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==Early life==
==Early life==
De Villiers was born in [[Bela-Bela|Warmbad]],<ref name="Miller">{{cite web|last1=Miller|first1=Andrew|title=Great, green and greased lightning|url=http://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/content/story/135971.html|website=ESPNcricinfo|date=16 December 2004|accessdate=8 June 2016}}</ref> and enjoyed what he later described as the "really relaxed lifestyle up there, where everyone knows everyone".<ref name="Interview"/> He went to high school in [[Pretoria]] but returned home for weekends. His father was a doctor who had played rugby union in his youth, and he encouraged his son to play sport; as a child, De Villiers played cricket at his home. His autobiography was published in September 2016. Beside cricket, De Villiers also excelled at golf, rugby and tennis in his youth.<ref name="Interview">{{cite web|last1=Miller|first1=Andrew|title=The bigger the pressure, the more I relax|url=http://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/content/story/145209.html|accessdate=8 June 2016|date=12 January 2005}}</ref>
De Villiers was born in [[Bela-Bela|Warmbad]],<ref name="Miller">{{cite web|last1=Miller|first1=Andrew|title=Great, green and greased lightning|url=http://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/content/story/135971.html|website=ESPNcricinfo|date=16 December 2004|accessdate=8 June 2016}}</ref> and enjoyed what he later described as the "really relaxed lifestyle up there, where everyone knows everyone".<ref name="Interview"/> He went to high school in [[Pretoria]] but returned home for weekends. His father was a doctor who had played rugby union in his youth, and he encouraged his son to play sport; as a child, De Villiers played cricket at his home. His autobiography was published in September 2016. Beside cricket, De Villiers also excelled at golf, rugby and tennis in his youth.<ref name="Interview">{{cite web|last1=Miller|first1=Andrew|title=The bigger the pressure, the more I relax|url=http://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/content/story/145209.html|accessdate=8 June 2016|date=12 January 2005}}</ref>He has been involved in charity works.<ref name=rediff>{{cite web|title=AB de Villiers Biography|url=https://www.7infi.com/ab-de-villiers-biography-age-weight-height-friend-like-affairs-favourite-birthdate-other/ |work=7infi.com}}</ref>


==Career==
==Career==

Revision as of 07:02, 1 May 2017

AB de Villiers
ABD in a practice session
Personal information
Full name
Abraham Benjamin de Villiers
Born (1984-02-17) 17 February 1984 (age 40)
Pretoria, Transvaal Province, South Africa
NicknameMr. 360°, ABD
Height1.79 m (5 ft 10 in)
BattingRight-handed
BowlingRight-arm medium
RoleBatsman / Wicket-keeper
South Africa ODI Captain
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 298)17 December 2004 v England
Last Test22 January 2016 v England
ODI debut (cap 78)2 February 2005 v England
Last ODI4 February 2017 v Sri Lanka
ODI shirt no.17
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
2003–presentNortherns
2004–presentTitans (squad no. 17)
2008–2010Delhi Daredevils
2011–presentRoyal Challengers Bangalore
2016Barbados Tridents
Career statistics
Competition Test ODI T20 FC
Matches 106 216 73 132
Runs scored 8074 9175 5,516 10,721
Batting average 50.46 54.29 54.03 50.80
100s/50s 21/39 24/52 3/36 24/53
Top score 278* 162* 133* 278*
Balls bowled 204 192
Wickets 2 7
Bowling average 52.00 28.85
5 wickets in innings 0 0 0
10 wickets in match 0 n/a n/a
Best bowling 2/49 2/15 2/49
Catches/stumpings 197/5 170/5 61/7 157/16
Source: Cricinfo, 4 March 2017

Abraham Benjamin de Villiers (born 17 February 1984) is a South African cricketer who currently captains the South African One Day International (ODI) team. He is also a former captain in T20I and Test cricket for South Africa. Often regarded as one of the best batsman in One Day International arena,[1] De Villiers holds many batting records, including world's fastest 50, 100 and 150 in ODI cricket, the fastest Test century by a South African and the fastest T20I 50 by a South African. He has been rated as the number one batsman in Tests and ODIs on several occasions.[2][3]

He began his international career as a wicketkeeper-batsman (returning to the role for a few years in mid-career), but has played most often solely as a batsman. He has batted at various positions in the batting order but predominantly in the middle-order. Noted as one of the most innovative batsman in modern game, De Villiers is noted for many unorthodox shots behind the wicket-keeper and slips, earned him the nickname Mr. 360. He made his international debut in a Test match against England in 2004 and first played an ODI in early 2005. His debut in Twenty20 International cricket came in 2006. As of 2016, he has passed 8,000 runs in both Test and ODI cricket and has a batting average of over fifty in both forms of the game.

