List of international cricket centuries by David Warner

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David Warner in 2014
David Warner has scored 49 international centuries for Australia.[1]

David Warner is an Australian international cricketer and former captain of the Australian national team in limited overs cricket.[2] A left-handed opening batsman, Warner is well-known for his "aggressive" batting style.[3] As of December 2023, he has scored 49 centuries—26 in Tests, 22 in One Day Internationals (ODIs) and 1 in Twenty20 Internationals (T20Is)—for Australia.[1][4] This is the most by any opener in international cricket.[5]

Warner made his Test debut against New Zealand in December 2011 and scored his first century (123 not out) in the second match of the series held at the Bellerive Oval. He carried the bat in the fourth innings of the match, which Australia lost by seven runs. He followed that with a 69-ball century in the third match of the home series against India in January 2012. It was the joint-fourth fastest in terms of balls faced at the time.[a] In January 2017, while playing against Pakistan at the Sydney Cricket Ground, he became the fifth cricketer—and the first in Australia—to score a century before lunch on the first day of a Test match.[b][8] His highest score of 335 not out was made against Pakistan at the Adelaide Oval in November 2019. Warner is one of three batsmen to score centuries in both innings of a Test match on three occasions.[c] In December 2022, he scored 200 in his hundredth Test match, becoming the second Australian[d] to score a century in his hundredth Test,[11] and the second overall to score a double century.[10][e] Among all countries, Warner has scored the most Test centuries (six) against Pakistan.[12]

Warner scored his first ODI century in 2012, three years after his debut, when he made 163 against Sri Lanka in the first of three finals of the 2011–12 Commonwealth Bank Series.[13] His 178 against Afghanistan in the 2015 World Cup was at the time the highest score by an Australian in the tournament's history.[14] The following year, he scored seven centuries,[f] including a career-high score of 179 against Pakistan. On 28 September 2017, he played in his 100th ODI and became the first batsman for Australia and 8th batsman overall to score a century in his 100th ODI. His seven scores in excess of 150 in ODIs is second only to India's Rohit Sharma's eight.[16] Among all countries, Warner has scored the most ODI centuries (five) against South Africa. Warner scored a man of the match innings of 89 in his T20I debut against South Africa in January 2009.[17] His highest score in this format of 100 not out was made against Sri Lanka at the Adelaide Oval in October 2019.[18]

As of December 2023, Warner ranks ninth on the list of players who have scored the most centuries in international cricket.[19]

Key[edit]

  • * – Remained not out
  • – Man of the match

Test centuries[edit]

Test centuries scored by David Warner[20]
No. Score Against Pos. Inn. Test Venue H/A/N Date Result Ref
1 123* †  New Zealand 2 4 2/2 Bellerive Oval, Hobart Home 9 December 2011 Lost [21]
2 180  India 2 2 3/4 WACA Ground, Perth Home 13 January 2012 Won [22]
3 119  South Africa 1 1 2/3 Adelaide Oval, Adelaide Home 22 November 2012 Drawn [23]
4 124  England 2 3 1/5 The Gabba, Brisbane Home 21 November 2013 Won [24]
5 112  England 2 3 3/5 WACA Ground, Perth Home 13 December 2013 Won [25]
6 115  South Africa 2 3 1/3 SuperSport Park, Centurion Away 12 February 2014 Won [26]
7 135  South Africa 2 1 3/3 Newlands Cricket Ground, Cape Town Away 1 March 20141 Won [27]
8 145  South Africa 2 3 3/3 Newlands Cricket Ground, Cape Town Away 1 March 20142 Won [27]
9 133  Pakistan 2 2 1/2 Dubai International Cricket Stadium, Dubai Neutral 22 October 2014 Lost [28]
10 145  India 2 1 1/4 Adelaide Oval, Adelaide Home 9 December 20141 Won [29]
11 102  India 2 3 1/4 Adelaide Oval, Adelaide Home 9 December 20142 Won [29]
12 101  India 2 1 4/4 Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney Home 6 January 2015 Drawn [30]
13 163  New Zealand 2 1 1/3 The Gabba, Brisbane Home 5 November 20151 Won [31]
14 116  New Zealand 2 3 1/3 The Gabba, Brisbane Home 5 November 20152 Won [31]
15 253  New Zealand 2 1 2/3 WACA Ground, Perth Home 13 November 2015 Drawn [32]
16 122* †  West Indies 1 2 3/3 Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney Home 3 January 2016 Drawn [33]
17 144  Pakistan 2 2 2/3 Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne Home 26 December 2016 Won [34]
18 113  Pakistan 2 1 3/3 Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney Home 3 January 2017 Won [35]
19 112  Bangladesh 1 4 1/2 Sher-e-Bangla National Cricket Stadium, Dhaka Away 27 August 2017 Lost [36]
20 123  Bangladesh 2 2 2/2 Zohur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium, Chittagong Away 4 September 2017 Won [37]
21 103  England 2 1 4/5 Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne Home 26 December 2017 Drawn [38]
22 154  Pakistan 1 2 1/2 The Gabba, Brisbane Home 21 November 2019 Won [39]
23 335* †  Pakistan 1 1 2/2 Adelaide Oval, Adelaide Home 29 November 2019 Won [40]
24 111*  New Zealand 1 3 3/3 Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney Home 3 January 2020 Won [41]
25 200  South Africa 1 2 2/3 Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne Home 26 December 2022 Won [42]
26 164  Pakistan 1 1 1/3 Perth Stadium, Perth Home 14 December 2023 Won [43]

