
Sydney, Australia — The curtain may have fallen on one of the most remarkable chapters in Indian cricket history on Saturday, as batting maestro Virat Kohli crafted a magnificent, unbeaten 74 in what is likely his final One Day International innings on Australian soil. His masterclass at the Sydney Cricket Ground (SCG), coupled with a century from Rohit Sharma (121 not out), steered India to a dominant nine-wicket victory over Australia in the third ODI, salvaging pride and averting a 3-0 series whitewash.
Under the grey skies of New South Wales, the atmosphere turned electric as the veteran batter walked out to the crease. Having registered two low scores earlier in the series, Kohli rose to the occasion with his characteristic stubbornness and brilliance, smashing 74 runs off 81 balls to provide the anchor for India’s successful chase. Fittingly, it was Kohli’s boundary that sealed the nine-wicket victory.
While the series was already decided in Australia’s favour (2-1), this final match served as a poignant conclusion to Kohli’s phenomenal record Down Under. At 36, Kohli leaves behind a statistical legacy that few international players can rival.
Across all formats on Australian pitches, the former captain has been a force of nature:
- ODIs: 1,401 runs in 32 matches at an average of 50.03, including five centuries.
- Tests: 1,542 runs in 18 matches at an average of 46.72, featuring seven centuries.
- T20Is: 747 runs in 17 matches, highlighted by an unbeaten 90 in Adelaide in 2016.
From his maiden Test century in Adelaide in 2012 to defining knocks in Melbourne and Perth, Australia has been the stage for some of Kohli’s most unforgettable performances. His final walk off the SCG, bathed in the applause of the crowd, marks a ‘happy ending’ to a beautiful and fiercely competitive story, cementing his place not just as an Indian great, but a legend of the global game whose records in Australia will endure for generations.






