Facebook Pixel Virat Kohli Indian Cricket Player Profile, Batting and Bowling stats, Recent form | CREX

LCP Element

Virat Kohli Logo
Virat Kohli Jersy
Virat Kohli
Team flagIND36 yrs
batting styleright handed Batter
#4 Batter in ODI

Virat Kohli Profile, Career & Stats

Batting
Bowling

Virat Kohli Recent Form

Batting

RCB vs PBKS, IPL43 (35)
RCB vs PBKS, IPL12 (12)
RCB vs LSG, IPL54 (30)
RCB vs SRH, IPL43 (25)
RCB vs CSK, IPL62 (33)
RCB vs DC, IPL51 (47)
RCB vs RR, IPL70 (42)
RCB vs PBKS, IPL73 (54) *
RCB vs PBKS, IPL1 (3)
RCB vs RR, IPL62 (45) *
arrow

Bowling

IND vs NED, ODI1-13
IND vs BAN, ODI0-2
IND vs HK, T20I0-6
IND vs NZ, Test0-4
IND vs SA, Test0-4
IND vs SL, Test0-1
IND vs SL, Test0-5
IND vs SL, ODI0-12
IND vs SL, ODI0-17
RCB vs GL, IPL0-13
arrow

Virat Kohli Career Stats

Batting

FormatMatInnR100s50sHSSRAvgFoursSixesDuckRank
ODI30229014181517418393.3557.881325152----
T20I1251174188138122137.0448.70369124----
Test1232109230303125455.5846.85102730----
IPL2672598661863113132.8639.55771291----
WC ODI3737179551211788.2159.8315914----
First class15625911485373925455.9548.05134145----
LIST A33432115566558118393.4157.021481175----
T2011190019146.1519.0011----

Bowling

FormatMatInnWEconAvgBest3W5WSRMaidenRank
ODI3025056.16136.001/1300132.40----
T20I1251348.0551.001/130038.00----
Test1231102.880.000/0000.00----
IPL2672648.8092.002/250062.75----
WC ODI37515.2334.001-130039.00----
First class1562533.15112.662/4200214.30----
LIST A3345756.12148.201/1300145.20----
T201000.000.000000.00----

Career Debut Information

ODI Debut
Sri Lanka vs India at Dambulla - August 18, 2008
T20I Debut
Zimbabwe vs India at Harare - June 12, 2010
Test Debut
West Indies vs India at Kingston - June 20 - 23, 2011
IPL Debut
vs Kolkata Knight Riders at M.Chinnaswamy Stadium, Apr 18, 2008
First class Debut
Tamil Nadu vs Delhi at Delhi- November 23 - 26, 2006
LIST A Debut
Delhi vs Services at Delhi- February 18, 2006
T20 Debut
Australia v India The Gabba, Brisbane, 17-10-2022

Teams played for

India Delhi India Red India U19 Royal Challengers Bangalore Board Presidents XI North Zone Indians India A

About Virat Kohli

NameVirat Kohli
GenderMale
Birth5 Nov 1988
Birth PlaceDelhi
Height175
NationalityIndian
RoleBatter
Batsright handed . middle order
Bowlsright-arm medium . Faster
Popular ShotCover Drive

A modern legend of the game, Virat Kohli is definitely the most versatile batter currently and by the time he brings the curtain down on his career, Kohli might well become the greatest ever batter to have graced the game. Despite emerging as a child prodigy who led India to an Under-19 World Cup win back in 2008, Kohli wasn’t quite as gifted as his idol, Sachin Tendulkar. However, his hard work and dedication helped him achieve what he has today. ... continue reading

Player Bio

A modern legend of the game, Virat Kohli is definitely the most versatile batter currently and by the time he brings the curtain down on his career, Kohli might well become the greatest ever batter to have graced the game. Despite emerging as a child prodigy who led India to an Under-19 World Cup win back in 2008, Kohli wasn’t quite as gifted as his idol, Sachin Tendulkar. However, his hard work and dedication helped him achieve what he has today. 

Emerging as a chubby and flamboyant youngster, Kohli was often touted as an arrogant young kid. He was in a totally different mould, unlike the culture in the Indian cricket team before. He was aggressive, and even in his early days, he never backed away from indulging himself in needling the opposition. Just like Rahul Dravid said in an interview, “Needling the opposition gets the best out of him, but it isn’t everyone’s cup of tea.” 

Born in 1988 in Delhi to a Punjabi family, Kohli was interested in cricket from a very early age. He used to hold a cricket bat when he was 3 years old and would ask his father to bowl at him. Kohli’s father admitted him to an academy where he trained under the watchful guidance of Rajkumar Sharma.

Recalling Kohli’s early days, Rajkumar Sharma said that Kohli oozed class from an early age. 

“He oozed talent. It was so difficult to keep him quiet. He was a natural in whatever he did and I was most impressed with his attitude. He was ready to bat at any spot, and I had to literally push him home after the training sessions. He just wouldn’t leave,” Rajkumar Sharma had said in an interview. 

