Test career Rahane was selected in the
Test squad to play against
West Indies in November 2011. Rahane was taken in the squad for 16 months and in his presence, he saw seven players make their debuts. His performance in the limited-overs cricket (ODI and T20I) during that period was not up to the mark, as he averaged around 25 in both ODI and T20I cricket, and struggled for form in the series against Pakistan and England (in January 2013). Rahane made his Test debut on 22 March 2013 against Australia in the Border-Gavaskar Trophy at
Feroz Shah Kotla Stadium, Delhi.Rahane was handed his India Test cap which brought an end to a lean patch for Mumbai, who had not produced a Test player for India since May 2007. Despite his failure in the debut match, Rahane was included in the playing eleven for the first match of India's tour of South Africa (2013–14). Batting in the lower-middle order, he made 209 runs at an average of 69.66 in the series (including a 96 off 157 balls at
Kingsmead,
Durban) against the bowling attack comprising
Dale Steyn,
Morne Morkel and
Vernon Philander. "For a man who had spent many a tour and series warming up the bench, carrying drinks, wondering when his opportunity will come, he has taken his chance with both hands, even though it arrived in the most difficult of conditions to bat in", cricket pundit Sidharth Monga wrote. Rahane finished as India's third-highest run-getter in the series, but he was in the most precarious position of all before the series began. Rahane made his first Test ton at
Basin Reserve,
Wellington, New Zealand, on 15 February 2014 against New Zealand. India were in a difficult position when Rahane came to the crease at 156 for five and by the time he departed with 118 India were in a match-winning position ruined by
Brendon McCullum's famous triple-century. "He had a mountain of first-class runs backing him, of course, but did he have what goes around by the queer name of X-factor? Did he have that extra edge in his game and personality that separates top-class international players from the rest? Was he merely humble, or was he unable to assert himself, unable to absorb real pressure? After his first two Test tours to South Africa and New Zealand, we can safely conclude it must be the former. Underneath that seemingly soft exterior lurks a solid Test batsman, and he was on display at the Basin Reserve", ESPNcricinfo wrote in their analysis. Rahane played in the
Investec Test Series (India tour of England, 2014) in England. His previous overseas performances (in away Tests, Rahane averaged 61.83 having scored 299 in four Tests including a century and two fifties) earned him a place in the playing eleven over
Rohit Sharma. In the process, Rahane became the fourth Indian batsman to post a Test century on his first appearance at Lord's, joining
Sourav Ganguly,
Dilip Vengsarkar and
Ajit Agarkar. Rahane played in the
2014–15 Border-Gavaskar Trophy in Australia. In the third Test match at
Melbourne, Rahane made his third Test hundred. He made 399 runs in four, including a century and two half-centuries against the opposition attack of
Mitchell Johnson and
Ryan Harris, the core of a bowling unit that famously won
2013–14 Ashes series 5–0. In the first Test of
2015 tour of Sri Lanka, Rahane broke the world record for most catches in a Test match with eight. In the second Test at
PSS,
Colombo, he scored his fourth Test hundred, scoring 126 in India's second innings, and India went on to win the match. In the process, he reached his career-best ranking of 20th, at the
ICC Player Rankings. Rahane played in the 2015 Freedom Series. In the 4th test match at New Delhi, Rahane made centuries in both the innings on a pitch where most batsmen found it difficult to score, and with this feat, he became only the fifth Indian to join the elite club of twin centurions in a single test. On 16 August 2016, Rahane achieved his career best
test batsmen's ranking of No. 8. On 25 March 2017, Rahane became India's 33rd Test Captain when he led the team in the 4th test against Australia in Dharamsala due to an injury to
Virat Kohli. He scored 46 runs in his first innings and quick 37 Runs in 2nd innings as India's Test captain. He scored a century in Sri Lanka in August 2017. In the return series at home, he failed miserably scoring only 17 in 5 innings. Despite an overseas average of 55, he was not included in the playing 11 for the 1st and 2nd Test against South Africa in 2018. After the failures of Rohit Sharma in both tests, the Indian vice-captain was brought back into the playing eleven for the 3rd test where his innings of 48 in the 2nd innings on a dangerous batting pitch proved very crucial in setting up an Indian victory. He led the Indian Team in the test match against
Afghanistan national cricket team in the absence of
Virat Kohli in 2018. In the India's tour of England, Rahane scored two half centuries, a match winning 81 in the third test and 51 in the fourth test. In the following India's tour of Australia, Rahane scored two half centuries; a match-winning 70 in the Adelaide test and a 51 in the Perth test. Overall, he finished the series with 217 runs. In 2019 two Match series in West Indies, he scored a century in the First Test to guide India to victory. In the home series against