Early life

De Villiers was born in Warmbad,[4] and enjoyed what he later described as the "really relaxed lifestyle up there, where everyone knows everyone".[5] He went to high school in Pretoria but returned home for weekends. His father was a doctor who had played rugby union in his youth, and he encouraged his son to play sport; as a child, De Villiers played cricket at his home. His autobiography was published in September 2016. Beside cricket, De Villiers also excelled at golf, rugby and tennis in his youth.[5]He has been involved in charity works.[6]

Career

De Villiers is a right-handed batsman, who has accumulated over 8000 runs in Tests including 21 centuries and 39 fifties. He holds the record for most Test innings without registering a duck (78),[7] before being dismissed for nought against Bangladesh in November 2008. He also holds the second-highest individual score by a South African batsman, with 278*. Until 2012 he was an occasional wicket-keeper for South Africa, although after the retirement of regular Test keeper Mark Boucher and under his own captaincy he has started to regularly keep wicket for the national side in Tests, ODIs and T20Is. He gave up wicket-keeping in 2015, after the debut of Quinton de Kock.

He holds the records for the fastest 50 (16 balls), 100 (31 balls) and 150 (64 balls) of all time in One Day Internationals by any batsmen, and also holds the fastest hundred by a South African in Tests and the fastest 50 by South African in T20Is. He is the three time ICC ODI player of the year, winning the award in 2010, 2014 & 2015.

He succeeded Graeme Smith after the 2011 Cricket World Cup for the ODI captaincy and Hashim Amla after the Second Test of the England in South Africa series for the Test captaincy. He stepped down from Test captaincy in December 2016 due an elbow injury which kept him out of the team for a long period.

International career

De Villiers in 2006

Early days

De Villiers became the second youngest and second fastest South African to reach 1000 test runs after Graeme Pollock. In his Test career so far has batted, bowled and kept wicket. Even though he excelled in other sports, he chose to pursue a career in cricket and, after a spell in the South Africa U19 team, he made his debut for the Titans in 2003/4. He also played for Carrickfergus Cricket Club in Northern Ireland as their overseas player in 2004.

He made his Test debut as a 20-year-old on 16 December 2004 against England at Port Elizabeth. He made an impression opening the batting, but was dropped down the order for the second Test and also handed the wicket-keeping gloves. In this match, he made a match saving half century from number seven. However, he found himself at the top of the order again for the final Test of the series and has played the majority of his Test innings there.

Despite a good tour of the Caribbean where he scored 178 to help South Africa seal a Test series win, his rapid progress was halted on the tour of Australia in 2005. Despite playing Shane Warne well, he struggled and made just 152 runs in 6 innings.

He Was been used in a similar fashion to Jonty Rhodes in ODIs, opening the innings, although he currently bats in the middle order. De Villiers gave the selectors a sign by producing his then highest one-day score of 92 not out, which included 12 fours and one six, from 98 balls against India in the 2006 winter series.

De Villiers has a reputation as an outstanding fielder, typified by a diving run-out of Simon Katich of Australia in 2006, when he dived to stop the ball, and while still lying on his stomach facing away from the stumps, he tossed the ball backwards over his shoulder and effected a direct hit. This has also led people to make further comparisons of him to Jonty Rhodes, who was also one of the finest fielders of his generation.

In 2009, he was nominated for ICC Cricketer of the year and ICC Test Player of the year.

On 6 June 2011, then S.A. coach Gary Kirsten announced that AB de Villiers will be South Africa's new limited-overs captain. "I'm very excited but I'm also inexperienced. But I've learnt a lot the last seven years from an unbelievable captain," said De Villiers, who had never captained a team at first-class level. "It's a big responsibility, but there'll be a fresh look in the side, which is good."

