List of ICC Champions Trophy centuries

In cricket, a player is said to have scored a century when he scores 100 or more runs in a single innings.[1] The ICC Champions Trophy was a One Day International (ODI) tournament organised by the International Cricket Council (ICC),[2] and was considered the second most significant after the World Cup.[3] Originally inaugurated as the "ICC KnockOut Trophy" in 1998, the tournament was organised every two or three years until the final edition in 2017.[2][4] A total of 50 centuries were scored by players from 10 different teams.[5] Players from all teams that have permanent ODI status have scored centuries.[6][lower-alpha 1] India, in fact leads the list, with ten centuries, followed by Sri Lanka, with seven.[lower-alpha 2][8]

Sourav Ganguly was the first player to score three centuries in the tournament's history.

Alistair Campbell of Zimbabwe was the first to score a century in the tournament, when he made 100 against New Zealand during the inaugural edition.[5] Four players—Sourav Ganguly (India), Herschelle Gibbs (South Africa), Chris Gayle (West Indies) and Shikhar Dhawan (India)—hold the record for the most number of centuries, with three each. A further four players—Saeed Anwar (Pakistan), Marcus Trescothick (England), Upul Tharanga (Sri Lanka) and Shane Watson (Australia)—have each scored two centuries.[6] Gayle's three centuries in 2006 is a record for any player in a single edition.[9] New Zealand's Nathan Astle's 145 against the United States was the highest individual score.[10] South Africa's Jacques Kallis's 113 not out against Sri Lanka in 1998, Ganguly's 141 not out against South Africa in 2000, and New Zealand's Chris Cairns's 102 not out against India in the same tournament feature in the top 100 ODI innings of all-time by a list released by the Wisden Cricketers' Almanack in 2002.[11]

Six centuries were made in the finals,[12] with three of them resulting in the centurions being on the championship winning side.[13] The 2002 edition saw ten centuries—all at the Premadasa Stadium, Colombo, the highest for a single tournament, while the fewest centuries were scored in the 2013 edition, with three.[14] The final century was made by Fakhar Zaman of Pakistan, when he scored 114 against India during the final of the 2017 edition of the tournament.[5]

Key

Key
Symbol Meaning
Player The batsman who scored the century
Runs Number of runs scored
* Batsman remained not out
The century was scored in the final
Balls Number of balls faced
4s Number of fours scored
6s Number of sixes scored
S/R Strike rate (runs scored per 100 balls)
Inn Innings in which the score was made
Team The cricket team the batsman was representing
Opposition The team the batsman was playing against
Venue The ODI cricket ground where the match was played
Date The date when the match was played
D/L The result was decided by the Duckworth–Lewis method

