Ferocity, fitness and fast bowling: how Virat Kohli revolutionised Indian cricket
Ferocity, fitness and fast bowling: how Virat Kohli revolutionised Indian cricket
Vaughan Cruickshank,  Brendon Hyndman

Ferocity, fitness and fast bowling: how Virat Kohli revolutionised Indian cricket

Virat Kohli announced his  retirement from Test cricket on Monday.

While his  Instagram message just said this was the “right time”, his  poor recent Test formmental fatigue and desire to spend more time with his  familycharity foundation and expanding  business empire have been suggested as other influential factors.

During his 14-year Test career “ King Kohli” has been the  backbone of the Indian batting line-up, and his absence is a  huge blow as the Indians prepare to tour England next month.

The  megastar scored 9230 runs in 123 Tests at an average of 46.85, including 30 centuries.

These numbers put him in the top five Indian Test batsmen of all time, but his legacy extends far beyond his batting achievements.

Kohli, 36, quit Twenty20 Internationals last year (after India won its second world title). He  may continue to play one-day internationals.

Rising to the top of Test cricket

Kohli has been the  greatest Indian batsman of his generation.

He made his Test  debut in 2011 against the West Indies and played his  final match against Australia in January.

He scored centuries against  every country he played against, with more than half of these coming overseas.

His  seven Test centuries in Australia is the  second most by an overseas batsman.

He was at his peak between 2014 and 2019, when he averaged more than 60 in Test cricket and became one of the “ fab four” (the world’s best Test batsmen) alongside Steve Smith, Kane Williamson and Joe Root.

This period also included six  double-hundreds in 18 months, and 13 months as the  number one ranked Test batsman in the world.

Kohli the leader

Kohli is India’s  greatest ever Test captain.

His tenure from 2014 to 2022 was a  golden age for Indian Test cricket.

India won  40 of 68 Tests (59%) in this period and did not lose a Test series at home. India was the  number one ranked Test team in the world from 2016–20 and won its  first Test series in Australia in 2018–19.

These statistics make Kohli one of the  most successful Test captains of all time.

Beyond these numbers, he was a charismatic and aggressive captain who  redefined India’s approach to Test cricket by bringing a  more competitive edge to the team.

He drove higher expectations around  fitnesstraining intensity and  fast bowling that  continue to shape Indian cricket.

Mandatory fitness testing and improved dieting and recovery practices, which redefined the team’s standards, are  attributed to Kohli’s leadership.

Similarly, Indian success was strongly contributed to by Kohli encouraging the development of a world-class pace bowling attack, which marked a  significant shift from the spin-heavy approach of Indian cricket.

Controversies

While Kohli’s  energy, passion and  intensity contributed to his success as batsman and captain, they also led to numerous confrontations with opposition players, which some believed to be  disrespectful and  arrogant.

His intense celebrations and assertive body language also drew  criticism from conservative cricketing audiences.

Many of these controversies have occurred in Australia, where Kohli enjoyed a  love-hate relationship with Australian  players and  crowds.

Examples include flipping the bird to the crowd, making sandpaper gestures (in reference to the 2018 Australian ball tampering scandal, also known as Sandpapergate) and  shoulder-barging young Australian batsman Sam Konstas.

What will his Test legacy be?

For more than a decade, Kohli has been the  heartbeat of the Indian Test team, and his retirement marks the  end of an era.

He  reshaped the mindset of Indian cricket and cultivated a faster, fitter, fiercer, more successful team.

Kohli was also one of the  greatest ambassadors of Test cricket, and has played a  significant role in ensuring the game remains relevant in an era increasingly dominated by T20 cricket.

He made Test cricket  aspirational again because he wanted it to thrive. He knew India needed to dominate the hardest format to be respected.

His social media reach ( 272 million followers on Instagram and 67.8 million on X) is more than Tiger Woods, LeBron James and Tom Brady combined, and was even referred to by LA2028 Olympics organisers when they announced cricket’s entry into the games.

In recent days, Kohli has been described as  “a modern-day giant”, a  “provocateur in chief”, and  “his generation’s most profound figure”.

Love him or hate him, he elevated the spectacle of Test cricket. His electric energy brought  the best out of India and its opponents and made him impossible to ignore when batting or fielding.

 

Republished from THE CONVERSATION, 15 May 2025

Disclosure statement The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Vaughan Cruickshank

Brendon Hyndman