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Captain Roop Singh Stadium

Cricket ground in Gwalior, India

Captain Roop Singh Stadium

Summary

Cricket ground in Gwalior, India

FieldValue
ground_nameCaptian Roop Singh International Cricket Stadium
imageCaptain Roop singh stadium in Flood Lights Gwalior - panoramio.jpg
captionCaptain Roop Singh Stadium
countryIndia
locationGwalior, Madhya Pradesh
establishment1978
seating_capacity18,000
ownerMadhya Pradesh Cricket Association
operatorGwalior Division Cricket Association
tenantsMadhya Pradesh cricket team
end1Railway end
end2Pavilion end
internationaltrue
firstodidate21 January
firstodiyear1988
firstodihomeIndia
firstodiawayWest Indies
lastodidate24 February
lastodiyear2010
lastodihomeIndia
lastodiawaySouth Africa
date12 August
year2024
sourcehttp://www.espncricinfo.com/india/content/ground/58119.html Captain Roop Singh Stadium, ESPNcricinfo

Captain Roop Singh Stadium, is an international cricket stadium in Gwalior, India. The stadium has hosted 12 ODI matches, the first one was played between India and West Indies on 22 January 1988.

The ground has flood lights and has hosted day-night encounters. It can hold 18,000 people. It was originally a hockey stadium named after great Indian hockey player Roop Singh.

Ground profile

Captain Roop Singh Statue at Stadium

The stadium's first one-day international was held in 1988, when West Indies beat India by 73 runs, a match in which Narendra Hirwani made his one-day debut. Floodlights were installed in preparation for the 1996 Cricket World Cup fixture, also between India and West Indies. The stadium was also the venue for the first and only day-night Ranji Trophy final in 1996. The match was played between Mumbai and Delhi over five days and Mumbai won on the basis of a first-innings lead.

The pitch at the Captain Roop Singh Stadium has traditionally favoured the batsmen. In eight of the 10 ODIs, the team batting first has scored over 250. It has also been very lucky for most of the cricketers from India in India, especially Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar.

A pavilion at the Captain Roop Singh Stadium is named after Sachin Tendulkar who made the history by becoming the first cricketer to score a double century in an ODI.

Matches hosted

Pavilion End
Railway End

One Match of the 1996 Cricket World Cup was also played on this ground between India and West Indies.

In May 1998, Kenya beat India by 69 runs in ODI for first time. As Kenya sailed confidently into the final of Coca-Cola Triangular Series.

It was their fifth win at this level, and their second over a Test nation. Ravindu Shah notching his third fifty in only his fourth one-day international, dominated the first phase of the innings. When he fell for 70 including 50 in boundaries, the score was 93. For once, Kenya built on their sound start.

Maurice Odumbe peppered his 91-ball 83 with five sixes, while Hitesh Modi contributed a run-a-ball fifty. In India's reply, eight batsmen made it to double figures, but none beyond 33. Maurice Odumbe followed his biggest score in one-day internationals with his best bowling, taking three for 14 with his off-spin.

In February 2010, in a match between India and South Africa where India scored 401/3 and Sachin Tendulkar became the first male cricketer ever to score a double century in an ODI ending on 200 not out. This match was comfortably won by India by 153 runs, where South Africa was bowled out for 248 in 42.5 Overs.

Cricket World Cups

This stadium has hosted One Day International (ODI) match for 1996 Cricket World Cup, when India was a host/co-host.

ICC World Cup 1996, 5th Match, Group B

List of 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 Edgbaston.
  • The column title Date refers to the date the match started.
  • The column title Result refers to the player's team result

One Day Internationals

No.ScorePlayerTeamBallsInns.Opposing teamDateResult
1113*Carl Hooper97122 January 1988url=https://www.espncricinfo.com/series/16728/scorecard/64319/india-vs-west-indies-6th-odi-west-indies-tour-of-india-1987-88title=6th ODI, West Indies tour of India at Gwalior, Jan 22 1988work=ESPNcricinfoaccess-date=24 August 2019}}
2138*Desmond Haynes164127 October 1989url=https://www.espncricinfo.com/series/8539/scorecard/65926/england-vs-west-indies-12th-match-mrf-world-series--nehru-cup--1989-90title=12th Match, MRF World Series (Nehru Cup) at Gwalior, Oct 27 1989work=ESPNcricinfoaccess-date=24 August 2019}}
3129Robin Smith14514 March 1993url=https://www.espncricinfo.com/series/16457/scorecard/64416/india-vs-england-6th-odi-england-tour-of-india-1992-93title=6th ODI, England tour of India at Gwalior, Mar 4 1993work=ESPNcricinfoaccess-date=24 August 2019}}
4134*Navjot Singh Sidhu16024 March 1993Won
5105*Graeme Hick10915 March 1993url=https://www.espncricinfo.com/series/16457/scorecard/64417/india-vs-england-7th-odi-england-tour-of-india-1992-93title=7th ODI, England tour of India at Gwalior, Mar 5 1993work=ESPNcricinfoaccess-date=24 August 2019}}
6153*Sourav Ganguly150111 November 1999url=https://www.espncricinfo.com/series/15772/scorecard/64632/india-vs-new-zealand-3rd-odi-new-zealand-tour-of-india-1999-00title=3rd ODI, New Zealand tour of India at Gwalior, Nov 11 1999work=ESPNcricinfoaccess-date=24 August 2019}}
7100Sachin Tendulkar119126 October 2003url=https://www.espncricinfo.com/series/8577/scorecard/66365/india-vs-australia-2nd-match-tvs-cup--india--2003-04title=2nd Match (D/N), TVS Cup (India) at Gwalior, Oct 26 2003work=ESPNcricinfoaccess-date=24 August 2019}}
8102VVS Laxman134126 October 2003Won
9200*Sachin Tendulkar147124 February 2010url=https://www.espncricinfo.com/series/13366/scorecard/441828/india-vs-south-africa-2nd-odi-south-africa-tour-of-india-2009-10title=2nd ODI (D/N), South Africa tour of India at Gwalior, Feb 24 2010work=ESPNcricinfoaccess-date=24 August 2019}}
10114*A. B. de Villiers101224 February 2010Lost

International cricket five-wicket hauls

ODIs

No.BowlerDateTeamOpponentInnOversRunsWktsEconBatsmenResult
1Aaqib JavedPakistan won

References

References

  1. "Captain Roop Singh Stadium – India – Cricket Grounds – ESPNcricinfo".
  2. "6th ODI, West Indies tour of India at Gwalior, Jan 22 1988". ESPNcricinfo.
  3. "12th Match, MRF World Series (Nehru Cup) at Gwalior, Oct 27 1989". ESPNcricinfo.
  4. "6th ODI, England tour of India at Gwalior, Mar 4 1993". ESPNcricinfo.
  5. "7th ODI, England tour of India at Gwalior, Mar 5 1993". ESPNcricinfo.
  6. "3rd ODI, New Zealand tour of India at Gwalior, Nov 11 1999". ESPNcricinfo.
  7. "2nd Match (D/N), TVS Cup (India) at Gwalior, Oct 26 2003". ESPNcricinfo.
  8. "2nd ODI (D/N), South Africa tour of India at Gwalior, Feb 24 2010". ESPNcricinfo.
  9. "2nd match: Pakistan v Sri Lanka at Gwalior, May 12, 1997 – Cricket Scorecard – ESPNcricinfo".
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