2007 Cricket World Cup

Competing in the 2007 Cricket World Cup, AB was in career best form in ODIs having scored four 50s during the South Africa vs India/Pakistan (2007) matches.

In the early stages of the tournament his form was poor with three failures including a duck against the Netherlands in a match where his team broke various records for batting,[8] although he scored a 92 in the first round against Australia.

He made his maiden ODI hundred, 146 from just 130 balls including 5 sixes and 12 fours, in the Super 8 game against West Indies on 10 April 2007. He had to bat with a runner for the latter stages of his innings and found every shot painful due to a combination of cramps, heat exhaustion and dehydration.[citation needed] His innings consisted of a second wicket partnership of 170 with Jacques Kallis and a third wicket partnership of 70 with Herschelle Gibbs. De Villiers' innings helped set up a total of 356/4 from 50 overs.

His batting during the World Cup was inconsistent as he also failed to score on 4 occasions, itself a record[9]

Gaining attention

On 4 April 2008, he became the first South African to score a double century against India with his top score of 217*.

De Villiers scored an obdurate 174 that helped set up a ten-wicket win for South Africa in the second Test against England at Headingley Carnegie in Leeds in July 2008. This was followed by a 97 at The Oval before he came down the wicket trying to smash Monty Panesar for a boundary and was caught on the fence .

In the first Test in Perth, De Villiers scored a match-winning century to help South Africa chase down the second highest ever fourth innings target of 414 with six wickets in hand. This was South Africa's first Test victory in Australia in 15 years and appeared to go a long way towards tilting world cricket's balance of power after over a decade of Australian dominance. De Villiers also took four diving catches in the course of the match, including one to dismiss Jason Krejza, a stunner at backward point.[10]

De Villiers only scored 11 runs though in the second Test at the Melbourne Cricket Ground and made another low score in the first innings of the final Test at the Sydney Cricket Ground. In the second innings of that Test though, De Villiers scored a patient half-century as South Africa almost held on for an against-the-odds draw.[11]

During ODI Series, In the 4th ODI in Adelaide, he played as wicketkeeper after Boucher was ruled out. He then scored 82 not out from 85 balls with 6 fours and a six to win the series and was named the man of the match.

AB de Villiers training with South Africa in 2009.

In the first Test of the return series at the Wanderers Stadium, De Villiers provided lone resistance in the first innings against a bowling attack led by pace bowler, Mitchell Johnson, scoring 104* of 185 balls with 9 fours and 1 six, while his teammates all fell for under 50. But in the second innings he made only 3 off 7.

In the third test, after centuries from Ashwell Prince and Jacques Kallis, De Villiers became the third centurion of the innings with a score of 163 off 196 balls with 12 fours and 7 sixes. This knock also tied the record for most sixes in an over as De Villiers, off a McDonald over, hit four consecutive sixes.

In the following 5 game ODI series, De Villiers played consistently,although starting badly in the first game, scoring only 2 runs. However, he went on to make 36*, 80, 84, and 38 and was named Player of the Series at the conclusion of game 5.

He was rested for the two-match Twenty20 series against Zimbabwe and because Mark Boucher was injured as well Heino Kuhn donned the keeping gloves. De Villiers returned for the ODI series and also took over the gloves while Mark Boucher was recovering. He did well against Zimbabwe scoring two centuries out of the three ODIs as South Africa comfortably won the three match series 3–0.

His major challenge came against Pakistan for the two Twenty20 matches, where he kept wicket. In the first match he was out for a second-ball duck off a superb delivery by Shoaib Akhtar. In the second T20I he scored 11 runs. He then participated in the five-match ODI series where South Africa were chasing 203 to win and he scored 51 before he was caught and bowled by Saeed Ajmal. In the second ODI he scored 29 as he was bowled by Shahid Afridi; in the same match a flamboyant Abdul Razzaq played the greatest innings of his life to lift Pakistan to an unbelievable victory. During the third match he scored 19 before he was stumped by Zulqarnain Haider. It turned out to be a mistake by the umpire as he had pressed the wrong button. In the fourth match he missed out on a half-century while on 49 when he gave his wicket to the fielder at point. His good form in the series continued when he scored 61 in the final ODI as South Africa won by 57 runs and the series 3–2.

