M. Chinnaswamy Stadium
![]() M. Chinnaswamy Stadium |
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Ground information | |
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Location | Bangalore |
Establishment | 1969 |
Capacity | 36,000 |
Owner | Government of Karnataka |
Operator | Karnataka State Cricket Association |
Tenants | Royal Challengers Bangalore |
End names | |
Pavilion End BEML End |
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International information | |
First Test | 22 Nov - 27 Nov 1974: India v England |
Last Test | 9 Oct - 13 Oct 2010: India v Australia |
First ODI | 26 Sep 1982: India v Sri Lanka |
Last ODI | 27 Feb 2011: India v England |
As of 15 February 2009 Source: M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Cricinfo |
The M. Chinnaswamy Stadium (Kannada: ಚಿನ್ನಸ್ವಾಮಿ ಕ್ರೀಡಾಂಗಣ, Chinnasvāmi Krīḍāngaṇa), located in Bangalore, Karnataka, is one of the cricket stadiums of India. Flanked by the picturesque Cubbon Park, Queen's Road, Cubbon and uptown MG Road, this four decade old stadium is situated in the heart of the city of Bangalore. Formerly known as the Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA) stadium, the ground was later rechristened in tribute to Mr. M. Chinnaswamy, who had served the KSCA for four decades and was also president of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) from 1977-1980. This stadium with a seating capacity of 55,000 not only regularly hosts Test cricket, One Day Internationals (ODI) and other First-class cricket matches, but also other musical and cultural events. The stadium is also the home ground of the Karnataka state cricket team and the Indian Premier League franchise Royal Challengers Bangalore. It is owned by the Government of Karnataka and has been leased out to the KSCA for a period of 99 years.
Contents
History and development
With generous patronage from the Government of Karnataka, the foundation stone of this stadium was laid in 1969 and construction work commenced in 1970. The stadium was first used for First-class cricket matches during the 1972-73 season. It earned Test status during the 1974-75 season when the West Indies toured India.
The first Test played at this stadium was on 22-29 November 1974. Incidentally, this was the début Test match for the West Indian batting giants Viv Richards and Gordon Greenidge. The West Indians led by Clive Lloyd crushed M. A. K. Pataudi's Indian team by a massive margin of 256 runs. India registered their first Test win on this ground against the touring English team led by Tony Greig in 1976-77. The first ODI match at this venue was played on 6 September 1982. India defeated Sri Lanka by six wickets in that match.
Floodlights were first installed at this stadium for the 1996 Wills World Cup. The first match played here under lights was the quarter-final clash between arch-rivals India and Pakistan on 9 March 1996 in which India defeated Pakistan by 39 runs in a thrilling encounter. In 2007, Sourav Ganguly and Yuvraj Singh lead a 300 run partnership fightback from 61/4 breaking several records. India's 365/5 at stumps was the highest 1st day score in whole of India. The 300 run partnership was the highest partnership at the stadium and the highest left-hander batsmen partnership. Sourav Ganguly's 239 is the highest left-hander score.
After the BCCI chose Bangalore as the centre for the National Cricket Academy in 2000, many budding cricketers have passed out of the Academy housed on this ground. This stadium also served as venue for the 1996 Miss World pageant. The KSCA now plans to increase the seating capacity to 70,000. After the launch of the IPL, it has also become the home ground of the Bangalore franchise team, the Royal Challengers Bangalore. The stadium was also given a facelift for the first season of the IPL. It was painted in red and yellow, the team colors of the Royal Challengers and also the colors of the Karnataka flag.
Apart from holding all cricket matches it has also been associated with all small and major events held in Bangalore or India.
Cricket World Cups
This stadium has hosted One Day International (ODI) matches for all the World cups whenever India has hosted the World cups namely
October 14, 1987 Scorecard |
India 252/7 (50 overs) |
v | New Zealand 236/8 (50 overs) |
India won by 16 runs M.Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore, India Umpires: David Archer and Dickie Bird Player of the match: Kapil Dev |
Navjot Sidhu 75 (71) Dipak Patel 3/36 (10 overs) |
Ken Rutherford 75 (95) Maninder Singh 2/40 (10 overs) |
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Quarter final match
9 March 1996 scorecard |
India 287/8 (50 overs) |
v | Pakistan 248/9 (49 overs) |
India won by 39 runs M Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore, India Umpires: Steve Bucknor and David Shepherd Player of the match: Navjot Sidhu |
Navjot Sidhu 93 (115) Mushtaq Ahmed 2/56 (10 overs) |
Aamer Sohail 55 (46) Venkatesh Prasad 3/45 (10 overs) |
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Cricket World Cup
This stadium has hosted One Day International (ODI) matches for all the World cups whenever India has hosted the World cups namely
Date | Teams | Result | Man of the Match | |
14-Oct-87 | India (252/7) | New Zealand (236/8) | India won by 16 runs | Kapil Dev |
9-Mar-96 | India (287/8) | Pakistan (248/9) | India won by 39 runs | Navjot Singh Sidhu |
27-Feb-11[1] | India (338) | England (338/8) | Match Tied | Andrew Strauss |
2-Mar-11 | England (327/8) | Ireland (329/7) | Ireland won by 3 wkts | Kevin O'Brien |
6-Mar-11 | India (210/5) | Ireland (207) | India won by 5 wkts | Yuvraj Singh |
13-Mar-11 | Australia(324/6) | Kenya(264/6) | Australia won by 60 runs | CO Obuya (Kenya) |
16-Mar-11 | Canada 211 (45.4 ov) | Australia 212/3 (34.5 ov) | Australia won by 7 wickets | SR Watson (Australia) |
Records
Test match records
Highest innings total: India 626/all out - India vs Pakistan, 3rd Test in Bangalore, 8-12 December 2007. The second highest score was made by Pakistan who were all out for 570 in 2005. The third highest score was made by India again who scored 541-6 against Sri Lanka in 1994.
