An astonishing innings of 300 not out has propelled Mohit Ahlawat into cricket’s history books – and prompted the opening batsman to put his name forward for the lucrative Indian Premier League – after he became the first player to score a triple century in a Twenty20 match.

Appearing for his team, Maavi XI, in a Friends Premier League match at Delhi’s Lalita Park, the 21-year-old Mohit creamed 39 sixes and 14 fours from just 72 balls to reach the remarkable milestone.

Having reached 250 after 18 overs, the wicketkeeper-batsman finally decided to throw caution to the wind, and he added a further 50 runs off the final two overs, including 34 from the last six balls – and five consecutive sixes to finish.

He ended unbeaten on exactly 300 as Maavi posted a commanding total of 416-2 from their 20 overs. In the least surprising news of the day, the run chase proved too much for the opposition, Friends XI, who despite scoring a respectable 200 in their innings still fell short by 216 runs.

The knock may open the door for Mohit, who has played three first-class games for Delhi, to a big-money IPL contract, with the players auction to take place in a fortnight.

“Yes, I have put my name in IPL auction but I am not sure if this knock will help make people notice me,” ABP Live quoted Mohit as saying. “The attack was good but after seeing off the new ball, I decided to just bat aggressively and was really timing the ball well.”

Scorecard of Delhi's Mohit Ahlawat's 300 runs in a T20 match. @mohanstatsman pic.twitter.com/RM2AbldY4S — Umang Pabari (@UPStatsman) February 7, 2017

In 2007, Sri Lankan Dhanuka Pathirana scored 277 from 72 balls in a local Lancashire T20 league match. But in the top tier of the professional game, no player has hit even a double century.



The current benchmark was set by Chris Gayle in a 2013 IPL match between the Royal Challengers Bangalore and Pune Warriors, but the West Indian’s 175 from 66 balls pales in comparison to Mohit’s recent efforts.

“I saw the scoreboard, and I was nearing my 200 with five overs to go, so I decided to go for the kill,” Mohit said. “I reached 250 with just two overs to go, I told my partner, ‘let me try if I can make 300’, and I got 30 off the last over.”