2011 Cricket World Cup

AB de Villiers scored two successive centuries in the 2011 World Cup. He became the first South African to score two centuries in a single World Cup and the fifth batsman after Mark Waugh, Saeed Anwar, Rahul Dravid and Matthew Hayden to score two consecutive centuries in a single World Cup tournament. He also became the 16th batsman to score two or more centuries in one World Cup tournament. AB de Villiers' strike rate of 136.73 is the highest among South African batsmen who have scored centuries in World Cup matches. With his third player of the match award in World Cups, De Villiers is joint second with Jacques Kallis on the list of South African players with most match awards in World Cups. Lance Klusener heads the list with five awards.

Through ranks

In the 2011–12 South African summer, De Villiers featured in the home series against Australia and against Sri Lanka. In the latter, he scored a century (160 not out) in South Africa's win in the third and deciding Test of the series. He was named the Player of the Series, having scored 353 runs at an average of 117.66.[12] He then led South Africa for his first series since being appointed captain of the One Day International team. In his first match as captain, South Africa inflicted the heaviest defeat in Sri Lanka's history, with a 258-run win in Paarl on 11 January 2012.[13] It was also the largest margin of victory (by runs) in an ODI match between two Test-playing teams.[14] South Africa went on to win the ODI series, and De Villiers was named player of the series, having scored 329 runs at an average of 109.66,[15] including a century (125 not out) in the fifth and final match in Johannesburg.[16] On 10 July, De Villiers was handed full-time wicketkeeping duties after Mark Boucher announced retirement from cricket after suffering eye injuries from a hit from a bail the day before.

On 4 February 2013, De Villiers equalled Jack Russell's record of 11 dismissals in a match.[17] He also scored an unbeaten 103 off 117 balls in South Africa's second innings of the same match. In the process, he became the first wicketkeeper to score a century and claim 10 dismissals in a Test.[18]

On 18 March, during the third ODI match of Pakistan's tour of South Africa at Johannesburg, De Villiers and Hashim Amla shared the record for the highest third wicket partnership in an ODI when they scored 238. De Villiers scored 12 fours and 3 sixes, and a total of 128.[19]

Record breaking

On 18 January 2015, De Villiers scored the fastest century by a batsman in One Day International cricket, off 31 balls and eventually scoring 149 runs off 44 balls in 59 minutes[20] against West Indies.[21]

De Villiers was one of the top performers at the 2015 Cricket World Cup scoring 482 runs at an average of 96.0 and strike rate of 144.0 during the tournament.[22] He also was the highest run scorer for South Africa.

On 27 February 2015, De Villiers scored 162 runs off 66 balls in a match against the West Indies in Pool B of 2015 Cricket World Cup; leading South Africa to their second highest total in world cup history (408) on the Sydney Cricket Ground. With this feat, he became the record holder for the fastest 50, 100, and 150 in One-Day International history.

Under the captaincy of De Villiers, South Africa qualified for the semi-finals of the World Cup but lost to New Zealand in the match. De Villiers finished the tournament as the third highest run-getter with 482 runs behind Martin Guptill and Kumar Sangakkara.

At the end of the tournament, he was ranked number 1 in the ICC batsmen rating in One day International cricket and number 3 in the ICC batsmen rating in Test cricket.[23]

World's No. 1

On 6 January 2016, the second test match between England and South Africa ended in a draw. After the end of the match, Hashim Amla resigned from the captaincy and De Villiers was chosen to captain South Africa for the last two matches. As of 24 October 2016, De Villiers is ranked No.10 in Tests, No.2 in ODIs and no.31 in T20Is. On 21 February 2016, de Villiers scored the fastest T20 fifty by a South African in just 21 balls. He completed the innings at 79 runs in 29 balls and led South Africa to a clean sweep in T20 series.

On 18 January 2017, De Villiers ruled himself out from most of the Test matches that South Africa is going to play in 2017.[24] De Villiers completed 9000 ODI runs in 205 innings and 9005 balls; this set a new record in terms of innings taken to reach 9000 runs. He won the Man of the Series award in the series versus New Zealand.

Domestic career

de Villiers is one of the most succesful batsmen in the Indian Premier League. In the fourth season, he was contracted by Royal Challengers Bangalore for US$ 1.1 million. He played for the Delhi Daredevils in the previous seasons. He has been crucial to the successful batting lineup of the RCB.

