Barabati Stadium
The Barabati Stadium is an Indian sports stadium used mostly for cricket and association football, and also sometimes for concerts and field hockey, located in Cuttack, Odisha. It is a regular venue for international cricket and is the home ground of Odisha cricket team. The stadium is owned and operated by the Odisha Cricket Association. It is also used for Association Football. It hosts Santosh Trophy national football tournament and the state's Odisha First Division League football matches.[2] The Barabati Stadium is one of the older grounds in India, having hosted several touring sides – including the MCC, the West Indies team and the Australians - before it hosted its first international match. It hosted only the third one-day international in this country, in January 1982, when India put it across England by five wickets to lift the series 2-1. It hosted its first ever Test match five years later where India played hosts to Sri Lanka. Though it isn't one of the regular Test venues anymore, it continues to enjoy the status of international venue and hosts One-Day Internationals regularly. It also hosted the 2013 Women's Cricket World Cup. [3]
Barabati Stadium at Cuttack | |
Address | India |
---|---|
Location | Stadium Road, Cuttack, Odisha |
Coordinates | 20°28′52″N 85°52′7″E |
Owner | Odisha Cricket Association |
Operator | Odisha Cricket Association |
Capacity | 48,000 |
Tenants | |
Indian cricket team Odisha Football Team (1958-present) Odisha Women's Football Team (1958-present) | |
Ground information | |
Location | Stadium Road, Cuttack, Odisha, India |
Establishment | 1958 |
Tenants | Odisha Cricket Team (1958-present) Hyderabad Deccan Chargers (2010-2012) Kings XI Punjab (2014) Kolkata Knight Riders (2014) Indian Cricket Team[1] |
End names | |
Mahanadi River End Pavilion End | |
International information | |
First Test | 4–7 January 1987: India v Sri Lanka |
Last Test | 8–12 November 1995: India v New Zealand |
First ODI | 27 January 1982: India v England |
Last ODI | 22 December 2019: India v West Indies |
First T20I | 5 October 2015: India v South Africa |
Last T20I | 20 December 2017: India v Sri Lanka |
Only women's Test | 7–11 March 1985: India v New Zealand |
First WODI | 1 February 2013: Australia v Pakistan |
Last WODI | 15 February 2013: South Africa v Sri Lanka |
As of 22 December 2019 Source: Cricinfo |
The cricket and football venue is equipped with floodlights for day-and-night games and is a regular venue for ODI matches. It was an adopted home venue for former Indian Premier League franchise Deccan Chargers. Barabati Stadium has successfully served as the venue for both Indian Premier League and the now defunct Odisha Premier League. It has also hosted Senior Women's T20 Challenger Trophy 2020 from 4-11 January 2020.[4]
As of 22 Dec, 2019 it has hosted 2 Tests, 19 ODIs, 2 T20Is and 7 IPL Matches.
History and development
The Barabati Stadium in Cuttack hosted only the third One Day International in this country, in January 1982, when India beat England by five wickets to lift the series 2-1. In the first Test match here, five seasons later, the Sri Lankans were greeted with an underprepared wicket affording vastly unpredictable bounce. Dilip Vengsarkar, then at the most dizzying heights of his career, made his highest Test score of 166, his fourth century in eight Tests, when no other batsman on either side crossed 60. The Lankans were rolled over twice as India seized an innings and 67-run victory. Kapil Dev bagged his 300th Test victim, bowling Rumesh Ratnayake with a ball that failed to sit up.
The only other Test match here, against New Zealand in 1995-96, was badly affected by rain, affording less than 180 overs of playing time. Narendra Hirwani, on a comeback trail, took 6 for 59 in New Zealand's only innings, the best bowling figures here.
Though it isn't one of the regular Test venues anymore, it continues to enjoy the status of international venue and hosts One-Day Internationals regularly. India have won one of the two Test matches played here, and have an 11-4 win-loss record in ODIs.
Indoor Hall
In 2012, OCA named the indoor cricket hall at Barabati Stadium after Sachin Tendulkar.
International cricket centuries
Key
- * denotes that the batsman was not out.
- Inns. denotes the number of the innings in the match.
- Balls denotes the number of balls faced in an innings.
- NR denotes that the number of balls was not recorded.
- Parentheses next to the player's score denotes his century number at the Feroz Shah Kotla.
- The column title Date refers to the date the match started.
