Rohit Sharma's ODI Future Under Cloud? Report Claims Serious Grade 3 Hamstring Tear
Reports of senior India cricketer Rohit Sharma carrying a serious hamstring problem have put renewed focus on his workload, fitness management and ODI future.
A report in CricBlogger has made a sensational claim that the former India skipper isn't completely fit and his scans showed a Grade 3 hamstring tear, with a 16-mm injury. The report raises questions over how India and Mumbai Indians manage one of their most important batters in a long World Cup cycle.

There has been no public medical bulletin from the Board of Control for Cricket in India confirming the exact nature or extent of the injury. That distinction is important. Until an official update is issued, the severity, recovery timeline and match availability should be treated with caution. Still, the claim has triggered a familiar debate around Rohit: how long can elite performance and recurring soft-tissue issues coexist at the highest level?
Why a Grade 3 hamstring tear is a major concern
A Grade 3 hamstring tear is generally considered the most severe category of hamstring injury. It can involve a complete tear of the muscle or tendon and often leads to major pain, weakness and loss of function. In high-performance sport, such injuries require careful diagnosis, structured rehabilitation and a cautious return-to-play plan.
Recovery from severe hamstring injuries can vary widely. Medical timelines depend on the exact location of the tear, the degree of tendon involvement, the player’s age, previous injury history and the demands of the sport. Some athletes return in a few months, while more complex cases can take longer. Surgery is considered only in specific cases, usually where there is significant tendon damage or retraction.
For a batter like Rohit, the hamstring is not only tested while running between wickets. It is also loaded during sudden starts, quick turns, diving efforts, boundary fielding and explosive movements while batting. Even if a player can strike the ball cleanly, repeated sprinting under match pressure remains a separate fitness test.
Rohit returned to action for the ongoing ODI series against Afghanistan. The 39-year-old cricketer - who became the oldest Indian to make an ODI appearance for the country - couldn't make the match a memorable as he was run out cheaply in the series opener in Dharamshala.
Rohit Sharma fitness debate now moves beyond form
Rohit’s ODI value has rarely been in doubt when judged purely on batting impact. His ability to control tempo, attack in the powerplay and convert starts into match-shaping innings has made him one of India’s most influential white-ball players. The tougher question now is not whether he can still bat, but whether his body can repeatedly handle ODI cricket’s physical load.
That question becomes more relevant because the 50-over format demands a different rhythm from T20 cricket. An ODI opener may spend long periods in the middle, sprinting twos, rebuilding after wickets and then accelerating again at the back end. For senior players managing soft-tissue injuries, those repeated bursts can be as demanding as the innings itself.
The report also claimed Rohit has managed the hamstring issue over several seasons and has missed some Indian Premier League (IPL) 2026 matches because of it. Soft-tissue injuries can become recurring concerns if return-to-play is rushed or if the underlying risk factors are not fully addressed. Teams usually monitor sprint loads, gym work, recovery markers and match intensity before clearing a player for sustained competition.
India’s selectors and team management have also become more direct about fitness standards in recent years. Reputation still matters in Indian cricket, but selection conversations increasingly weigh availability, fielding output, workload and long-term planning. For senior players, that means performance alone may not settle every debate.
What India must weigh before the 2027 World Cup
The 2027 ODI World Cup is still some distance away, but planning for it cannot wait until the final year. India must decide how to phase senior players through bilateral cricket while also giving enough opportunities to the next group of openers and middle-order options. Rohit’s fitness situation, if serious, adds another layer to that process.
India do not need to make an immediate public call on Rohit’s long-term ODI role. What they do need is clarity on availability. If he is fit for selected series but not for a heavy run of matches, selectors may have to manage him carefully. That could mean fewer low-priority games, longer recovery windows and a sharper focus on major tournaments or high-value assignments.


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