Cricket ODI World Cup: Individual Stats and Awards
Check out the incredible achievements of some iconic cricketing personalities in World Cup history.
ICC World Cup 2023 is delivering a power-packed cricket action to avid fans of this beautiful sport. It’s the 13th edition of the World Cup and cricket enthusiasts are expecting to witness some incredible matches throughout the competition. This time, India, the biggest stakeholder in this sport, is hosting the World Cup entirely and the International Cricket Council (ICC) is looking to make this tournament a huge success.
Amidst the blockbuster World Cup action, cricket fans need to know the names of outstanding achievers of this distinguished tournament. The success of these players attracted a lot of kids and young folks to take up the sport. Let’s revisit the individual stats and awards achieved by cricketing icons whose performances made the Cricket World Cup one of the most popular sporting events in the world.
Batting Statistics
Sachin Tendulkar, the Global Ambassador for the World Cup 2023, is considered the greatest batter of all time. In the World Cup, he is the leading run-getter with 2278 runs with six centuries and 15 fifties. The batting maestro appeared in six editions of the World Cup played between 1992 and 2011. Sachin also holds the feat of notching up the most runs in a single World Cup edition with his 673 runs in 11 outings in the 2003 World Cup.
Talking about the highest individual run-scorer record in the World Cup, New Zealand opener Martin Guptill owns the feat with his unbeaten 237-run knock from 163 deliveries against the West Indies in the 2015 World Cup q
uarter-final played in Wellington.
Most runs | Sachin Tendulkar (1992-2011) | 2278 runs in 45 matches |
Highest score in an innings | Martin Guptill against the West Indies in 2015 | 237* |
Highest average (minimum 10 innings) | Lance Klusener | 124.00 |
Highest strike rate (minimum 500 runs) | Glenn Maxwell | 169.25 |
Most centuries | Rohit Sharma and Sachin Tendulkar | 6 |
Most 50+ scores | Sachin Tendulkar | 21 |
Fastest half-century | Brendon McCullum against England in 2015 | 18 deliveries |
Fastest Century | Aiden Markram against Sri Lanka in 2023 | 49 deliveries |
Most ducks | Nathan Astle and Ijaz Ahmed | 5 |
Most sixes | Chris Gayle | 49 |
Most sixes in an innings | Eoin Morgan against Afghanistan in 2019 | 17 |
Most fours | Sachin Tendulkar | 241 |
Most fours in an innings | Martin Guptill vs the West Indies in 2015 | 24 |
Most centuries in an edition | Rohit Sharma (2019) | 5 |
Most 50+ scores in an edition | Sachin Tendulkar (2003) and Shakib Al Hasan (2019) | 7 |
Most runs in an edition | Sachin Tendulkar (2003) | 673 runs in 11 innings |
Most sixes in a World Cup edition | Chris Gayle (2015) | 26 in six innings |
Most fours in a World Cup edition | Sachin Tendulkar (2003) | 75 in 11 innings |
Most consecutive centuries | Kumar Sangakkara (2015) | 4 |
Most consecutive 50+ scores | Steven Smith (2015) and Virat Kohli (2019) | 5 |
Most consecutive ducks | Nicholas de Groot and Shem Ngoche | 3 |
Bowling Statistics
Former Australia pacer Glenn McGrath is the most successful bowler of the World Cup with 71 wickets in 39 outings at an impressive economy of 3.96. The Aussie also owns the record of clinching the best bowling figures in a World Cup contest. The former speedster grabbed 7/15 figures against Namibia in the 2003 World Cup installment and added this prestigious feat to his name.
Most wickets | Glenn McGrath (1996-2007) | 71 wickets in 39 matches |
Best bowling figures | Glenn McGrath against Namibia in 2003 | 7/15 |
Best bowling average (qualification: minimum 400 deliveries) | Mitchell Starc | 14.81 |
Best strike rate (qualification: minimum 20 wickets) | Mohammed Shami | 18.6 |
Best economy rate (qualification: minimum 100 overs) | Bob Willis | 2.66 |
Most five-wicket hauls | Mitchell Starc | 3 |
Most four-wicket hauls (and over) | Mitchell Starc | 6 |
Most wickets in consecutive balls | Lasith Malinga against South Africa in 2007 | 4 |
Fastest bowler | Shoaib Akhtar against England in 2003 | 161.3 km/h |
Most wickets in an edition | Mitchell Starc in 2019 | 27 wickets in 10 matches |
Fielding and wicketkeeping records
Former Australia player and two-time World Cup-winning captain Ricky Ponting holds the record for the most catches in the World Cup. The former Aussie stalwart took 28 grabs in 46 innings. Talking about the most successful wicketkeeper in the tournament, Sri Lanka's former player Kumar Sangakkara is ruling the chart for performing the most dismissals (54) with 41 catches and 13 stumpings.