Season by season at IPL

Career Span Matches Runs Best Average S/R 100s 50s Team
2008-2016 126 3410 133* 38.75 148.06 3 22 DD and RCB
2008 6 95 26* 19.00 96.93 0 0 DD
2009 15 465 105* 51.66 130.98 1 3 DD
2010 7 111 45 15.85 93.97 0 0 DD
2011 17 312 65 34.30 127.98 0 2 RCB
2012 16 319 64* 32.87 161.11 0 3 RCB
2013 14 360 64 36.00 164.38 0 2 RCB
2014 14 395 89* 35.90 158.63 0 3 RCB
2015 16 513 133* 46.63 175.08 1 2 RCB
2016 16 687 129* 52.84 168.79 1 6 RCB
2017 7 153 89* 30.60 125.40 0 1 RCB

Twenty20 centuries

Twenty20 Centuries of AB de Villiers
# Runs Balls 4s 6s For Against Venue Year
1 105* 54 5 6 Delhi Daredevils Chennai Super Kings Durban 2009
2 133* 59 19 4 Royal Challengers Bangalore Mumbai Indians Mumbai 2015
3 129* 52 10 12 Royal Challengers Bangalore Gujarat Lions Bengaluru 2016

Records

World Records

  • Fastest half-century (16 balls) and century (31 balls) in a One Day International (ODI), against the West Indies at Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg on 18 January 2015.[25][26][27][28]
  • Fastest 150 in an ODI, in 64 balls against the West Indies at the Sydney Cricket Ground, Australia on 27 February 2015.
  • Fastest player to reach 8000 runs in ODIs.[29]
  • Fastest player to reach 9000 runs in ODIs (205 innings). He took only 9005 balls to reach the milstone, which is also the quickest of all.[30][31]
  • Most sixes (16) in an ODI (tied with Rohit Sharma and Chris Gayle), against the West Indies at Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg on 18 January 2015.
  • Most ducks (4) in an ODI series, at the 2007 Cricket World Cup (tied with Greg Chappell and Kyle McCallan).[9][32]
  • Most sixes (37) at the Cricket World Cup (tied with Chris Gayle).[33]
  • Highest T20 partnership of 229 runs off 92 balls for any wicket(2nd wicket), with Virat Kohli in the Indian Premier League in a match against Gujrat Lions where De villers remained unbeaten with 129 off 52 balls.Also both AB De Villiers and Virat Kohli put on an unbeaten 215 runs for the 2nd wicket in IPL,which is also the second highest partnership for any wicket in T20 history[34]
  • Both AB De Villiers and Virat Kohli were the second pair of batsman in T20 history to score centuries in a single T20.[35]
  • Most Test innings (78) without registering a duck.[36]
  • Scored all his 24 ODI Centuries at strike rate greater than 100.
  • He has the record for the highest individual score made by a batsman in an ODI innings when batting at number 5 position as well as in a World Cup match.(162*)[37]
  • Most test runs made by a batsman before being dismissed for a duck(2958)[38]
  • He holds the record for the joint most number of dismissals as wicketkeeper in a test match(11) with Jack Russell[39]

National level records

  • Leading run scorer for South Africa at the Cricket World Cup.
  • Fastest T20I fifty by a South African (21 balls).[when?]

Personal life

De Villiers is married to Danielle Swart with whom he had a son, named Abraham after himself in July 2015.[40]

He is a devout Christian and has stated that his faith is crucial to his approach to life.[citation needed] He is also an accomplished guitar player and a singer. In 2010, he released a bilingual pop album entitled 'Maak Jou Drome Waar' with his friend and acclaimed South African singer Ampie du Preez.[citation needed] He is also a self admitted Manchester United fan, having followed the club since Ryan Giggs' debut.[41]

International awards

Test cricket

Player of the Series awards

S No Series Season Series Performance Result
1 Sri Lanka in South Africa Test Series 2011/12 353 runs with 1 century and 2 fifties.
Avg. 117.66 (3 matches)
 South Africa won the series 2–1.[42]
2 Pakistan in South Africa Test Series 2012/13 352 runs with 2 centuries and a fifty.
Avg. 88.00 ; WK 17 ct. (3 matches)
 South Africa won the series 3–0.[43]
3 South Africa vs Pakistan in UAE Test Series 2013/14 273 runs with a double century.
Avg. 93.66 ; WK 5 ct. 1 st. (2 matches)
Series drawn.[44]
4 India in South Africa Test Series 2013/14 190 runs with a century and a fifty.
Avg. 63.33 ; WK 14 ct. (2 matches)
 South Africa won the series 1–0.[45]

