Rohit Sharma’s journey to 14,000 List A runs is one of those moments. During the second ODI against Afghanistan in Lucknow, the Indian captain quietly crossed the landmark and became only the fifth Indian batter to achieve it. The applause was for another number on the scorecard, but the achievement represents much more than that.
List A cricket rarely grabs the same headlines as Test matches or T20 leagues. Yet, it has always been the backbone of one-day cricket. Every great ODI batter has spent years building their reputation in this format. Scoring 14,000 runs here demands far more than talent. It demands fitness, patience, and the ability to stay relevant season after season. Only five Indians have managed to enter the elite club. Let’s take a look at their names below.
Sachin Tendulkar set a standard that still feels untouchable
When batting records enter the conversation, Sachin Tendulkar usually sits comfortably at the top.
His 21,999 List A runs almost feel unreal. Generations of bowlers came and went, but Tendulkar kept finding gaps, timing drives and collecting runs. Some players enjoy purple patches. Sachin built an entire career around consistency.
Even today, his record stands as a reminder of just how long he dominated world cricket. His 60 centuries tell only part of the story. The bigger achievement lies in the fact that he carried India’s batting through different eras without losing his hunger for runs.
Virat Kohli made consistency look easy
Every generation produces a batter who seems to enjoy pressure. For this generation, that player has been Virat Kohli.
His 16,447 List A runs didn’t arrive through reckless stroke play. They came through discipline, relentless fitness, and an unmatched desire to finish games. Watching Kohli chase a target often felt like watching someone solve a puzzle. He rarely panicked, rarely rushed, and almost always found a way.
That consistency explains why he sits second on this prestigious list.
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Sourav Ganguly and Rahul Dravid built success in different ways
Sourav Ganguly and Rahul Dravid left an unforgettable mark on Indian cricket.
Ganguly believed in attacking. He backed himself against fast bowlers and loved driving through the covers. He never shied away from taking risks. He had had great partnerships with Sachin Tendulkar, which changed the way India approached ODI cricket.
Dravid, meanwhile, preferred patience over flair. He understood situations better than most and rarely let pressure dictate his game. If the team lost early wickets, he rebuilt the innings. If quick runs became necessary, he adjusted without losing control. His 15,271 List A runs prove he was far more than just a Test specialist.
Rohit Sharma belongs among the greats
Rohit Sharma’s place on this list feels completely deserved. Few batters have reinvented themselves as successfully as he has. He started as a middle-order player before becoming one of the most dangerous openers in cricket history. That single decision transformed both his career and India’s white-ball batting.
His effortless stroke play often makes difficult batting conditions look simple. Bowlers know that one mistake is enough for Rohit to take complete control of an innings.
Crossing 14,000 List A runs only strengthens his legacy. Records come and go, but some names always remain part of cricket’s biggest conversations.
Sachin Tendulkar inspired a generation. Sourav Ganguly changed India’s mindset. Rahul Dravid brought stability. Virat Kohli raised the standards of consistency. Rohit Sharma showed that elegance and power can exist in the same innings.
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