Most catches as a fielder | Ricky Ponting | 28 catches in 46 innings |
Most dismissals as a wicketkeeper | Kumar Sangakkara | 54 dismissals (41 catches and 13 stumpings) in 36 innings |
Most dismissals in an edition (wicketkeeper) | Adam Gilchrist (2003) and Tom Latham (2019) | 21 dismissals in 10 matches |
Most catches in an edition (fielder) | Joe Root (2019) | 13 catches in 11 innings |
Umpiring records
England's David Shepherd, who passed away in 2009, still tops the chart of officiating the most World Cup matches, with 46 appearances from 1983 to 2003, while the West Indies' Steve Bucknor officiated five consecutive World Cup finals played between 1992 and 2007 editions and broke into the records books, becoming the umpire with the highest number of finals.
Other statistics
Most editions | Javed Miandad (1975-1996) and Sachin Tendulkar (1992-2011) | 6 |
Most matches | Ricky Ponting (1996-2011) | 46 |
Player with the most number of titles | Adam Gilchrist, Glenn McGrath and Ricky Ponting (1999, 2003 and 2007) | 3 |
Youngest player | Nitish Kumar | 16 years, 283 days |
Oldest player | Nolan Clarke | 47 years, 257 days |
Most matches as a captain | Ricky Ponting (2003-2011) | 29 |
Best win% as a captain | Ricky Ponting (2003-2011) | 89.65% with 26 victories |
Player of the Tournament award winners
In the 1992 World Cup, the Player of the Tournament Award was introduced in the tournament. Martin Crowe, who chalked up 456 runs in nine matches for New Zealand, ended up as the leading run-getter and became the first recipient of the Player of the Tournament award.
Year |
Player |
Stats |
1992 |
Martin Crowe |
456 runs |
1996 |
Sanath Jayasuriya |
221 runs and 7 wickets |
1999 |
Lance Klusener |
281 runs and 17 wickets |
2003 |
Sachin Tendulkar |
673 runs and 2 wickets |
2007 |
Glenn McGrath |
26 wickets |
2011 |
Yuvraj Singh |
362 runs and 15 wickets |
2015 |
Mitchell Starc |
22 wickets |
2019 |
Kane Williamson |
578 runs and 2 wickets |
Golden Bat winners
After every World Cup final, the Golden Bat Award is handed to the batter who ends up as the leading run-getter in the competition. Glenn Turner from New Zealand became the first winner of this prestigious award in the 1975 World Cup. Sachin Tendulkar is the only batter to clinch this award twice in the tournament, becoming the winner in 1996 and 2003.
World Cup edition |
Top run-scorer |
Runs |
1975 |
Glenn Turner |
333 |
1979 |
Gordon Greenidge |
253 |
1983 |
David Gower |
384 |
1987 |
Graham Gooch |
471 |
1992 |
Martin Crowe |
456 |
1996 |
Sachin Tendulkar |
523 |
1999 |
Rahul Dravid |
461 |
2003 |
Sachin Tendulkar |
673 |
2007 |
Matthew Hayden |
659 |
2011 |
Tilakaratne Dilshan |
500 |
2015 |
Martin Guptill |
547 |
2019 |
Rohit Sharma |
648 |
Also Check: List of Rohit Sharma international & IPL centuries
Golden Ball winners
The Golden Ball Award is handed to the highest wicket-taker following every World Cup final. Australia’s Gary Gilmour and the West Indies’ Bernard Julien became the joint winners of the Golden Ball in the maiden edition of the World Cup in 1975. The Aussie pacer Mitchell Starc is the only bowler to win this award two times, clinching it in 2015 and 2019.
World Cup edition |
Top wicket-taker |
Wickets |
1975 |
Gary Gilmour Bernard Julien |
11 10 |
1979 |
Mike Hendrick |
10 |
1983 |
Roger Binny |
18 |
1987 |
Craig McDermott |
18 |
1992 |
Wasim Akram |
18 |
1996 |
Anil Kumble |
15 |
1999 |
Geoff Allott and Shane Warne |
20 |
2003 |
Chaminda Vaas |
23 |
2007 |
Glenn McGrath |
26 |
2011 |
Zaheer Khan and Shahid Afridi |
21 |
2015 |
Mitchell Starc and Trent Boult |
22 |
2019 |
Mitchell Starc |
27 |
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