Batting Records

ODI Stats: Slowest Centuries Ever

A plethora of stats and records are available on varied aspects of one-day cricket, but this will surely be a chequered one. The centuries in the previous cricket era are only considered an essential aspect of a player in Test Cricket. But, today, its generosity has increased in limited-overs formats also, like ODI & T20s. No one could forget the fastest centuries hit by AB de Villiers, Shahid Afridi, Virender Sehwag, and Virat Kohli that aided their respective teams to achieve milestone victories. But there are meager ones that put a cricket fan in a mega dilemma.

Many individuals juggle between the two facets, whether this stuff should be praised or should disruptively detract. Because in the end, a ton remains a three-figure number which can never be underrated even if it takes too much time to come out. There are mens like Ramiz Raza, Scott Styris & Tom Cooper who add this unwanted feather in their highly prestigious cap. Not many Indians have achieved this milestone in world cricket, but few like Sourav Ganguly, Ajay Jadeja & Sachin Tendulkar have tried.

So before going deep into this, here are the top 5 mens in ODI cricket who hit the slowest centuries in the 50-overs format.

Slowest Centuries in ODI Cricket

Player Balls Taken to 100 Against Venue Year
David Boon (AUS) 166 India Hobart 1991
Ramiz Raja (PAK) 157 West Indies Melbourne 1992
Geoff Marsh (AUS) 156 England Lord’s 1989
Scott Styris (NZ) 152 Sri Lanka St George’s 2007
Ramiz Raja (PAK) 152 Sri Lanka Adelaide 1990
Tom Cooper (NED) 151 Afghanistan Voorburg 2010
Geoff Marsh (AUS) 150 West Indies Georgetown 1991
David Hemp (BER) 150 Kenya Potchefstroom 2009
Shai Hope (WI) 149 India Chennai 2019
David Boon (AUS) 146 West Indies Melbourne 1992

You can also find here the same record in Test formats in our blogs.

Let’s look into the slowest five centuries in ODI in detail, shall we?

#1 David Boon – 166 Balls

Final Score: 102 (168) vs India | Match Scorecard

The Australian team was touring India in 1992, and a one-day series was in progress. Chasing 175 in a mid-match of the ODI series, David Boon, the Aussie opener, achieved this rarest feat on his name. He made a long partnership with his opening partner Alan Border of 129 runs and finally got to the target set by the Indians. Indians tried so hard to restrict team Australia, but Boon had contrasting intentions on that day in his mind. 

#2 Ramiz Raja – 157 Balls

Final Score: 102*(158) vs West Indies | Match Scorecard

Pakistan was fighting a hard match on the slow and tricky surface of Melbourne Cricket Ground against West Indies in the World Cup 1992. Ramiz had scored the ton of 102* in a long-running stock of 157 deliveries. He was looking at his best that day; with the help of his ton, Pakistan had scored 220 runs in the 1st innings. But, in reply West Indies had quickly chased down the target with all 10 wickets in hand and 19 balls were still spare in the game.

#3 Geoff Marsh – 156 Balls

Final Score: 111*(162) vs England | Match Scorecard