Virat Kohli Stats Centuries


Virat Kohli Profile, cricket player India, career info, stats, IPL, details

 Virat Kohli

India

Virat Kohli Individual Data

Born       Nov 05, 1988 (34 years)

Birth        Place Delhi 

Height     5 ft 9 in (175 cm) 

Role        Batsman Batting

Style       Right-hand Bat

Bowling Style   Right-arm medium 

Virat Kohli ICC Rankings 

             Test     ODI       T20 

Batting-  13        8          14

Bowling- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Vocation Information Teams India, Delhi, India Red, India U19, Imperial Challengers Bangalore, Board Presidents XI, North Zone, Indians, India A, Asia XI

A spicy, rotund youngster with gelled hair shot to popularity in the wake of driving India to magnificence in the Under-19 World Cup at Kuala Lumpur in mid-2008. In an Indian group loaded up with holy person-like symbols w...

Virat Kohli Full profile

Batting Profession Synopsis

           M    Inn  NO  Runs HS   Avg     BF   SR       100   200 50  4s    6s

Test   108  183   11    8416 254   48.93 15211 55.33 28 7 28 941     24

ODI   274   265   40   12898 183 57.32 13776 93.63 46 0 65 1211  139

T20I  115  107    31   4008 122 52.74 2905 137.97 1 0 37 356 117

IPL  237  229    34   7263 113 37.25 5586 130.02 7 0 50 643 234

Bowling Profession Outline

           M     Inn         B     Runs Wkts BBI  BBM Econ      Avg  SR   5W  10W

Test   108     11 175        84  0        0/0 0/0      2.88          0.0 0.0     0    0

ODI   274     48 641       665  4       1/15 1/15      6.22     166.25 160.25 0    0

T20I   115     13 152       204  4      1/13 1/13      8.05       51.0 38.0     0     0

IPL    237    26 251       368  4      2/25 2/25       8.8       92.0 62.75   0     0

Career Data

Test debut    vs West Indies at Sabina Park, Jun 20, 2011

Last Test       vs Australia at Narendra Modi Arena, Blemish 09, 2023

ODI debut     vs Sri Lanka at Rangiri Dambulla Global Arena, Aug 18, 2008

Last ODI        vs Australia at Mama Chidambaram Arena, Blemish 22, 2023

T20debut       vs Zimbabwe at Harare Sports Club, Jun 12, 2010

Last T20        vs Britain at Adelaide Oval, Nov 10, 2022

IPL debut      vs Kolkata Knight Riders at M.Chinnaswamy Arena, Apr 18, 2008

Last IPL         vs Gujarat Titans at M.Chinnaswamy Arena, May 21, 2023

Profile An energetic, plump young person with gelled hair shot to acclaim after driving India to magnificence in the Under-19 World Cup at Kuala Lumpur in mid-2008. In an Indian group loaded up with holy person-like symbols deserving of their own hagiographies, Virat Kohli, with his most un-Indian, 'terrible kid' force, would plainly be a pariah.

Grind through the positions

Before long joined the senior Men dressed in Blue in Sri Lanka, come August 2008. Without even a trace of the ordinary openers, Virat Kohli was allowed an opportunity to open the batting in the ODI series. He played a few estimable thumps in his drawn-out run as an opener, as India proceeded to win the ODI series. Notwithstanding, the laid-out and impressive sets of Tendulkar and Sehwag kept Kohli out of the group

The 20-year-old kept on intriguing for Delhi and ruled assaults, obviously showing that he had a place at a lot more elevated level; that lesser cricket was underneath his norms. Kohli then went to Australia in 2009 for the Arising Players competition and stepped his position all around the bowling assaults. He added 'huge match personality' to his list of references as well, binding a familiar hundred in the last against South Africa, and directing his group to a clinical triumph. The youthful wonder, scarcely mature enough to accept his man-of-the-match champagne, finished the competition with 398 runs from 7 excursions with two centuries and two fifties, guaranteeing that he stayed new in the selectors' psyches.


Establishing a public spot

The selectors had no real option except to give Kohli another go on the Indian side, and this time he hung together various amazing scores. In the wake of being given a lengthy run, he reimbursed their confidence by scoring up his lady ODI hundred in a noteworthy run-pursue against Sri Lanka in December 2009 - his first of numerous model thumps in run-pursues. On the Planet Cup last, of 2011, the greatest phase of all, Kohli, alongside his Delhi colleague Gautam Gambhir, pulled off a generally misjudged salvage exertion with an 83-pursue stand losing the openers early. This thump assumed an urgent part in setting the stage for MS Dhoni's famous thump of 91*, which ultimately won India the World Cup on that charming night in Mumbai.

In the headache of the World Cup elation, Kohli kept on taking monster steps in the restricted overs design. Three years after his ODI debut, he was at long last given the sought-after Test cap in the Caribbean islands in July 2011, inferable from the need to rest the senior players. After a series each against the Dukes ball and the SG ball, it was present time for his preliminary against the Kookaburra Down Under. In the initial two Tests, he appeared to miss the mark on a strategy to play in Australia, keeping up with his low position on the fun tracks. He likewise had a fairly limiting trigger development with his front foot regularly going over towards off-stump, in this manner blocking the fundamental development to play back-foot shots like the force and the cut.

