David Warner ODI centuries: David Warner centuries list in ODIs

Dixit Bhargav | 21/06/2022
David Warner ODI centuries: David Warner centuries list in ODIs

David Warner ODI centuries: The Australian batter missed out on a well-deserved century at the R Premdasa Stadium tonight.

Australia opening batter David Warner has missed out on a well-deserved century in the fourth ODI of their ongoing tour of Sri Lanka in Colombo. In what would’ve been Warner’s 19th ODI century, it would’ve been his sixth away from home, fourth against Sri Lanka and in Asia and second in Sri Lanka.

However, it was a magnificent delivery from Sri Lanka all-rounder Dhananjaya de Silva which forced Warner to return to the pavilion after scoring 99 (112) with the help of 12 fours.

Nothing short of a masterclass, Warner scored more runs than the rest of the team combined at the time of his dismissal in the 38th over. With most of the Australian batters struggling to cope up against as many as four first-choice Sri Lankan spinners, Warner was in a league of his own at the R Premdasa Stadium tonight.

Not that the excessive grip and turn didn’t deceive him but the 35-year old batter found ways to both not lose his wicket and score runs at a brisk pace for a large part of his innings.

Chasing a 259-run target in a must-win match, Warner becoming the seventh Australian batter to get out with close to 70 runs needed to win has handed a massive advantage to the hosts. The visitors losing three wickets for as many runs at that point in time put the home team into the driver’s seat with respect to both this match and series.

David Warner ODI centuries

S. No. Runs Balls 4s 6s Oppositon Ground Year
1 163 157 13 2 Sri Lanka Brisbane 2012
2 100 140 4 1 Sri Lanka Adelaide 2012
3 127 115 18 0 England Sydney 2015
4 178 133 19 5 Afghanistan Perth 2015
5 122 113 9 3 India Sydney 2016
6 109 120 11 2 South Africa Basseterre 2016
7 106 126 9 0 Sri Lanka Pallekele 2016
8 117 107 13 2 South Africa Durban 2016
9 173 136 24 0 South Africa Cape Town 2016
10 119 115 14 1 New Zealand Canberra 2016
11 156 128 13 4 New Zealand Melbourne 2016
12 130 119 11 2 Pakistan Sydney 2017
13 179 129 19 5 Pakistan Adelaide 2017
14 124 119 12 4 India Bengaluru 2017
15 107 111 11 1 Pakistan Taunton 2019
16 166 147 14 5 Bangladesh Nottingham 2019
17 122 117 15 2 South Africa Manchester 2019
18 128* 112 17 3 India Mumbai 2020
Post Edited By: Dixit Bhargav

About the author

Dixit Bhargav

Born and brought up in Pathankot, Dixit Bhargav is an engineering and sports management graduate who works as a Cricket Editor at The SportsRush. Having written more than 10,000 articles across more than five years at TSR, his first cricketing memory dates back to 2002 when former India captain Sourav Ganguly had waved his jersey at the historic Lord’s balcony. What followed for an 8-year-old was an instant adulation for both Ganguly and the sport. The optimist in him is waiting for the day when Punjab Kings will win their maiden Indian Premier League title. When not watching cricket, he is mostly found in a cinema hall watching a Punjabi movie.