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ODI Records and Statistics – Most Stumpings in Individual Wicketkeeping Records

A Day International (ODI) is a game of limited-overs cricket played between two teams of international standing and lasted up to nine hours.

In an ODI, each team confronts a certain number of overs, currently 50. The Cricket World Cup is generally contested in this format every four years. Although this general word can also describe Twenty20 International matches, Day International matches are sometimes called Limited Overs Internationals (LOI). Big contests are regarded as the pinnacle of List A, limited-overs competition.

The following are the individual wicketkeeping records for the most stumpings:

Rank Stumpings Innings Player Team Span
1 123 345 MS Dhoni  India 2004–2019
2 99 353 Kumar Sangakkara  Sri Lanka 2000–2015
3 75 185 Romesh Kaluwitharana 1990–2004
4 73 209 Moin Khan  Pakistan 1990–2004
5 55 281 Adam Gilchrist  Australia 1996–2008

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MS Dhoni

MS Dhoni, a former cricketer from India, led the team in limited-overs competitions from 2007 to 2017 and in Test matches from 2008 to 2014. He now leads Chennai Super Kings in the Indian Premier League as their captain. India won three major tournaments under his leadership—the 2011 Cricket World Cup, the 2013 ICC Champions Trophy, and the 2007 ICC World Twenty20—the most of any captain. He also guided India to triumph in the Asia Cup in 2010 and 2016. Under his direction, India also won the 2013 ICC ODI Championship and the 2010 and 2011 ICC Test Championships. Right-handed wicketkeeper-batsman MS Dhoni is renowned for his assertive leadership style and ability to win games in difficult circumstances.

Kumar Sangakkara

ICC Hall of Fame inductee, former president of Marylebone Cricket Club, and former captain of the Sri Lanka national cricket team in all formats, Kumara Chokshananda Sangakkara (born October 27, 1977) is a Sri Lankan cricket commentator who is also regarded as one of the greatest batters in the history of the game. Throughout his international career, he was consistently ranked among the top three batters in the world in all three game versions. He now serves as the Rajasthan Royals’ IPL head coach. Throughout a 15-year career, Sangakkara amassed 28,016 runs in all formats of international cricket.

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Romesh Kaluwitharana

Deshabandu Romesh Shantha Kaluwitharana, born on November 24, 1969, is a former Sri Lankan cricketer who played for the country’s national team from 1990 to 2004. [1] He was known for his aggressive hitting style and served as the team’s wicketkeeper for the 1996 Cricket World Cup-winning squad.

With their explosive batting in the mid-1990s, Kaluwitharana and Sanath Jayasuriya are credited with revolutionizing one-day international cricket and setting the stage for all countries’ current hard-hitting batting strategies.

Moin Khan

Muhammad Moin Khan, a former wicketkeeper-batsman and current cricket coach in Pakistan was born on September 23, 1971. He played for the Pakistani national cricket team from 1990 until 2004. He has also served as Pakistan’s team captain. At Multan, he played in his first international match against the West Indies. In Test cricket, he recorded over 100 catches. He has amassed over 200 catches and more than 3,000 runs in ODI cricket. Saqlain Mushtaq’s mysterious delivery, which travels from leg to off, is known as the doosra, thanks to him. Its Urdu translation is “the other one.” He took over as the team’s chief selector from Iqbal Qasim in July 2013. Moin was chosen to lead the team as the national squad on February 11, 2014.

Adam Gilchrist

Adam Craig Gilchrist AM, a former international cricket player who was also the captain of Australia’s national cricket team, was born in Australia on November 14, 1971. He was a record-breaking wicketkeeper who reinvented the position for the Australia national team via his aggressive left-handed hitting. He was also an explosive left-handed hitter. Gilchrist, who is regarded as one of the greatest wicketkeeper-batsmen in the annals of the sport, held the world record for the most dismissals by a wicketkeeper in One Day International (ODI) cricket until Kumar Sangakkara surpassed it in 2015, as well as the record for the most by an Australian in Test cricket.

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