Highest individual score: 267 - Younis Khan, Pakistan v India, 24-28 March 2005
Best innings bowling: 7-27 - Maninder Singh, India v Pakistan, 13-17 March 1987
Most runs were scored by Sachin Tendulkar(825 runs) in this stadium. He is followed by Sunil Gavaskar(625 runs) and Sourav Ganguly (503 runs).
Most wickets were taken by Anil Kumble, (41 wickets) in this stadium. He is followed by Harbhajan Singh (30 wickets) and Kapil Dev(27 wickets)
One day international match records
Highest total: 347-2 - Australia v India 12 November 2003. The second and third highest scores were tied at 338 in the India-England match.
Highest Run Chase : 329-7 - Ireland scored 329 (in 49.1 overs) against England's 327 runs from 50 overs, 02 March 2011.
Highest individual score: 163 scored by Andrew Strauss
The most runs were scored by Sachin Tendulkar(534 runs) followed by Virendar Sehwag(328 runs) and Micheal Clark(238 runs)
The most wickets were taken by Zaheer Khan(14 wickets) followed by Javagal Srinath(10 wickets) and Venkatesh Prasad & Kapil Dev(8 wickets each)
Gallery
See also
References
External links
- Chinnaswamy Stadium Layout + IPL 2010 Updates
- M Chinnaswamy Stadium Notable Events
- Details on Cricinfo
v · d · eTest cricket grounds in India |
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Barabati Stadium • Bombay Gymkhana • Brabourne Stadium • Eden Gardens • Feroz Shah Kotla • Gandhi Stadium • Green Park Stadium • Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium • K. D. Singh Babu Stadium • Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium • M. A. Chidambaram Stadium • M. Chinnaswamy Stadium • Punjab Cricket Association Stadium • Rajiv Gandhi International Cricket Stadium • Sardar Patel Stadium • Sawai Mansingh Stadium • Sector 16 Stadium • University Ground • Vidarbha Cricket Association Stadium • Vidharba Cricket Association Ground • Wankhede Stadium • |
v · d · e1987 Cricket World Cup Stadiums | |
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India |
Barabati Stadium · Eden Gardens (Finals) · Feroz Shah Kotla · Green Park(Kanpur) · Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium · MA Chidambaram Stadium · Chinnaswamy Stadium · Nehru Stadium (Pune) · Nehru Stadium (Indore) · Gujarat Stadium · Sawai Mansingh Stadium · Sector 16 Stadium · VCA Ground · Wankhede Stadium (Semi-Finals) |
Pakistan |
Arbab Niaz Stadium · Gaddafi Stadium (Semi-Finals) · Iqbal Stadium · Municipal Stadium · National Stadium · Niaz Stadium · Pindi Club Ground |
v · d · e1996 Cricket World Cup Stadiums | |
---|---|
India |
Barabati Stadium · Chinnaswamy Stadium · Eden Gardens (Semi-Finals) · Feroz Shah Kotla · Green Park(Kanpur) · Indira Priyadarshini Stadium |
Pakistan | |
Sri-Lanka |
v · d · e2011 Cricket World Cup Stadiums | |
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India |
Eden Gardens · Feroz Shah Kotla · M. A. Chidambaram Stadium · Punjab Cricket Association Stadium (Semi-final) · M. Chinnaswamy Stadium · Sardar Patel Stadium (Quarter-final) · Vidarbha Cricket Association Stadium · Wankhede Stadium (Final) |
Sri Lanka |
R. Premadasa Stadium (Semi-final) · Mahinda Rajapaksa International Stadium · Muttiah Muralitharan International Cricket Stadium |
Bangladesh |
Zohur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium · Sher-e-Bangla Cricket Stadium (Quarter-final) |
Coordinates: 12°58′43.7″N 77°35′58.4″E / 12.978806°N 77.599556°E
v · d · eIndian Premier League | |
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Seasons | |
Participating teams |
Chennai Super Kings · Deccan Chargers · Delhi Daredevils · Kings XI Punjab · Kolkata Knight Riders · Mumbai Indians · Pune Warriors India · Rajasthan Royals · Royal Challengers Bangalore |
Former teams |
Kochi Tuskers Kerala |
IPL Venues | |
Auctions | |
Statistics and Records |
Team records · Series records · Batting records · Bowling records · Wicketkeeping & fielding records · Partnership records · Miscellaneous records |
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