Centuries

List of ICC champions trophy centuries
No. Player Runs Balls 4s 6s S/R Inn Team Opposition Venue Date Result Ref
1 Alistair Campbell 100 143 7 1 69.93 1  Zimbabwe  New Zealand Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka, Bangladesh 24 October 1998 Lost [15]
2 Sachin Tendulkar 141 128 13 3 110.15 1  India  Australia Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka, Bangladesh 28 October 1998 Won [16]
3 Jacques Kallis 113* 100 5 5 113.00 1  South Africa  Sri Lanka Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka, Bangladesh 30 October 1998 Won [17]
4 Philo Wallace 103 102 11 5 100.98 1  West Indies  South Africa Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka, Bangladesh 1 November 1998 Lost [18]
5 Avishka Gunawardene 132 146 19 0 90.41 1  Sri Lanka  West Indies Gymkhana Club Ground, Nairobi, Kenya 4 October 2000 Won [19]
6 Saeed Anwar (1/2) 105* 134 12 1 78.35 2  Pakistan  Sri Lanka Gymkhana Club Ground, Nairobi, Kenya 8 October 2000 Won [20]
7 Saeed Anwar (2/2) 104 115 16 0 90.43 1  Pakistan  New Zealand Gymkhana Club Ground, Nairobi, Kenya 11 October 2000 Lost [21]
8 Sourav Ganguly (1/3) 141* 142 11 6 99.29 1  India  South Africa Gymkhana Club Ground, Nairobi, Kenya 13 October 2000 Won [22]
9 Sourav Ganguly (2/3) 117 130 9 4 90.00 1  India  New Zealand Gymkhana Club Ground, Nairobi, Kenya 15 October 2000 Lost [23]
10 Chris Cairns 102* 113 8 2 90.26 2  New Zealand  India Gymkhana Club Ground, Nairobi, Kenya 15 October 2000 Won [23]
11 Sanath Jayasuriya 102* 120 10 0 85.00 2  Sri Lanka  Pakistan R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo, Sri Lanka 12 September 2002 Won [24]
12 Mohammad Kaif 111* 112 8 1 99.10 1  India  Zimbabwe R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo, Sri Lanka 14 September 2002 Won [25]
13 Andy Flower 145 164 13 0 88.41 2  Zimbabwe  India R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo, Sri Lanka 14 September 2002 Lost [25]
14 Marvan Atapattu 101 118 8 0 85.59 1  Sri Lanka  Netherlands R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo, Sri Lanka 16 September 2002 Won [26]
15 Brian Lara 111 120 8 2 92.50 1  West Indies  Kenya Sinhalese Sports Club Ground, Colombo, Sri Lanka 17 September 2002 Won [27]
16 Marcus Trescothick (1/2) 119 102 11 2 116.66 1  England  Zimbabwe R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo, Sri Lanka 18 September 2002 Won [28]
17 Herschelle Gibbs (1/3) 116 126 13 3 92.06 1  South Africa  Kenya R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo, Sri Lanka 20 September 2002 Won [29]
18 Virender Sehwag 126 104 21 1 121.15 2  India  England R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo, Sri Lanka 22 September 2002 Won [30]
19 Sourav Ganguly (3/3) 117* 109 12 3 107.33 2  India  England R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo, Sri Lanka 22 September 2002 Won [30]
20 Herschelle Gibbs (2/3) 116* 119 16 0 97.47 2  South Africa  India R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo, Sri Lanka 25 September 2002 Lost [31]
21 Nathan Astle 145* 151 13 6 96.02 1  New Zealand  United States The Oval, London, England 10 September 2004 Won [32]
22 Andrew Flintoff 104 91 9 3 114.28 1  England  Sri Lanka The Rose Bowl, Southampton, England 17 September 2004[lower-alpha 3] Won (D/L) [34]
23 Herschelle Gibbs (3/3) 101 135 9 1 74.81 1  South Africa  West Indies The Oval, London, England 18 September 2004[lower-alpha 4] Lost [36]
24 Marcus Trescothick (2/2) 104 124 14 0 83.87 1  England  West Indies The Oval, London, England 25 September 2004 Lost [37]