- The column title Result refers to match result[5][6][7]
Test centuries
The following table summarises the Test centuries scored at the Barabati Stadium.[5]
No. | Score | Player | Team | Balls | Inns. | Opposing team | Date | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 166 | Dilip Vengsarkar | India | 279 | 1 | Sri Lanka | 4 January 1987 | Won |
One Day Centuries
The following table summarises the One Day centuries scored at the Barabati Stadium.[6]
No. | Score | Player | Team | Balls | Inns. | Opposing team | Date | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 102 | Ravi Shastri | India | 142 | 1 | England | 27 December 1984 | Lost |
2 | 104 | Ajay Jadeja | India | 126 | 2 | West Indies | 9 November 1994 | Won |
3 | 127* | Sachin Tendulkar | India | 138 | 2 | Kenya | 18 February 1996 | Won |
4 | 153* | Mohammad Azharuddin | India | 150 | 1 | Zimbabwe | 9 April 1998 | Won |
5 | 116* | Ajay Jadeja | India | 121 | 1 | Zimbabwe | 9 April 1998 | Won |
6 | 102 | Grant Flower | Zimbabwe | 118 | 2 | India | 9 April 1998 | Lost |
7 | 111* | Kevin Pietersen | England | 128 | 1 | India | 26 November 2008 | Lost |
8 | 111 | Ajinkya Rahane | India | 108 | 1 | Sri Lanka | 2 November 2014 | Won |
9 | 113 | Shikhar Dhawan | India | 107 | 1 | Sri Lanka | 2 November 2014 | Won |
10 | 150 | Yuvraj Singh | India | 127 | 1 | England | 19 January 2017 | Won |
11 | 134 | MS Dhoni | India | 122 | 1 | England | 19 January 2017 | Won |
12 | 102 | Eoin Morgan | England | 81 | 2 | India | 19 January 2017 | Lost |
International cricket five-wicket hauls
Key
Symbol | Meaning |
---|---|
The bowler was man of the match | |
10 or more wickets taken in the match | |
§ | One of two five-wicket hauls by the bowler in the match |
Date | Day the Test started or ODI was held |
Inn | Innings in which five-wicket haul was taken |
Overs | Number of overs bowled |
Runs | Number of runs conceded |
Wkts | Number of wickets taken |
Econ | Runs conceded per over |
Batsmen | Batsmen whose wickets were taken |
Result | Result of the match |
Tests
No. | Bowler | Date | Team | Opposing team | Inn | Overs | Runs | Wkts | Econ | Batsmen | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Ravi Ratnayeke | 4 January 1987 | Sri Lanka | India | 1 | 27.3 | 85 | 5 | 3.09 | India won[8] | |
2 | Narendra Hirwani | 8 November 1995 | India | New Zealand | 2 | 31 | 59 | 6 | 1.90 | Drawn[9] |
Records
Match Information:
Game Type No. of Games Test Matches 2[10] ODI 19[11] T20I 2
Test Match Statistics:
Category Information Highest Team Score India (400 All Out against Sri Lanka) Lowest Team Score Sri Lanka (142 All Out against India) Best Batting Performance Dilip Vengsarkar (166 Runs against Sri Lanka) Best Bowling Performance Narendra Hirwani (6/59 against New Zealand)
ODI Match Statistics:
Category Information Highest Team Score India (381/6 in 50 Overs against England Lowest Team Score West Indies (113 All Out in 34.2 Overs against Australia Best Batting Performance Mohammad Azharuddin (153* Runs against Zimbabwe) Best Bowling Performance Daren Powell (4/27 against India)
Notable events
- Kapil Dev bagged his 300th test wicket when he bowled Rumesh Ratnayake of Sri Lanka in January 1987
- The Stadium hosted matches in two World Cups hosted in the subcontinent - 1987 Cricket World Cup (Australia beat Zimbabwe by 70 runs)and 1996 Cricket World Cup (India beat Kenya by 7 Wickets)
- Mohammad Azharuddin and Ajay Jadeja put on an unbroken 275 run partnership against Zimbabwe which was the then highest ODI partnership
- The above partnership is the current world record for the 4th Wicket in ODI Cricket.[12]
- The partnership is the current world record for any unbroken partnership.[13]
- The most runs scored here in Test cricket was by India who were all out for 400 in 1987 and 298-8 in 1995. The third highest score was by Sri Lanka who were dismassed for 191 runs in 1987.