Kohli went on to play for the Delhi U-15 team in October 2002 and was part of the 2002-03 Polly Umrigar Trophy. He finished as the leading run-getter for his team and was appointed as the captain in the next season. He smashed 390 runs in just 5 matches, including two centuries and two half-centuries. He kept churning out runs on a consistent basis, and in the 2003-04 Vijay Merchant Trophy, Kohli was at his staggering best, scoring 470 runs in just 4 matches.

 Following his consistent run, Kohli was awarded a place in the India U-19 squad for the tour of England in July 2006. India won the series, and Kohli emerged as a promising talent and earned accolades from the then-Indian manager Lalchand Rajput. The same year, Kohli made his First-Class debut for Delhi against Tamil Nadu in November. A month later, Kohli had to deal with a big personal loss after the death of his father, but he decided to play a day after his father’s death and went on to score a match-saving 90 against Karnataka. 

In February-March 2008, Kohli was appointed as the skipper of the Indian U-19 team for the 2008 World Cup. Kohli not only impressed with the bat but also led India to a sensational victory. Batting at No 3, Kohli scored 235 runs in 6 matches at an average of 47, which included a century against the West Indies. Following his heroics in the junior World Cup, Kohli bagged an IPL contract with the Royal Challengers Bangalore and was bought at his base price.

He was soon drafted into the senior Indian side when he was included in the squad for the ODI series in Sri Lanka. Regular openers Sachin Tendulkar and Virender Sehwag had sustained injuries, and Kohli played as a makeshift opener, scoring a solitary fifty in his 5 outings. The youngster took some time to settle himself in a side loaded with superstars. 

He smashed his maiden international century in 2009 in an ODI against Sri Lanka in Kolkata. Along with Gautam Gambhir, Kohli shared a sensational stand and helped India win the match from a precarious situation. Gambhir showed a great gesture by awarding his Man of the Match Award to Kohli. 

Kohli made his World Cup debut in 2011 and joined an elite list of cricketers with a hundred on his World Cup debut in the opener against Bangladesh. Two years after making his ODI debut, Kohli was finally handed his Test debut against the West Indies in 2011. In the next series in Australia, Kohli’s technique was questioned after two disappointing outings in the first two games. However, the skipper, MS Dhoni, persisted with him, and the result was there for everyone to see in the next two matches. He smashed 75 and 44 in the next Test in Perth and followed it up with a maiden Test century in Adelaide when most of the other experienced batters failed.

Kohli’s breakthrough ODI knock came in 2012 when he thrashed the Sri Lankan bowlers all around the park in Hobart and helped India chase down a stiff target of 321 in just the 38th over. Lasith Malinga received some special treatment from Kohli as he was belted for 24 runs in an over. That knock turned out to be a career-changing one for Kohli as he started taking giant strides as a batter, especially in the limited-overs. Not even a month had passed, but Kohli played yet another innings for the ages, smashing 183 runs versus Pakistan in the Asia Cup 2012. While chasing 330 runs, India had lost Gautam Gambhir early, but Kohli once again soaked up the pressure, doing the bulk of the scoring all by himself, leading India to a famous win in Mirpur.

Over the next few years, Kohli kept climbing the ladder and emerged as one of the greatest young cricketers. However, there were a few chinks in his armour, especially when it came to a technique that troubled him quite a bit in 2014. He was found wanting against the quality English pace attack in the tour of 2014. He scored just 134 runs in 10 innings and had a forgettable outing. He went back and focused on his technique, even taking some advice from his idol Sachin Tendulkar, and in 2018, he came to England as a totally changed batter, finishing as the leading run-getter (593) by a country mile among both the teams. 

He was part of the 2015 World Cup squad and scored a century in the opening encounter against Pakistan. He had a slump in form as the tournament progressed, as India was eliminated after losing the semi-final against Australia. By then, Kohli had already established himself as arguably the greatest ODI batter and in 2016, Kohli was very close to taking India to a title win in the 2016 T20 World Cup. However, the dreams were shattered after some shoddy batting from the middle order.

 Following the retirement of MS Dhoni, Kohli was handed over the full-time captaincy of the Test side in 2015, and he led India to their first series win in Sri Lanka after 22 years. After losing the opening Test, India staged a dramatic comeback and registered a 2-1 series win. He then led India to a 3-0 series win against South Africa on rank turners, but his personal form was far from impressive. 

Over the years, Kohli has evolved as a “chase master” in limited-overs cricket, and his exploits, especially in 50-over cricket, have simply gone on to a different level. 

Despite starting off his Test career on a rather sedate note, Kohli has also taken his Test record to a different level. In 2017, Kohli became the first batter in Test cricket history to smash 4 double hundreds in 4 consecutive Test series. He had a sensational time with the bat in Australia back in 2014 when he accumulated 692 runs in 4 matches, which included 4 centuries. Despite his exceptional record in all formats, Kohli continues to have some problems with the moving ball.