25 Upul Tharanga (1/2) 105 129 11 1 81.39 1  Sri Lanka  Bangladesh Punjab Cricket Association IS Bindra Stadium, Mohali, India 7 October 2006 Won [38]
26 Upul Tharanga (2/2) 110 130 13 1 84.61 1  Sri Lanka  Zimbabwe Sardar Patel Stadium, Ahmedabad, India 10 October 2006 Won [39]
27 Chris Gayle (1/3) 104* 118 11 3 88.13 2  West Indies  Bangladesh Sawai Mansingh Stadium, Jaipur, India 11 October 2006 Won [40]
28 Shahriar Nafees 123* 161 17 1 76.39 1  Bangladesh  Zimbabwe Sawai Mansingh Stadium, Jaipur, India 13 October 2006 Won [41]
29 Chris Gayle (2/3) 101 128 10 1 78.90 1  West Indies  England Sardar Patel Stadium, Ahmedabad, India 28 October 2006 Lost [42]
30 Dwayne Bravo 112* 124 14 1 90.32 1  West Indies  England Sardar Patel Stadium, Ahmedabad, India 28 October 2006 Lost [42]
31 Chris Gayle (3/3) 133* 135 17 3 98.51 2  West Indies  South Africa Sawai Mansingh Stadium, Jaipur, India 2 November 2006 Won [43]
32 Tillakaratne Dilshan 106 92 16 1 115.21 1  Sri Lanka  South Africa SuperSport Park, Centurion, South Africa 22 September 2009 Won (D/L) [44]
33 Shoaib Malik 128 126 16 0 101.58 1  Pakistan  India SuperSport Park, Centurion, South Africa 26 September 2009 Won [45]
34 Graeme Smith 141 134 16 0 105.22 2  South Africa  England SuperSport Park, Centurion, South Africa 27 September 2009 Lost [46]
35 Shane Watson (1/2) 136* 132 10 7 103.03 2  Australia  England SuperSport Park, Centurion, South Africa 2 October 2009 Won [47]
36 Ricky Ponting 111* 115 12 1 96.52 2  Australia  England SuperSport Park, Centurion, South Africa 2 October 2009 Won [47]
37 Shane Watson (2/2) 105* 129 10 4 81.39 2  Australia  New Zealand SuperSport Park, Centurion, South Africa 5 October 2009 Won [48]
38 Shikhar Dhawan (1/3) 114 94 12 1 121.27 1  India  South Africa Sophia Gardens, Cardiff, Wales 6 June 2013 Won [49]
39 Shikhar Dhawan (2/3) 102* 107 10 1 95.32 2  India  West Indies The Oval, London, England 11 June 2013 Won [50]
40 Kumar Sangakkara 134* 135 12 0 99.25 2  Sri Lanka  England The Oval, London, England 13 June 2013 Won [51]
41 Tamim Iqbal 128 142 12 3 90.14 1  Bangladesh  England The Oval, London, England 1 June 2017 Lost [52]
42 Joe Root 133* 129 11 1 103.10 2  England  Bangladesh The Oval, London, England 1 June 2017 Won [52]
43 Kane Williamson 100 97 8 3 103.09 1  New Zealand  Australia Edgbaston, Birmingham, England 2 June 2017 No result [53]
44 Hashim Amla 103 115 5 2 89.56 1  South Africa  Sri Lanka The Oval, London, England 3 June 2017 Won [54]
45 Shikhar Dhawan (3/3) 125 128 15 1 97.65 1  India  Sri Lanka The Oval, London, England 8 June 2017 Lost [55]
46 Shakib Al Hasan 114 115 11 1 99.13 2  Bangladesh  New Zealand Sophia Gardens, Cardiff, Wales 9 June 2017 Won [56]
47 Mahmudullah 102* 107 8 2 95.32 2  Bangladesh  New Zealand Sophia Gardens, Cardiff, Wales 9 June 2017 Won [56]
48 Ben Stokes 102* 109 13 2 93.57 2  England  Australia Edgbaston, Birmingham, England 10 June 2017 Won (D/L) [57]
49 Rohit Sharma 123* 129 15 1 95.34 2  India  Bangladesh Edgbaston, Birmingham, England 15 June 2017 Won [58]
50 Fakhar Zaman 114 106 12 3 107.54 1  Pakistan  India The Oval, London, England 18 June 2017 Won [59]

Notes

  1. The teams are Australia, Bangladesh, England, India, New Zealand, Pakistan, South Africa, Sri Lanka, West Indies and Zimbabwe.[7]
  2. Both India and Sri Lanka have the most centurions (six).
  3. Rain ended play on 17 September, so the reserve day of 18 September was used to finish the match.[33]
  4. Rain ended play on 18 September, so the reserve day of 19 September was used to finish the match.[35]

References

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Bibliography

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