Adam Zampa

  • Mar 31, 1992 (31 years)
  • Shellharbour, New South Wales
  • Right-hand bat
  • Right-arm legbreak
Player Batting Status
  M Inn NO Runs HS Avg SR 100 200 50 4s 6s
ODI 89 44 16 255 36 9.11 62.04 0 0 0 22 1
T20I 73 16 8 48 13 6.0 82.76 0 0 0 4 0
IPL 20 5 0 15 7 3.0 62.5 0 0 0 1 0
Player Bowling Status
  M Inn B Runs Wkts BBI BBM Econ Avg SR 5W 10W
89 89 4692 4350 151 5/35 5/35 5.56 28.81 31.07 1 0
73 72 1565 1823 82 5/19 5/19 6.99 22.23 19.09 1 0
20 20 419 558 29 6/19 6/19 7.99 19.24 14.45 1 0
Biography

With his boy-ish looks and a similar action, a teen-aged Adam Zampa drew immediate comparisons with Shane Warne. With the old-school technique of tossing the ball above the eye-line and wily deception, Adam Zampa burst onto the scene when he represented Australia U-19 in their successful 2010 World Cup campaign, when scouts and experts recognized the rather familiar action.

After being handed a state contract in 2012, Zampa made his first-class debut for New South Wales in the 2012/13 Sheffield Shield. He moved to South Australia for the next season and continued to perform admirably in the Sheffield Shield. After moving to South Australia, he interacted with Johan Botha, then captain of South Australia and trained at the Australian Center of Excellence before joining the squad for the summer.

After making headlines with his hat-trick in the Matador BBQs One-Day Cup, Zampa was sought after by several T20 franchises and got a transfer to the Melbourne Stars for the 2014/15 season. Zampa continued to impress with his cunning bowling in the shorter formats, but did not deliver any performances of note in Shield cricket. However, his T20 numbers, especially in the BBL, where his overall economy rate stood at a scarcely believable 7.19 – essentially conceding a miserly 28 runs in a T20 match.

He was selected into the Australian ODI and T20I squads and performed well enough to maintain his spot for the 2016 World T20 in India. Despite Australia's disappointing campaign, picking Zampa proved to be a good move as he ended the tournament as Australia's highest wicket-taker. The highlight of his bowling was, once again, his miserly economy rate, standing at 6.27 runs per over during the World T20.

Zampa continued to impress in other T20 leagues around the world, including the CPL and the Indian Premier League. The young leg-spinner seemed to have taken a liking to Indian conditions, extracting more turn on the dry pitches, as he notched up the second-best figures for any bowler in the 2016 edition of the Indian Premier League, when he claimed 6/19 against the Sunrisers Hyderabad (albeit in a losing cause). He impressed in the CPL as well, finishing with 15 wickets in the season.

Zampa was a shock omission for the T20I series against Sri Lanka at home in early 2017, owing to captain Aaron Finch's 'horses for courses' strategy. Zampa publicly expressed his dejection as a 'kick in the guts' and returned in the 3rd T20I to hand his team a consolation win and delivered a man of the match performance with figures of 3/25.

The wrist-spinner struggled to stand out in first-class cricket, owing to the strong South Australian pace attack, leaving Zampa as a bit of a side-show in Shield cricket. In the 2016/17 Sheffield Shield, he delivered his first note-worthy performance against Queensland, as he picked up 10 wickets in the match on an Adelaide track conducive to spin bowling. He was touted by ex-Kiwi skipper to play in the Test series in India in early 2017, owing to his excellent white-ball record in the country and the higher degree of possible control with the SG ball. However, the selectors gave preference to finger-spinners Steve O'Keefe and Nathan Lyon, and Zampa was unable to earn a ticket to India.

A cunning bowler with the ability to deceive batsmen in the air and off the pitch, Zampa's talent was never in doubt but for some reason, he never got the desired backing despite having a year like 2016 where he was the highest wicket-taker in ODIs. He waited patiently though and continued to work harder on improving his game and repertoire.

The 2018-19 season saw a turnaround for Zampa who had a fine BBL to begin with but it was the white-ball tour of India in 2019 that cemented his spot in the national side. It seemed like he had finally got his act together and with the management also supporting him fully, Zampa started to turn in match-winning spells that booked his ticket for the World Cup. Zampa played in just 4 games and picked up 5 wickets. In the following years, Zampa continued to be a steady presence in Australia’s white-ball setup. While performances of note were few and far between, Zampa always performed well enough to warrant a place in the squad. Subsequently, he was a part of Australia’s squads for the twin T20 World Cups of 2021 and 2022 and he was the second highest wicket-taker with 13 wickets in 7 games, including a match-winning fifer against Bangladesh.

Zampa was bought by the Rajasthan Royals for INR 1.5 crore in 2022. The following year, Zampa was named in Australia’s 15-member squad for the Cricket World Cup as their front-line spinner.

Written by Rishi Roy