Man of the Match awards

S No Series Season Match Performance Result
1 5th Test – England in South Africa Test Series 2004/05 1st Innings: 92 (165 balls, 15x4)
2nd Innings: 109 (169 balls, 11x4, 1x6)
Match drawn.[46]
2 2nd Test – South Africa in India Test Series 2007/08 1st Innings: 217* (333 balls, 17x4, 2x6)
2nd Innings: 2 ct. ; DNB
 South Africa won by an innings and 90 runs.[47]
3 1st Test – South Africa in Australia Test Series 2008/09 1st Innings: 2 ct. ; 63 (130 balls, 7x4, 1x6)
2nd Innings: 2 ct. ; 106* (186 balls, 9x4)
 South Africa won by 6 wickets.[48]
4 2nd Test – South Africa vs Pakistan in UAE Test Series 2010/11 1st Innings: 278* (418 balls, 23x4, 6x6)
2nd Innings: 25 (29 balls, 1x4)
Match drawn.[49]
5 3rd Test – West Indies in South Africa Test Series 2014/15 1st Innings: WK 1 st. ; 148 (194 balls, 15x4, 1x6)
2nd Innings: WK 2 ct. ; DNB
 South Africa won by 8 wickets.[50]

One-Day International cricket

Player of the Series awards

# Series Season Match Performance Result
1 South Africa in Zimbabwe 2007/08 170 Runs (3 Matches, 1×100, 1×50) with avg. 86.00; WK 6 ct.  South Africa Won the series 3–0.[51]
2 Australia in South Africa 2008/09 240 Runs (5 Matches, 2×50) with avg. 60.00 ; 3 ct.  South Africa Won the series 3–2.[52]
3 Zimbabwe in South Africa 2010/11 231 Runs (3 Matches, 2×100) with avg. 115.50 ; WK 6 ct.  South Africa Won the series 3–0.[53]
4 Sri Lanka in South Africa 2011/12 329 Runs (5 Matches, 1×100, 2×50) with avg. 109.66 ; WK 7 ct.  South Africa Won the series 3–2.[54]
5 Pakistan in South Africa 2012/13 367 Runs (5 Matches, 1×100, 3×50) with avg. 91.75 ; WK 7 ct.  South Africa Won the series 3–2.[55]
6 South Africa in India 2015/16 358 Runs (5 Matches, 3×100) with avg. 89.50 ; 3 ct. WK 1 ct.  South Africa Won the series 3–2.[56]