Kohli continues to be part of the Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB) franchise but not as a captain anymore. He took batting to a whole new level in the 2016 IPL when he almost smashed 1000 season runs with 4 centuries. Kohli took his side to the final, where they lost against Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) narrowly. His captaincy in the tournament was questioned repeatedly as RCB failed to lift a trophy. However, things did not change much even after he relinquished the captaincy post the 2022 season.

Amidst all of this, a captaincy saga jolted Indian cricket. After Kohli willingly left the T20I leadership set-up, with the 2021 World Cup being his final assignment that resulted in a league-stage exit for India, the ODI captaincy was taken away from him. The then-BCCI president Sourav Ganguly gave a reason behind this opinion that they want a single white-ball skipper, handing over the reins to Rohit Sharma.

Things went upside down even further as Kohli decided to resign from the Test captaincy after the South Africa tour, even though he became India’s most successful leader in the format.

A century drought bugged him in between. The wait between his 70th and 71st hundred lasted 1,021 days. He broke this unwanted streak in the Asia Cup 2022 match versus Afghanistan.

This gave birth to a second wind as Kohli was back to his old self, something that the fans had craved for a long time.

In the T20 World Cup 2022, Kohli led the run-scoring charts. He top-scored with 296 runs in six innings. Not to forget his epic 82-run knock versus Pakistan in Melbourne. He brought India out of misery, pulling off a miraculous run-chase that needed the Men in Blue to score 48 runs in the final three overs of the innings. In the process, he smashed a back-foot straight six on a good-length delivery off Haris Rauf, which is now hailed as the Shot of the Century.

In IPL 2023, his run-machine mode continued. Although RCB failed to reach the playoffs, Kohli displayed tremendous touch, scoring 639 runs in 14 matches, including two tons.

In the Asia Cup 2023, he scored a match-winning hundred against Pakistan and took his rich form to the World Cup held in the same year.

Although India lost the final to Australia, where Kohli scored a fifty, there was no stopping The King. He scored 765 runs in the tournament, the most by a batter in a single edition of an ODI World Cup. He smashed three centuries, including the one which came in the semi-final versus New Zealand. It took him to his 77th international hundred and 50th in the ODI format, helping him surpass Sachin Tendulkar’s record of most ODI centuries in front of the legend himself.

He was named the ICC Men’s ODI Cricketer of the Year for 2023.

After the World Cup final heartbreak, Kohli next played a Test series in South Africa, piling up 172 runs across four innings.

He made his T20I comeback after 14 months in the series versus Afghanistan.

While he was initially named in the India squad for the England Test series, he pulled out of the first two Tests, with his break extending to the whole assignment later on due to personal reasons.

Kohli returned in the IPL 2024 and won the Orange Cap. He finished the tournament with 741 runs in 15 matches. Kohli registered a century and five half-centuries.

Kohli was named in the T20 World Cup 2024 squad, and although he didn’t have the best of the tournament with the bat, he came good when it mattered the most - in the final. Kohli scored 76 off 59 and helped India post a score which the bowlers later defended. 

Kohli was adjudged player of the match in the final, and in his post-match interview, he announced that he is retiring from the shortest format of the game. 

Kohli finished his T20I career with 4188 runs from 125 matches. The batter scored a century and 38 half-centuries. His highest score of 122 came against Afghanistan in the Asia Cup 2023.

Post his T20I retirement, Kohli had an underwhelming ODI series against Sri Lanka in August 2024, failing to make a significant impact. However, he bounced back with some steady performances in the Test series against Bangladesh (September-October 2024), followed by a challenging series against New Zealand (October-November 2024), where he struggled to convert starts into big scores.

The much-anticipated Border-Gavaskar Trophy (November 2024 - January 2025) saw glimpses of vintage Kohli. He started strong with a century in the first Test, but his form dipped as the series progressed. Despite his mixed performances, his leadership and presence in the dressing room remained invaluable.

In November 2024, ahead of the IPL 2025 mega auction, Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB) retained Kohli for INR 21 crore, reaffirming their trust in their talismanic batter.

January 2025 marked a historic moment in Kohli’s career as he returned to the Ranji Trophy after 12 years, representing Delhi. His decision to play domestic cricket was widely appreciated, showcasing his commitment to the red-ball format even after achieving everything at the highest level.

Kohli was back in action for India in the ODI series against England (February 2025), where he played a steady knock of 52 in one of the matches. 

However, it was in the Champions Trophy 2025 (February-March) where he truly stamped his authority. He amassed 218 runs in 5 matches at an average of 54.50, playing two standout knocks – a match-winning 84 in the semi-final against Australia and an unbeaten century (100) against Pakistan in the group stage. 

His performances were instrumental in India’s triumph, as he played a pivotal role in securing India’s seventh ICC trophy, further solidifying his reputation as one of the greatest match-winners in the history of Indian cricket.

As of mid-2025, Kohli continues to be an integral part of the Indian ODI setup, but he retired from the longest format in the middle of the IPL 2025. However, he had the happiest moments in the IPL post that tournament, as he broke the 18-year-old jinx and helped RCB win its maiden IPL title.

(As of July 2025)