Partnership Records

Top 10: Highest ODI Partnership in a Losing Cause

There is a saying in cricket that partnerships win games for the team, and this is especially important as the format gets longer. Whether it is ODI or Tests, the need for long and huge batting partnerships is paramount for the batting team. This helps the batting team not just by piling up huge scores but also by frustrating and draining the fielding team to a large extent.

A big partnership most often results in their team’s win, but there are occasions when a team loses despite a monumental stand from one of their batting pairs. Here in this article, we delve into such occurrences where the team has lost, even though a pair has added a significant number of runs for any wicket.

Let’s look at the top 10 highest partnerships that came in losing cause in ODIs.

Highest Partnership in a Losing Cause in ODI

Partners Runs Wicket Against Venue Date
Azmatullah Omarzai, Mohammad Nabi (AFG) 242 6th Sri Lanka Pallekele 9 Feb 2024
Herschelle Gibbs, Gary Kirsten (SA) 235 1st India Kochi 9 Mar 2000
Ijaz Ahmed, Saeed Anwar (PAK) 230 3rd India Dhaka 18 Jan 1998
Kevin O’Brien, William Porterfield (IRE) 227 4th Kenya Nairobi 2 Feb 2007
Ibrahim Zadran, Rahmanullah Gurbaz (AFG) 227 1st Pakistan Hambantota 24 Aug 2023
Andrew Flintoff, Andrew Staruss (ENG) 226 4th West Indies Lord’s 6 Jul 2004
Mohammad Hafeez, Nasir Jamshed (PAK) 224 1st India Mirpur 18 Mar 2012
Mohammad Azharuddin, Ajay Jadeja (IND) 223 5th Sri Lanka Colombo (RPS) 17 Aug 1997
VVS Laxman, Yuvraj Singh (IND) 213 4th Australia Sydney 22 Jan 2004
Andrew Balbirnie, Harry Tector (IRE) 212* 3rd Zimbabwe Harare 18 Jan 2023

(Check out other partnership-related articles here.)

Key Insights

242: This is the biggest partnership in the history of ODI cricket in a losing cause. This happened between the pair of Azmatullah Omarzai and Mohammad Nabi in an ODI game between Sri Lanka and Afghanistan at Pallekele. It is the only 200-run stand for the 6th or lower wickets that came in a loss.

150: There have been over 115 instances where a partnership of 150 or more runs resulted in a losing cause for a team, with most of them coming between the 1st and 4th wickets.