South Africa, he scored a brisk fifty in second Test in Pune sharing a crucial century partnership with skipper
Virat Kohli. In the third Test, he scored a match winning 115 with a 267 run partnership with
Rohit Sharma who scored his first double century in Tests rescuing the team from 39 for 3. On 15 November 2019, in the first innings of the first test match against
Bangladesh, Rahane hit 86 off 172 deliveries, crossing the boundary 9 times. This became his 21st test fifty in international cricket. He was selected in the Test eleven for a 2 match series against New Zealand in February 2020, but like the rest of the team, his batting performance was not up to the mark. In December 2020 he was made captain of the Indian team for the final three matches of India's
tour of Australia in place of Virat Kohli, who was taking paternity leave. In the second test, Rahane scored 112 in the first innings and 27* in the second innings and guided India to a 8 wicket victory and was awarded man of the match. After drawing the third test at
Sydney, India went on to win the fourth test in Brisbane and handed Australia their first Test defeat at
The Gabba in 32 years with Rahane contributing to the winning cause with a quick fire 24 runs off 22 balls in the second innings and India winning the series 2–1. He finished the series as the third highest run getter with 268 runs at an average of 38.28. He received high praise from the critics and pundits for his captaincy and leading India to one of their greatest Test series win despite losing out on many of the first team players due to injury and bouncing back strongly after the first Test defeat. Rahane was appointed as the captain of the Indian team for the first Test against
New Zealand in November 2021, as Kohli had been rested. Rahane has captained in 6 Tests, out of which 4 won and 2 drawn. In the second test against New Zealand, he was dropped from India playing 11 due to a hamstring injury. Despite poor form throughout 2021, he was selected in the playing 11 in the first two test matches of the South African tour. This decision received a lot of criticism, especially since Shreyas Iyer was sidelined and had scored a hundred on debut. Many critics urged to drop him after his golden duck in the 2nd test. In the tour of South Africa 2021–22, Rahane finished the series with 136 runs and only one half-century. Despite a decent performance in Ranji Trophy 2022, he was not selected for a 2-match home series against Sri Lanka, and he was made to sit on the benches 5 times overall in his Test career.
One-Day International career Two back to back centuries in the Emerging Players Tournament in Australia (201) helped Rahane secure a place in the India limited-overs squad for the tour of England. He made his debut against England at
Chester-le-Street as a replacement for opener
Virender Sehwag. Although Rahane made 40 runs at strike-rate of 90.90, India's hopes of their first victory of the 2011 summer against England were thwarted by a washout at Chester-le-Street. He did well in his maiden international series (2011 NatWest Series), against England in England, and in the return series. He made a 47 ball 54 on his second match of the latter tour. Rahane failed to impress in his next few limited over matches against West Indies, Sri Lanka, Pakistan and England. Rahane made his second ODI fifty in 2013-14 Asia Cup, only to be followed by another slump. In a short ODI career in the middle order, Rahane has seemed unsure and struggled at times to find the balance between defence and attack. He showed signs of comfort at the top of the order with rapid centuries against England (September 2014) and Sri Lanka (November 2014), but
Rohit Sharma's second ODI double-century followed by a big hundred against Australia at the MCG pushed Rahane back to the middle order. In the ICC Cricket World Cup followed, Rahane only managed to score 208 runs from 8 matches, with an average of 34.66. He was dropped by
Mahendra Singh Dhoni in the second ODI against
Bangladesh but after the series, he was appointed as captain of India for its tour of Zimbabwe for ODIs and T20Is in 2015 when a second string squad was selected. India won that ODI series 3–0, although Rahane was not able to leave any big impacts with the bat, he made a total of 112 in three matches with only one half-century in it.
T20I career Rahane made his international debut for India in a
Twenty20 International against England at
Old Trafford Cricket Ground,
Manchester in August 2011. He scored a half-century on this match (61 of 39) against an England attack comprising
Stuart Broad,
Graeme Swann and
Tim Bresnan. The match was the only T20I played by former Indian captain
Rahul Dravid. Rahane was part of Indian team make it to the final of
2014 World T20. After sitting on the bench for the first three matches he got a chance to play against Australia where he scored 19 runs. He gave India a good start in the semi-final scoring 32 runs as India went on to win the Match. He also captained India in the two
Twenty20 International against
Zimbabwe, winning the first and losing the second match. He scored 33 and 4 runs in those matches. ==List of international centuries==