For someone who arrived in the Test arena with his unabashed youthful exuberance and aggression, Virat Kohli went on to herald a remarkable phase in red ball cricket not just for India but for the format itself.
In 68 Tests, India under Kohli, won 40, lost 17 and drew 11, numbers which emphasise that Kohli's team was characteristically different than those of the past
For someone who arrived in the Test arena with his unabashed youthful exuberance and aggression, Virat Kohli went on to herald a remarkable phase in red ball cricket not just for India but for the format itself.
In 68 Tests, India under Kohli, won 40, lost 17 and drew 11, numbers which emphasise that Kohli's team was characteristically different than those of the past.
Kohli kept Test cricket at the pinnacle of his career and never shied away from getting into the grind. Here's a look at his key moments:
Test debut: Shortly after the high of winning his first ODI World Cup, Kohli made his Test debut on June 20 with India cap No. 269 on the tour of West Indies but returned 76 runs across three Tests.
Skirmish with fans in Sydney: Not a part of India's horrendous England tour in mid 2011, Kohli found him thrown in deep water in Australia amid a faltering batting line-up.
"Indians weren't interested in Test cricket" remarked Greg Chappell as India were trounced 0-4, but the pressure of being in a losing side and being unfamiliar to unruly Australian crowd's heckling, Kohli responded with a rude gesture. He was fined 50 per cent of the match fee.
Maiden Test ton in Australia: As the golden era of India's Test batting ended, Kohli threw his hat in the ring to become a flag bearer in future with his maiden ton at Adelaide in January 2012.
Bright signs in rainbow nation: Though India lost the two-Test series 0-1 to South Africa in 2013, Kohli's 119 and 96 at Johannesburg were signs of him taking charge.
A big low in England: With 134 runs in five Tests in England in 2014, Kohli failed miserably against seam and swing with James Anderson at his pomp. It was a huge setback for the young batter who had established his supremacy in ODI format and was being perceived as the next Indian batting star.
The highs of Australia: India's tour of Australia in 2014-15 witnessed a far more disciplined and determined Kohli, who gave the opponents a hard time. He began with 115 and 141 at Adelaide and by the end of the tour, he had 692 runs at 86.50 with four centuries and two fifties.
Love affair with Adelaide: His twin tons in Adelaide showed his special bond with the venue but as the tour progressed, Kohli kept having run-ins with Australia players, including Mitchell Johnson.
"I'm not there to take to some unnecessary words or chats from someone. I'm going there to play cricket, back myself. There's no good reason that I should respect unnecessarily some people when they are not respecting me," he had said.
By the end of the tour, Kohli was India's full-time Test captain.
Taking over: The start was shaky as Sri Lanka beat India by 63 runs in the first Test but India struck back hard defeating Sri Lanka by 278 runs in Colombo and won the three-Test series.
Making England pay: Yet to prove himself in England as a batter, a challenge which Kohli by his own admission did not rate very high, Kohli scored first of his six double centuries by scoring 235 in Mumbai against England as India crushed them 4-0.
Run-in with Steve Smith's Australia: It began with Kohli shouldering arms to Steve O'Keefe, getting bowled and India suffering a 333-run hammering in Pune.
India won the series 3-1, but it also was one to forget for Kohli the batter — he scored only 46 runs in three Tests that he played.
The fiery affairs included Kohli's claim that he has lost friendship with Australian players. He also complained to on-field umpires when Australia batters looked to the dressing room while deciding to take DRS.
Sri Lanka pay again: Kohli's peak batting prowess in 2016-17 saw him flaying Sri Lanka with consecutive double tons of 213 and 243 at Kolkata and Nagpur, respectively.
Mastering England in 2018: With all eyes on Kohli, he towered above the rest with 593 runs in five Tests (two 100s, three 50s at 59.30) during the England tour starting with a splendid 149 at Birmingham.
Highest Test score: South Africa bore the brunt when Kohli hit 254 not out for his highest Test score in Pune in 2019.
Rewriting history in 2018-19: Aggression personified, Kohli's India stunned the much-fancied Australia side and became the first team from Asia to win a Test series Down Under in nearly seven decades.
Scripting a special win at Lord's: One of Kohli's most famous wins as captain was at Lord's in 2021 when herallied his troops around to bundle England out for a mere 120 inside two sessions, as India recorded a massive 151-run win.
Talking to the stump-mic in Cape Town in 2022: Furious after a leg-before appeal was turned down against South Africa's Dean Elgar, a furious Kohli walked up to the stump mic and said, "Focus on your team as well when they shine the ball, not just the opposition", suggesting manipulation with the ball and making an indirect remark on the infamous 'sandpapergate' episode.
The final act: Stung by poor showings at home against New Zealand, Kohli began the tour of Australia with 100 not out at Perth when the opposition was under the pump.
But the fight petered out with the bat as Kohli kept getting caught in the cordon, while his shoulder-brushing incident with debutant Sam Konstas invited criticism.