2
5 Wickets 0
Balls Bowled 3506
Runs Conceded 3266

Batting Statistics

Matches 38
Innings 7
Runs 27
Average 13.5
Strike Rate 96.42
Highest Score 10*
100s 0
50s 0
Fours 2
Sixes 0
Catches 5

Bowling Statistics

Matches 38
Innings 37
Wickets 54
Average 20.24
Economy 8.45
Strike Rate 14.3
Best Figure 3/9
4 Wickets 0
5 Wickets 0
Balls Bowled 776
Runs Conceded 1093

Batting Statistics

Matches 104
Innings 45
Runs 230
Average 9.58
Strike Rate 92
Highest Score 43*
100s 0
50s 0
Fours 19
Sixes 6
Catches 24

Bowling Statistics

Matches 104
Innings 101
Wickets 126
Average 34.96
Economy 5.41
Strike Rate 38.7
Best Figure 4/33
4 Wickets 2
5 Wickets 0
Balls Bowled 4885
Runs Conceded 4406

Batting Statistics

Matches 63
Innings 20
Runs 134
Average 14.88
Strike Rate 108.06
Highest Score 27*
100s 0
50s 0
Fours 12
Sixes 1
Catches 11

Bowling Statistics

Matches 63
Innings 62
Wickets 85
Average 20.82
Economy 8.21
Strike Rate 15.2
Best Figure 5/14
4 Wickets 1
5 Wickets 1
Balls Bowled 1292
Runs Conceded 1770
England quick bowler Mark Wood, tremendously fast but frequently injured, has in his brief career been something of a cautionary tale like many other out and out fast men in modern times. Unlike some of his other similarly ill-starred counterparts, Wood, despite multiple setbacks, particularly injuries to his ankle, did not compromise his speeds for a longer career. Instead, he abandoned the short run-up that had marked his career until about mid-2018 for a longer one that would put less pressure on his body and still allow him to crank out top speeds.
Wood made his first-class debut for Durham in April 2011, his List A debut the following month, and played his first County Championship match, against Nottinghamshire, in August the same year. Like fellow Durham quick Stephen Harmison, Wood hails from Ashington in Northumberland. Skinny and medium height for a fast bowler, with a skiddy, whippy delivery, he took 19 wickets at a little over 21 in his first five first-class appearances, including a match-winning five-for against Nottinghamshire in 2012.
The following summer was Wood's breakthrough: he claimed 27 first-class wickets at 24.07 to help Durham to the Championship title and confirm his status as the latest in an impressive collection of homegrown pace bowlers. His 2014 season was disrupted by the first appearance of a long-running ankle problem, but he made an instant impression on his Test debut against New Zealand the following summer, bowling above 90mph and celebrating wickets with abandon. He played four Tests in the Ashes that followed, where he took the wicket that sealed England's series win, at Trent Bridge.
There was another comeback from injury in the second half of 2016, when Wood delivered some of the most potent fast-bowling spells of the season, taking Durham to the final of the T20 Blast. He also featured in England's 4-1 ODI series win over Pakistan. Then, further injury issues ruled him out of the tours of Bangladesh and India and he underwent a third ankle operation within a year, which cast doubt upon his prospects. Though he came back in 2017, he was down on pace somewhat, and wasn't effective in his two home Tests, against South Africa, and he lost his England central contract at the end of the season.
Returning yet again in 2019, he took his first Test five-wicket haul, in Gros Islet, bowling at hair-raising speeds and helping England secure a consolation win in their 1-2 series defeat in the West Indies. That summer he made it back to the ODI side and went on to play a huge role in England's first World Cup title. He and Jofra Archer traded records for the quickest deliveries of the tournament - both exceeded 95mph, and while Archer finished with more wickets (20 to Wood's 18), Wood had the better strike rate. He sustained a serious side strain during the epic final, against New Zealand, but with the match in the balance, continued to bowl at high pace.
He missed the Ashes series that followed but was back to his mercurial best in South Africa early in 2021, taking nine wickets in a Player-of-the Match performance in Johannesburg to seal the Test series for England. He made it to Australia at last in 2021-22, saving his best for last: nine wickets in the Hobart Test, though England were blanked 4-0 in the series. In March of 2022 came another surgery - this time on a troublesome elbow, but Wood was back later in the year for the ludicrously high-scoring Bazball tour of Pakistan, where his 4 for 65 on an unforgiving Multan track kept Pakistan in check in the second Test, putting England 2-0 ahead.
Come the home Ashes of 2023, Wood tore into Australia at Headingley, finishing with seven wickets and the Player-of-the-Match award, having sealed the win with the bat in the company of Chris Woakes. In his three Tests that series, where he averaged just over 20, he accounted for Usman Khawaja, Steven Smith and Marnus Labuschagne twice apiece.
Wood took nine wickets in his four games in England's T20 World Cup-winning campaign in 2022 but missed the latter matches with a calf injury. Five months later, in his second coming in the IPL (he played one game for Chennai Super Kings in 2018), he made an unimpeachable start, taking 5 for 14 for his new side, Lucknow Super Giants, but missed the second half of the season due to the birth of his second child. Come the ODI World Cup that year, Wood, like most of his team-mates, was forgettable in England's shambolic defence of their title.