Man of the Match awards

S No Opponent Venue Date Match Performance Result
1 Bangladesh National Stadium, St. George's 10 April 2007 146 (130 balls, 12x4, 5x6) ; 1 ct.  South Africa won by 67 runs.[57]
2 Zimbabawe Harare Sports Club, Harare 26 August 2007 107 (89 balls, 8x4, 6x6) ; WK 1 ct.  South Africa won by 28 runs.[58]
3 Pakistan Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore 18 October 2007 103* (95 balls, 9x4, 3x6) ; 1 ct.  South Africa won by 45 runs.[59]
4 New Zealand Kingsmead, Durban 25 November 2007 87 (103 balls, 9x4)  South Africa won by 2 wickets.[60]
5 West Indies Kingsmead, Durban 1 February 2008 77 (86 balls, 7x4)  South Africa won by 5 wickets.[61]
6 Australia Adelaide Oval, Adelaide 26 January 2009 WK 2 ct. ; 82* (85 balls, 6x4, 1x6)  South Africa won by 8 wickets.[62]
7 England Newlands Stadium, Cape Town 27 November 2009 121 (85 balls, 14x4)  South Africa won by 112 runs.[63]
8 India Sardar Patel Stadium, Ahmedabad 27 February 2010 102* (59 balls, 11x4, 3x6)  South Africa won by 90 runs.[64]
9 West Indies Windsor Park, Roseau 28 May 2010 70 (80 balls, 2x4, 1x6) ; WK 3 ct.  South Africa won by 67 runs.[65]
10 West Indies Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi 24 February 2011 107* (105 balls, 8x4, 2x6)  South Africa won by 7 wickets.[66]
11 Netherlands PCA Stadium, Mohali 3 March 2011 134 (98 balls, 13x4, 4x6)  South Africa won by 231 runs.[67]
12 New Zealand Westpac Stadium, Wellington 25 February 2012 WK 2 ct, 1 st ; 106* (106 runs, 3x4, 4x6)  South Africa won by 6 wickets.[68]
13 Pakistan Wanderers, Johannesburg 17 March 2013 128 (108 balls, 12x4, 3x6) ; WK 2 ct.  South Africa won by 34 runs.[69]
14 Pakistan Willowmoore Park, Benoni 24 March 2013 WK 2 ct. ; 95* (111 balls, 9x4, 1x6)  South Africa won by 6 wickets.[70]
15 Pakistan Sharjah Cricket Stadium, Sharjah 11 November 2013 115* (102 balls, 10x4, 3x6)  South Africa won by 117 runs.[71]
16 Sri Lanka MRIC Stadium, Hambantota 12 July 2014 108 (71 balls, 11x4, 4x6) ; 1 ct.  South Africa won by 82 runs.[72]
17 Australia Harare Sports Club, Harare 27 August 2014 2 ct. ; 136* (106 balls, 11x4, 2x6)  South Africa won by 7 wickets.[73]
18 New Zealand Bay Oval, Mount Maunganui 21 October 2014 89 (85 balls, 9x4)  South Africa won by 6 wickets.[74]
19 West Indies Kingsmead, Durban 16 January 2015 81 (94 balls, 6x4) ; WK 4 ct, 1 st.  South Africa won by 61 runs (D/L).[75]
20 West Indies Wanderers, Johannesburg 18 January 2015 149 (44 balls, 9x4, 16x6)  South Africa won by 148 runs.[76]
21 West Indies SCG, Sydney 27 February 2015 162* (66 balls, 17x4, 8x6) ; 1 ct.  South Africa won by 257 runs.[77]
22 UAE Westpac Stadium, Wellington 11 March 2015 99 (82 balls, 6x4, 4x6) ; 3–0–15–2 ; 1 ct.  South Africa won by 146 runs.[78]
23 New Zealand Kingsmead, Durban 26 August 2015 64 (48 balls, 8x4, 1x6)  South Africa won by 62 runs.[79]
24 India Green Park, Kanpur 11 October 2015 104* (73 balls, 5x4, 6x6)  South Africa won by 5 runs.[80]
25 England Newlands, Cape Town 14 February 2016 1 ct. ; 101* (97 balls, 11x4, 1x6)  South Africa won by 5 wickets.[81]
26 New Zealand Westpac Stadium, Wellington 25 February 2017 85 (80 balls, 7x4, 1x6); 1 Ct.  South Africa won by 159 runs.[82]

Twenty20 International cricket

Man of the Match Awards

# Series Date Opponent Match Performance Result
1 New Zealand in South Africa 23 November 2007 New Zealand 1 ct. ; 52* (45 balls, 4x4, 1x6)  South Africa won by 3 wickets.[83]
2 2009 ICC World Twenty20 7 June 2009 Scotland 79* (34 balls, 5x4, 6x6)  South Africa won by 130 runs.[84]
3 2009 ICC World Twenty20 16 June 2009 India 63 (51 balls, 5x4); 3 ct.  South Africa won by 12 runs.[85]
4 2012 ICC World Twenty20 22 September 2012 Sri Lanka 30 (13 balls, 1x4, 2x6); WK 1 ct.  South Africa won by 32 runs.[86]
5 2014 ICC World Twenty20 29 March 2014 England 69* (28 balls, 9x4, 3x6); 1 ct.  South Africa won by 3 runs.[87]
6 England in South Africa 21 February 2016 England WK ; 71 (29 balls, 6x4, 6x6)  South Africa won by 9 wickets.[88]

See also

References

  1. ^ "AB de Villiers is the best cricket batsman in world across all three formats and best batsman at present , writes Michael Hussey". The Courier Mail.
  2. ^ "ICC Test Championship Batting Rankings - AB de Villiers".
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