One Day International centuries[edit]

ODI centuries scored by David Warner[44]
No. Score Against Pos. Inn. S/R Venue H/A/N Date Result Ref
1 163  Sri Lanka 1 1 103.82 The Gabba, Brisbane Home 4 March 2012 Won [45]
2 100  Sri Lanka 2 1 71.42 Adelaide Oval, Adelaide Home 6 March 2012 Lost [46]
3 127  England 1 2 110.43 Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney Home 16 January 2015 Won [47]
4 178  Afghanistan 1 1 133.83 WACA Ground, Perth Home 4 March 2015 Won [48]
5 122  India 2 1 107.54 Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney Home 23 January 2016 Lost [49]
6 109  South Africa 1 1 90.83 Warner Park, Basseterre Neutral 11 June 2016 Won [50]
7 106  Sri Lanka 1 2 84.12 Pallekele Cricket Stadium, Kandy Away 4 September 2016 Won [51]
8 117  South Africa 1 1 109.34 Kingsmead Cricket Ground, Durban Away 5 October 2016 Lost [52]
9 173  South Africa 1 2 127.20 Newlands Cricket Ground, Cape Town Away 12 October 2016 Lost [53]
10 119  New Zealand 1 1 103.47 Manuka Oval, Canberra Home 6 December 2016 Won [54]
11 156  New Zealand 1 1 121.88 Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne Home 9 December 2016 Won [55]
12 130  Pakistan 2 1 109.24 Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney Home 22 January 2017 Won [56]
13 179  Pakistan 1 1 139.84 Adelaide Oval, Adelaide Home 26 January 2017 Won [57]
14 124  India 1 1 104.20 M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore Away 28 September 2017 Won [58]
15 107  Pakistan 2 1 96.39 County Ground, Taunton Neutral 12 June 2019 Won [59]
16 166  Bangladesh 1 1 112.92 Trent Bridge, Nottingham Neutral 20 June 2019 Won [60]
17 122  South Africa 1 2 104.27 Old Trafford, Manchester Neutral 6 July 2019 Lost [61]
18 128* †  India 1 2 114.28 Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai Away 14 January 2020 Won [62]
19 106  England 1 2 103.92 Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne Home 22 November 2022 Won [63]
20 106  South Africa 1 1 113.97 Mangaung Oval, Bloemfontein Away 9 September 2023 Won [64]
21 163  Pakistan 1 1 131.45 M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore Neutral 20 October 2023 Won [65]
22 104  Netherlands 2 1 111.82 Arun Jaitley Cricket Stadium, Delhi Neutral 25 October 2023 Won [66]

Twenty20 International centuries[edit]

T20I centuries scored by David Warner[67]
No. Score Against Pos. Inn. S/R Venue H/A/N Date Result Ref
1 100* †  Sri Lanka 2 1 178.57 Adelaide Oval, Adelaide Home 27 October 2019 Won [68]
Adelaide Oval, where Warner has scored centuries in all three formats of the game.

References[edit]

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Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Warner had levelled West Indian cricketer Shivnarine Chanderpaul's record. As of January 2020, it is the fastest century by an opener and sixth fastest overall in Tests.[6][7]
  2. ^ The others being Victor Trumper, Charlie Macartney, Don Bradman and Majid Khan.[8]
  3. ^ The other two are India's Sunil Gavaskar and Australia's Ricky Ponting.[9]
  4. ^ The first was Ricky Ponting.[10]
  5. ^ The first was Joe Root.[10]
  6. ^ In terms of most ODI centuries made by a player in a calendar year, Warner is behind Sachin Tendulkar (nine in 1998) and is joint-second with Sourav Ganguly (seven in 2000).[15]