- In Test cricket, the most runs scored here was by Dilip Vengsarkar(166 runs) followed by Kapil Dev(60 runs) and Sri Lankan Roy Dias(58 runs).
- The most wickets were taken by Narendra Hirwani and Maninder Singh(6 wickets each) followed by Sri Lankan Ravi Ratnayeke and Kapil Dev (5 wickets each).
- In ODIs, the highest score was made by India who scored 381-6 in 2017.
- In ODIs, highest individual score at the venue is 152* by Mohammad Azharuddin against Zimbabwe.
- The most runs scored here was by Sachin Tendulkar with 469 runs, followed by Ajay Jadeja with 273 runs and M Azharuddin with 242 runs.
- The most wickets taken here was by Anil Kumble, Ishant Sharma and Ajit Agarkar all with 7 wickets each
- Yuvraj Singh got his 14th odi century as well as highest run 150 here
Cricket World Cup
Barabati Stadium has hosted One Day International (ODI) matches when India hosted the 1987 Cricket World Cup and 1996 Cricket World Cup. Barabati Stadium also hosted the 2013 Women's Cricket World Cup.
Australia vs Zimbabwe
India vs Kenya
2013 Women's Cricket World Cup
Group B
v |
||
- Australia Women won the toss and elected to bat
v |
||
- Pakistan Women won the toss and elected to bat
Super Sixes
v |
||
- South Africa Women won the toss and elected to bat
v |
||
- England Women won the toss and elected to field
v |
||
- Sri Lanka Women won the toss and elected to field
5th place playoff
v |
||
- Sri Lanka Women won the toss and elected to bat
7th place playoff
v |
||
- Pakistan Women won the toss and elected to bat
Indian Premier League
IPL 2010
IPL 2012
v |
Kolkata Knight Riders 127/5 (19 overs) | |
- Kolkata Knight Riders won the toss and elected to field.
- The match had a delayed start, but was not shortened.[14]
IPL 2014
v |
Chennai Super Kings 187/6 (20 overs) | |
- Chennai Super Kings won the toss and elected to field.
- Suresh Raina became the first player to score 3000 runs in IPL.
v |
Kolkata Knight Riders 150/1 (18 overs) | |
- Kolkata Knight Riders won the toss and elected to field.
- This was the 100th match for Robin Uthappa in his IPL career.
Mumbai Indians 141/5 (20 overs) |
v |
|
- Kolkata Knight Riders won the toss and elected to field.
- This was the 100th match for Yusuf Pathan in his IPL career
- This match was moved to a neutral venue as security constraints due to the elections prevented Eden Gardens from hosting.
Santosh Trophy 2012
This stadium was the main venue of the 2012 Santosh Trophy football tournament which was won by Services.
See also
References
- "Kolkata Knight Riders Crown Barabati Stadium as their new Homeground". DNA. Retrieved 10 May 2014.
- http://www.orisports.com/SheduleDetails.aspx?cId=ODYy
- "About **Barabati Stadium**". BCCI.
- "Harmanpreet, Mandhana and Veda to lead in T20 Challengers". Cricbuzz. Retrieved 24 December 2019.
- "Statsguru: Test matches / Batting records / Innings by innings list". Cricinfo. ESPN. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
- "Statsguru: One Day International matches / Batting records / Innings by innings list". Cricinfo. ESPN. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
- "Statsguru: Twenty20 Internationals / Batting records / Innings by innings list". Cricinfo. ESPN. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
- "3rd Test: India v Sri Lanka at Cuttack, Jan 4-7, 1987 | Cricket Scorecard". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 30 January 2016.
- "3rd Test: India v New Zealand at Cuttack, Nov 8-12, 1995 | Cricket Scorecard". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 30 January 2016.
- "Match result information of Test Matches played in Barabati Stadium". Cricinfo. Retrieved 7 April 2007.
- "Match result information of ODI Matches played in Barabati Stadium". Cricinfo. Retrieved 7 April 2007.
- "ODI Partnership Records". Cricinfo. Archived from the original on 28 May 2007. Retrieved 7 April 2007.
- "ODI Partnership Records". Cricinfo. Archived from the original on 28 May 2007. Retrieved 7 April 2007.
- Binoy, George (22 April 2012). "Kolkata earn hard-fought points". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 23 April 2012.
https://www.news18.com/cricketnext/newstopics/barabati-stadium.html