
In this Cricketing Blog we are going to get info on some of the best Cricketing Legends who have given best ODI 100 runs partnerships which won matches for their countries.
In this Cricket article we are going to see best ODI Partnerships ever plus some of the best ODI partnerships in the particular matches. I think it is going to be an exciting read. So read it full.
Best 100+ Runs Partnerships by Cricketing Legends Ever in ODI :
| Batting Pair | Team | 100+ Partnerships | Era |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sachin Tendulkar & Sourav Ganguly | India | 26 | 1992–2007 |
| Tillakaratne Dilshan & Kumar Sangakkara | Sri Lanka | 20 | 2000–2015 |
| Virat Kohli & Rohit Sharma | India | 18 | 2010–present |
| Adam Gilchrist & Matthew Hayden | Australia | 16 | 2000–2008 |
| Gordon Greenidge & Desmond Haynes | West Indies | 15 | 1979–1991 |
| Jonny Bairstow & Jason Roy | England | 14 | 2016–present |
| Kane Williamson & Ross Taylor | New Zealand | 14 | 2010–2023 |
| Sanath Jayasuriya & Marvan Atapattu | Sri Lanka | 14 | 1996–2007 |
| AB de Villiers & Hashim Amla | South Africa | 12 | 2006–2018 |
| David Warner & Aaron Finch | Australia | 12 | 2013–2023 |
| Quinton de Kock & Hashim Amla | South Africa | 11 | 2013–2019 |
| MS Dhoni & Yuvraj Singh | India | 10 | 2004–2017 |
| Chris Gayle & Marlon Samuels | West Indies | 7 | 2003–2019 |
| Gautam Gambhir & Virat Kohli | India | (Lower than 13)- Don’t Know Exact | 2009–2013 |
| Dean Jones & Allan Border | Australia | (Lower than 10)- Don’t Know Exact | 1984–1992 |
Extra Reference :
Legendary ODI Batting Duos: Stories Behind the Stats
🇮🇳 Sachin Tendulkar & Sourav Ganguly (26 hundred-run stands)
Why they stand out:
- The most 100+ run partnerships in ODI history.
- Feasted on the best bowling attacks: Wasim Akram, Shoaib Akhtar, McGrath, Pollock—you name it.
- Their 2002 NatWest Final stand vs England still gives fans goosebumps.
- Destroyed Pakistan at Sharjah and Australia in India—prime time carnage.
- Style contrast: Sachin’s elegance + Dada’s aggression = perfect combo.
Cricket gossip:
They were known to plan attacks on specific bowlers. Dada once admitted they would target bowlers in spells—“We’d leave McGrath alone but hammer Warne or Lee.”
🇱🇰 Tillakaratne Dilshan & Kumar Sangakkara (20 century stands)
Why they’re elite:
- Reigned during the 2011–2015 golden age of SL cricket.
- Played fearless cricket against Australia, India, and Pakistan in World Cups and bilateral series.
- Dilshan’s Dilscoop + Sanga’s calmness = pain for fast bowlers.
World Cup highlight stats:
In 2011 WC, they smashed England, 231 unbeaten*. That’s not a partnership—it’s a decapitation.
🇦🇺 Adam Gilchrist & Matthew Hayden (16 century stands)
Why they were feared:
- Opened in Australia’s invincible ODI era (2000s).
- Their left-handed aggression broke spirits before middle orders walked in.
- Flattened Pakistan and India in early overs.
- Gilly’s quick starts, Hayden’s bullying presence: bowlers couldn’t breathe.
Fun fact:
In the 2007 World Cup, they averaged over 50 as a pair. Think about that: in a World Cup. Not league games—World Cup!
🇮🇳 Virat Kohli & Rohit Sharma (18 century stands, still active)
Modern masters:
- Best chasing duo in modern ODIs.
- Played against top pace attacks like Starc-Hazlewood, Shaheen-Rauf, and Archer-Wood.
- Rohit starts with a bang, Virat finishes with finesse.
- In 2018 vs West Indies: 246-run stand where bowlers looked like spectators.
Together, they have more 100+ stands than Gilchrist-Hayden, and they remind you of the dominance that once Aussies had in cricket.
🇿🇦 Quinton de Kock & Hashim Amla (11 century stands)
Why they were poetry in motion:
- They destroyed India in 2013—Quinton scored 3 centuries in a row, Amla right beside him.
- Played fast and spin equally well—troublemakers in subcontinent conditions.
- Attacked Starc, Shami, Malinga with no fear.
Underrated but Awesome:
They averaged over 50 as a pair, yet got very little limelight. Silent assassins.
Gordon Greenidge & Desmond Haynes (15 century stands)
Pioneers of dominance:
- Their era had no helmets, uncovered pitches, fearsome bowlers.
- Took down Imran Khan, Kapil Dev, Botham in the ’80s.
- Revolutionized aggressive opening in ODIs.
