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Who is the world's best batsman under 30?

Prior to their 30th birthday, six batsmen around the globe are lighting up world cricket

Kane Williamson's 10th Test century on day three of the first Test against England at Lord's put the Black Caps second-drop in an exclusive club of young batsmen.

Williamson become just the eighth batsman in Test history to score 10 Test tons prior to his 25th birthday, joining the likes of Sir Donald Bradman, Sir Garfield Sobers and Sachin Tendulkar.

The 24-year-old is one of six elite, blossoming batsmen spanning the planet, stretching from India to England, to Sri Lanka and the Antipodes.

But choosing the best of best of the Super Six under 30, well, that's a about as hard as bowling to these men at the peak of their powers on a flat track with short boundaries.

To help you decide, below is an alphabetical snapshot of each player's last two years in all formats, and while the balance of matches is different for each member, the numbers (based on statistics from the last two years) are unsurprisingly similar.

Virat Kohli

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DOB: 5/11/1988

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India's Test captain and master of the limited-overs run-chase, Kohli represents modern India and his country's new, aggressive approach to cricket. While Kohli's stats in the Test arena are sensational, his numbers in coloured clothing and against the white ball is what gives him an edge. Ranked the 10th best batsman in five-day cricket by the official ICC Player Rankings, the right-hander is fourth in one-day internationals and peerless in the shortest format of the sport. When confronted with a target to pursue in ODIs, Kohli has scored 14 centuries, 13 of which have come in victories where he averages 85.97. With numbers like those it's no wonder he's called the next Sachin.

Angelo Mathews

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DOB: 2/6/1987

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A golden run with the bat for Sri Lanka has Mathews rounding out the top five highest ranked Test batsmen. Since taking on the captaincy two years ago, Mathews has scored three of his four Test hundreds, highlighted by a magnificent 160 at Leeds in his side's record-breaking series win on English soil last winter. A tall, strapping allrounder, Mathews combines his explosive power game with pause and patience, carefully identifying the state of the match like he would one of his mystery spinners and their deceptive variations. Only Kohli has scored more ODI runs over the qualification period, and throw in the contribution from his more-than-handy fast-mediums, Mathews is a star of the future, today. 

Joe Root

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DOB: 30/12/1990

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Diagnosed early as a future Test star for England, Joe Root's rapidly ascending career for the Three Lions shows no signs of stopping after a mixed beginning. Fifteen Tests and two centuries into his career, the Yorkshire product was dropped for the final Test of the horror 2013-14 Ashes whitewash to suffer his first setback as an international cricketer. Like all great batsman do, Root bounced back, compiling an unbeaten 200 at Lord's against Sri Lanka last season, and has since reached triple figures on three more occasions, each unbeaten and more than 140. With England's top order under immense scrutiny in recent times, Root has been a pillar of safety batting at No.5 and will be the key wicket for the Australians in the upcoming Ashes.

Steven Smith

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DOB: 2/6/1989

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Arguably the form player in the solar system, Smith had the Midas Touch last summer, turning everything he touched, from the Test captaincy to Australia's successful World Cup campaign, to pure gold. Criticised in his infant Australia career for a loose technique and wayward shot selection, Smith has developed his home-spun method into one that can dominate any type of attack in any type of condition in any type of scenario. The right-hander, through the use of classical textbook stroke play and an ever expanding unorthodox repertoire, dismantled India last summer to re-write the record books and cement his position in Australia's middle order as the highest ranked Test batsman in this group.

David Warner

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DOB: 27/10/1986

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For Warner, attack is the best form of defence. Not only has the pocket rocket scored more Test hundreds than any of his five peers over the past two years, 'Bull' has also charged head on at opposing attacks, striking at 78 runs per hundred balls faced. Four of those nine hundreds came in two Tests as the explosive opener recorded twin tons twice; first against South Africa in Cape Town last March then in Adelaide in the emotional first Test of last summer. At 28, Warner is the oldest member of the Super Six, but with his best days as a top-order batsman still on the horizon, expect to see the free flowing left-hander remain in this list until he no longer qualifies.

Kane Williamson

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DOB: 8/8/1990

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It took less than one season at Yorkshire for head coach Jason Gillespie to proclaim his Kiwi international will become one of the all-time great batsmen. As it stands right now, Dizzy appears to be a good judge. Blessed with precision and timing, Williamson is a major reason why the Black Caps have surged up the Test rankings to sit third behind Australia and South Africa. A mountain of runs has been resourced both home and away, unruffled by neither extreme pace nor paralysing spin. His 132 against England at the Home of Cricket has put his side in a commanding position, and if Gillespie's prediction comes to fruition, we'll be writing about the elegant right-hander well into the next decade.