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Who scored most hundreds in IPL? How many tons Rohit & Kohli scored in IPL?

Who scored most hundreds in IPL? How many tons Rohit & Kohli scored in IPL?

Former Mumbai Indians skipper Rohit Sharma enjoyed a successful outing in Mullanpur, Chandigarh, on Friday. Playing in the Eliminator match of the IPL, Rohit had all the luck on his side, earning two lifelines after being dropped by Gerald Coetzee and Kusal Mendis. He made the most of the opportunity but missed out on a well-deserved century, losing his wicket to Prasidh Krishna on 81.
Rohit had the chance to enter the top 10 list of players with the most IPL centuries, but the star Indian batter might have to wait a little longer. Meanwhile, his countryman and RCB stalwart Virat Kohli continues to lead the list with eight centuries to his name.
Jos Buttler, with seven IPL centuries, is second on the overall list of players with the most centuries, while KL Rahul, with five, has the second-highest number of IPL centuries among Indian batters.
Players with most centuries in IPL
Player Span Mat Inns Runs HS 100 50
V Kohli (RCB) 2008–2025 266 258 8618 113* 8 63
JC Buttler (GT/MI/RR) 2016–2025 121 119 4120 124 7 24
CH Gayle (KKR/KXIP/PBKS/RCB) 2009–2021 142 141 4965 175* 6 31
KL Rahul 2013–2025 145 136 5222 132* 5 40
Shubman Gill (GT/KKR) 2018–2025 118 114 3865 129 4 26
SR Watson (CSK/RCB/RR) 2008–2020 145 141 3874 117* 4 21
DA Warner (DC/SRH) 2009–2024 184 184 6565 126 4 62
AB de Villiers (DC/RCB) 2008–2021 184 170 5162 133* 3 40
SV Samson (DC/RR) 2013–2025 177 172 4704 119 3 26
HM Amla (KXIP) 2016–2017 16 16 577 104* 2 3
B Sai Sudharsan (GT) 2022–2025 40 39 1713 108* 2 11
BA Stokes (CSK/RPS/RR) 2017–2023 45 44 935 107* 2 2
H Klaasen (RCB/RR/SRH) 2018–2025 49 45 1480 105* 2 7
JM Bairstow (MI/PBKS/SRH) 2019–2025 51 51 1636 114 2 9
YBK Jaiswal (RR) 2020–2025 67 66 2166 124 2 15
RD Gaikwad (CSK) 2020–2025 71 70 2502 108* 2 20
AC Gilchrist (DCH/KXIP) 2008–2013 80 80 2069 109* 2 11
V Sehwag (DC/KXIP) 2008–2015 104 104 2728 122 2 16
M Vijay (CSK/DC/KXIP) 2009–2020 106 106 2619 127 2 13
BB McCullum 2008–2018 109 109 2880 158* 2 13
Q de Kock 2013–2025 115 115 3309 140* 2 24
RR Pant (DC/LSG) 2016–2025 125 123 3553 128* 2 19
SA Yadav (KKR/MI) 2012–2025 165 150 4267 103* 2 29
AM Rahane 2008–2025 198 183 5032 105* 2 33
S Dhawan 2008–2024 222 221 6769 106* 2 51
RG Sharma (DCH/MI) 2008–2025 271 266 7038 109* 3 47

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time26 minutes ago

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PBKS vs MI: Mahela Jayawardene rues dropped chances after losing Qualifier 2

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With assist from Kashmiri greats, Suhail Ahmad Bhat makes his way from Srinagar to Indian football team
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Indian Express

time30 minutes ago

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With assist from Kashmiri greats, Suhail Ahmad Bhat makes his way from Srinagar to Indian football team

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If he gets picked, he will become only the fourth player from Jammu and Kashmir to represent India after Abdul Majeed Kakroo, Mehrajuddin Wadoo and Danish Farooq. Without these three, Bhat probably wouldn't have reached this far. In a way, Bhat's story is also the story of Kashmir football, at least in the last two decades and the origins can be traced to a protest back on a pleasant spring day in 2007. The story goes that the then J&K chief minister, Gulam Nabi Azad, was considering converting Srinagar's primary football facility, the TRC Ground, into a tulip garden. Kakroo, the first player from Kashmir to captain India in the 1980s, had seen how one football ground after another in Srinagar had disappeared before his eyes to development projects. If TRC Ground met the same fate, Kakroo was convinced it would spell the end of football in Srinagar. Incensed, he took it upon himself to 'save the stadium'. 'I had two South Asian Games gold medals, and I said I would burn myself outside the secretariat,' he had told The Indian Express in an earlier interview. Nabi, eventually, relented. And the TRC Ground would become the site where Kashmir's football dreams blossomed. It was developed into a cute little stadium with a top-grade artificial surface that could survive the bitter winters. A decade later, it became home to one of the most romantic chapters in Indian football. Real Kashmir — a club born out of a natural calamity, the floods of 2014 — took the domestic scene by storm, winning the second division and becoming the first club from J&K to play in the top division of Indian football. Those were heady days for football in Kashmir and Farooq, a no-nonsense midfielder, was one of the poster boys. The club's ardent fan base would create an atmosphere that made the opposition quake in their boots. Bhat was one of the faces in the crowd back then, accompanying his father, Mohammad Abdullah Bhat, for the matches. The football bug, he says, bit him at an early age. 'My father played football, so I was drawn to the game naturally when I was very young,' Bhat says. Father's dream Abdullah's day job was as a labourer and a vegetable vendor. Once the sun set, though, the self-confessed football tragic travelled long distances to play matches. 'I had no coaching or no club as such. A few of us from the neighbourhood formed a team and played wherever we got an opportunity. I played barefoot for most of my life,' he says. Abdullah takes pride that two out of his three sons went on to become doctors. But there's pure, unbridled joy in his voice that at least one of them — Suhail — picked football as a career. 'I couldn't play beyond a local level,' says Bhat Sr. 'But when my son started taking an interest in the sport, I told him to pursue his dream without any fear.' It helped that by then, an ecosystem had developed. Beyond the glamour of big-time football that Real Kashmir brought to Srinagar, Wadoo silently began to develop the next-gen players at the state football academy, at the TRC Ground. 'Growing up, we didn't have many coaches or a set pathway for someone to make a career in football. So, I wanted to do something for football in Kashmir and the state football academy was a part of that plan,' says Wadoo, who spearheaded the project. Bhat was 14 when he joined the academy. 'Like a lot of players in Kashmir, Suhail is physically very strong and has this quality to fight for the ball inside the box, never shy of doing that. And then, he was very disciplined. He never missed training,' Wadoo says. Such was their obsession, that Abdullah was even prepared to change his son's school to ensure he didn't miss training. 'One time, the school teachers made him sit there till 3pm. 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'In 2019, when an 'India Stars' team came to Srinagar for an exhibition match against a J&K team, Amrinder (Singh) Paaji was the goalkeeper. And I was a 14-year-old ball boy, standing behind Paaji's goalpost,' he says. 'This week, I was training with him. It's all a bit surreal.'

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