Virat Kohli vs Ross Taylor Batting Stats Highlights

Virat Kohli
Ross Taylor
Team RCB (2025) DC (2014)
IPL Seasons 18 7
IPL Innings 259 54
Runs 8661 1017
Strike Rate 132 123
Half Centuries 63 3
Centuries 8 0
Fours 771 66
Sixes 291 46

Virat Kohli vs Ross Taylor Runs Graph


Virat Kohli Batting Statistics By IPL Season

Season Innings Runs Balls Faced SR 4's 6's 50's 100's
2025 15 657 454 144 66 19 8 0
2024 15 741 479 154 62 38 5 1
2023 14 639 457 139 65 16 6 2
2022 16 341 294 115 32 8 2 0
2021 15 405 339 119 43 9 3 0
2020 15 466 384 121 23 11 3 0
2019 14 464 328 141 46 13 2 1
2018 14 530 381 139 52 18 4 0
2017 10 308 252 122 23 11 4 0
2016 16 973 640 152 83 38 7 4
2015 16 505 386 130 35 23 3 0
2014 14 359 294 122 23 16 2 0
2013 16 634 457 138 64 22 6 0
2012 15 364 326 111 33 9 2 0
2011 16 557 460 121 55 16 4 0
2010 13 307 212 144 26 12 1 0
2009 13 246 219 112 22 8 1 0
2008 12 165 157 105 18 4 0 0

Ross Taylor Batting Statistics By IPL Season

Season Innings Runs Balls Faced SR 4's 6's 50's 100's
2014 4 59 59 100 6 0 0 0
2013 5 63 76 82 2 1 0 0
2012 12 197 171 115 12 7 1 0
2011 11 181 152 119 11 7 0 0
2010 7 88 75 117 2 6 0 0
2009 11 280 208 134 20 15 1 0
2008 4 149 81 183 13 10 1 0

🏏 Virat Kohli vs Ross Taylor - IPL Careers Overview

Virat Kohli is the undisputed batting king of the Indian Premier League, a Royal Challengers Bengaluru lifer who has turned loyalty into legend across 18 electrifying seasons from 2008 to 2025. With 8,661 runs off 6,519 balls, Kohli is the league’s highest-ever run-getter, firing at a strike rate of 132 and painting every corner of every ground with 771 fours and 291 towering sixes. His 63 half-centuries and 8 hundreds—topped by a blistering 113*—tell the story of a man who converts starts into statements, walking in 259 innings and delivering a match-defining fifty or hundred in roughly one out of every four trips to the crease. While he has rolled his arm over occasionally, claiming four wickets from 26 bowling innings, it is with the bat that Kohli has authored the IPL’s most enduring chronicle, forever clad in the red and gold of RCB.


Ross Taylor’s IPL story is one of fearless middle-order batting packed into seven seasons from 2008 to 2014. Across 54 innings the New Zealand maestro stacked up 1,017 runs off just 822 balls, translating to a pulsating strike rate of 123. That aggression is best captured in his boundary ledger: 66 fours and 46 sixes—more than one maximum every 18 balls faced. Three half-centuries highlight his knack for turning games, with a career-best 81 remaining his highest score. Though he never crossed three figures, his ability to clear the rope meant a six or four every 7.5 balls, making him a late-overs nightmare for opposition captains. Taylor’s journey took him through five franchises: Royal Challengers Bangalore, Rajasthan Royals, Delhi Capitals (twice), and Pune Warriors. The 2014 stint saw him return to Delhi Capitals, the side with which he originally exploded onto the IPL scene in 2012. While he rolled his arm over occasionally, his bowling figures read a modest 12 balls, 24 runs, and no wickets—numbers that underline why his true value always lay with the willow. In essence, Taylor’s IPL résumé is a compact highlight reel of calculated power hitting, delivering 1,000-plus runs at a tempo few middle-order batsmen have matched in the tournament’s history.

Note: This overview is partially generated using AI and is based on statistical data. Please verify with official sources for complete accuracy.