Old-school flex:
They built 15 100+ stands when ODI totals barely crossed 250. In today’s game, they’d have had 30!
Jason Roy & Jonny Bairstow (10 century stands)
Bazball brothers in white-ball:
- Explosive starts in the 2019 World Cup helped England win their first title.
- Their 160+ vs India (2018) in 25 overs showed what “new era” ODIs look like.
- Roy smashes from ball one, Bairstow counters with calculated chaos.
- Bairstow once said their only rule: “No dot balls in the Powerplay.” 🙂
🇮🇳 MS Dhoni & Yuvraj Singh (9 century stands)
Middle-over monsters:
- Against Pakistan, they were match finishers, not just accumulators.
- Dhoni’s calm + Yuvi’s flair—India’s answer to chaos.
- 256-run partnership vs England in 2017: both got centuries—ages 35+!
- Yuvi’s cancer comeback was emotionally powered by Dhoni’s unflinching support. Their chemistry? Legendary.
Most Runs by a Batting Pair in a Single ODI Match – Record Partnerships
| Batting Pair | Team | Runs | Opponent | Year | Event/Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chris Gayle & Marlon Samuels | West Indies | 372 | Zimbabwe | 2015 | 2015 World Cup (Highest ODI partnership) |
| Sachin Tendulkar & Rahul Dravid | India | 331 | New Zealand | 1999 | |
| Sourav Ganguly & Rahul Dravid | India | 318 | Sri Lanka | 1999 | 1999 World Cup |
| Imam-ul-Haq & Fakhar Zaman | Pakistan | 304 | Zimbabwe | 2018 | |
| Upul Tharanga & Sanath Jayasuriya | Sri Lanka | 286 | England | 2006 | |
| David Warner & Travis Head | Australia | 284 | Pakistan | 2017 | |
| Virat Kohli & Rohit Sharma | India | 246 | West Indies | 2018 | |
| Jason Roy & Jonny Bairstow | England | 159 | West Indies | 2017 | (Corrected Runs & Year, highest shared) |
| Jason Roy & Jonny Bairstow | England | 159 | Pakistan | 2019 | (Second instance of their highest) |
Final Words : Best Batting Pairs ever in the Cricketing History
| Batting Pair | Teams Scored 100+ Against |
|---|---|
| Sachin Tendulkar & Sourav Ganguly | Australia, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, New Zealand, England, Zimbabwe, West Indies, Bangladesh |
| Tillakaratne Dilshan & Kumar Sangakkara | India, Pakistan, Australia, England, Zimbabwe, Bangladesh, West Indies |
| Virat Kohli & Rohit Sharma | West Indies, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Australia, New Zealand, England, Zimbabwe, Bangladesh |
| Adam Gilchrist & Matthew Hayden | India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, New Zealand, England, West Indies |
| Gordon Greenidge & Desmond Haynes | India, Australia, England, New Zealand, Pakistan, Sri Lanka |
| Jonny Bairstow & Jason Roy | India, Pakistan, West Indies, Australia, Sri Lanka |
| Kane Williamson & Ross Taylor | India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, West Indies, England |
| Sanath Jayasuriya & Marvan Atapattu | India, Pakistan, England, Australia, West Indies |
| AB de Villiers & Hashim Amla | India, Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe, West Indies, England |
| David Warner & Aaron Finch | India, Pakistan, New Zealand, England, West Indies |
| Quinton de Kock & Hashim Amla | India, Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe, Bangladesh |
| MS Dhoni & Yuvraj Singh | Pakistan, Sri Lanka, England, West Indies, 🇿🇼 Zimbabwe |
| Chris Gayle & Marlon Samuels | Zimbabwe, India, Sri Lanka |
| Gautam Gambhir & Virat Kohli | Sri Lanka, West Indies, Australia, Zimbabwe |
| Dean Jones & Allan Border | England, India, West Indies |
I’ve shared these iconic partnerships with you because cricket is evolving, new formats are emerging, and the game is stepping into a new age. With the legendary Virat & Rohit era nearing its close, it felt right to look back and celebrate the batting pairs who lit up stadiums and hearts with their brilliance.
From the golden days of Ganguly & Sachin, who rose and thrived in an era dominated by mighty Australians, to the explosive Gilchrist & Hayden, who redefined aggressive opening, these names etched themselves into history through sheer class and consistency. Their partnerships weren’t just about runs — they were about resilience, synergy, and unforgettable moments under pressure.
Let us not forget the elegance of Sangakkara, Dilshan, Jayawardene, Dravid, and the unshakable presence of Virat & Rohit. These are the names every cricket lover will carry in their heart — not just for the records they broke, but for the joy, hope, and pride they gave us.
Cricket will continue to evolve, but these partnerships will remain timeless — stories to be cherished, retold, and remembered forever.
I hope you liked this Cricket article.
Happy Cricket