A Rite of Passage Down Under

The selectors and the skipper persevered with him going into the third Test, and he conveyed a leading-edge execution on a fun Perth wicket - a noteworthy 75 - where a noticeable change in method was apparent. He figured out how to stand tall, with a more open position, and displayed the back-foot shots in his collection throughout the innings. The unstable Kohli figured out how to eclipse his indecency directly with his presentation in the last Trial of the series. Scoring up India's just 100 years of a lamentable visit, Kohli was the focusing light amid the tumult, as he stroked his direction to 100 in Adelaide displaying the will to improve and remarkable concentration under tension in the burning intensity and strain of Australia.

While he caught and ripped at his way into the Test side, he went on a record-breaking binge in ODIs: the Indian record for the quickest to the product of a thousand runs in ODIs, coming full circle on the planet record for the quickest to 9000 runs in ODIs. He was likewise the most noteworthy run-scorer for India in ODIs for three successive schedule years - 2010, 2011, and 2012 and won the ICC ODI Cricketer of the Year grant in 2012.

That cutting-edge inning…

We recall the awards, however, where did everything start? There's consistently the one inning that made the world pay attention; the 86-ball knock which he got going as a reckless kid, yet finished as a man. Pursuing a doubtful objective of 321 off 40 overs to remain alive in the competition, he laid into the Sri Lankan bowlers and trucked his approach to 133*, getting India home with multiple overs in excess, basically hauling them out of the air terminal after M.S. Dhoni rather unconsciously commented that India had previously been killed from the competition.

Lord Kohli had shown up. The ruler of the run-pursue, and a plenty of ODI records in the cutting-edge age.

Virat Kohli Batting strategy and quirks

Kohli has an apparently hot head on his shoulders, however, he channels generally his indignation while he is batting. Known to be a forceful batsman generally keeping watch for runs, he has a genuinely strong, but somewhat capricious strategy, which makes him judge the length of the ball sooner than most, and incredibly speedy wrists to run his hands through the ball, even against quick bowlers. He is similarly skilled against speed and twist and never looks awkward at the wrinkle. With deft foot development against the spinners, he is known to be very disastrous when the circumstance requests it. He has needed to fill a few rather huge shoes of his ancestors and has worked effectively most definitely.

Virat Kohli Captaincy and an adjustment of procedure

With normal skipper MS Dhoni weak from a physical issue, Kohli was named substitute chief for the principal Test at Adelaide. After a wretched visit through Britain, pundits had one or two misgivings of Kohli's presentation in Australia for the Line Gavaskar prize in December. Kohli demonstrated that they could never have been all the more off-base, as he scored two familiar hundreds in the principal Test at Adelaide. His innings masterclass of 141 nearly pulled off a shocking run-pursue on a famous fifth-day rank-turner and proceeded to score a sum of four hundred on this visit. Saying that he had quieted pundits would be putting it mildly.

As India arranged for their title safeguard in front of the 2015 World Cup Down Under, with the expression 'Won't give it back' doing the rounds, Virat Kohli was promoted to be a critical entertainer for India. The Indians had a horrendous disagreement with Australia, having neglected to dominate a solitary game in the Test series as well as the succeeding ODI tri-series. Kohli got going in signature design, with a commonly stroke-filled hundred against Pakistan as India kept up with their unbeaten go against their chief opponents on ICC occasions. As India burst into the semi-finals unbeaten, Kohli's structure kept on taking a strange plunge, finishing in a meticulous 1 in the semi-last misfortune against the co-has and possible bosses, Australia.

Kohli, the then full-time Test commander, visited Sri Lanka with a youthful side without the administrations of Mahendra Singh Dhoni, careful about the Sri Lankan spinners' legendary fourth innings con-work. In the wake of losing the main Test, Kohli's India kept a sensational dig out from a deficit win in the series, proceeding to win 2-1. Kohli kept on expanding on his favorable beginning to Test captaincy as he drove them to a defeat of the South Africans on a progression of rank-turners all around India. He had a calm series with the bat, as the more indifferent batsmen of his group dominated. Regardless, the victory took India to the No. 1 spot in the ICC Test rankings interestingly since they relinquished it to Britain after the forgettable white-wash in 2011.

He proceeded with his earnest spat T20 cricket (and running) like a man had, however, whipping limits effortlessly. Despite an 89* in the 2016 semi-last against the West Indies (expanding his brutal run of structure in the configuration), India's bowling overreacted at a critical stage. One needed to feel frustrated about him as he needed to manage with the 'Player of the Competition' grant for the second progressive Twenty20 World Cup; a qualification he would've readily traded for the slippery World T20 prize. Kohli's hunger for runs indicated that things are not pulling back as he stole from a small matter of 973 runs during the 2016 release of the Indian Chief Association, the most.