The International Cricket Council has corrected an error in its published data on Virat Kohli’s time spent as the No.1 batter in the ICC Men’s ODI rankings, revising a figure that had briefly altered his position in the all-time list.
The correction follows the latest rankings update that saw Virat Kohli return to the top spot after a prolonged gap.
Return to No.1 after long gap
Kohli reclaimed the No.1 ranking after scoring 93 off 91 balls against New Zealand in Vadodara. The knock marked a decisive return to form and ended a spell away from the summit that had lasted since July 2021.
In its initial communication around the rankings update, the International Cricket Council stated that Kohli had spent 825 days as the top-ranked ODI batter. The same figure appeared in an accompanying chart tracking the most days spent at No.1.
Revised tally changes historical context
The ICC has now amended that statistic, confirming that Kohli has spent a total of 1,547 days as the No.1 batter in ODI cricket. The revised count reflects the cumulative total of his multiple stints at the top, rather than a single uninterrupted phase.
With the updated figure, Kohli becomes the Indian batter with the most days at No.1 in ODIs and moves to third place on the all-time list.
Only two batters ahead
Only West Indies legends Viv Richards and Brian Lara remain ahead of Kohli in terms of longevity at the top of the ODI rankings, with Richards having spent 2,306 days and Lara 2,079 days as the No.1 batter.
The correction places Kohli ahead of several modern-era greats and offers a clearer measure of his sustained presence at the top across more than a decade of international cricket.
Importance of accurate rankings data
The brief discrepancy highlighted how numerical errors can reshape perception in an era where “days at No.1” has become a shorthand for dominance. The revised figure better captures Kohli’s repeated returns to the summit across changing teams, conditions, and competitive cycles.
While the ICC has not issued a detailed explanation for the initial error, such inconsistencies are often linked to differences in data pulls used for editorial text and visual graphics. The updated tally suggests the governing body has now standardised the cumulative method across its rankings material.
Kohli first reached the No.1 ODI ranking in October 2013 and has reclaimed the position ten times since, underlining the durability of his career at the highest level.