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Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium

International cricket Stadium in Rawalpindi


International cricket Stadium in Rawalpindi

FieldValue
nameRawalpindi Cricket Stadium
native_name(Urdu)
nicknameRCS
image_size300px
coordinates
capacity15,000
ownerPakistan Cricket Board
operatorPakistan Cricket Board
mapframe-zoom14
mapframe-markercricket
public_transitRawalpindi Cricket Stadium
embedded{{Infobox cricket ground
embedyes
countryPakistan
locationRawalpindi, Punjab, Pakistan,
establishment
tenantsPakistan national cricket team
Islamabad United
internationaltrue
firsttestdate9–14 December
firsttestyear1993
firsttesthomePakistan
firsttestawayZimbabwe
lasttestdate20–24 October
lasttestyear2025
lasttesthomePakistan
lasttestawaySouth Africa
firstodidate19 January
firstodiyear1992
firstodihomePakistan
firstodiawaySri Lanka
lastodidate16 November
lastodiyear2025
lastodihomePakistan
lastodiawaySri Lanka
firstt20idate7 November
firstt20iyear2020
firstt20ihomePakistan
firstt20iawayZimbabwe
lastt20idate29 November
lastt20iyear2025
lastt20ihomePakistan
lastt20iawaySri Lanka
date29 November
year2025
sourcehttp://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/ground/59006.html Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium, Cricinfo

| mapframe-zoom = 14 | mapframe-marker = cricket Islamabad United

Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium is a cricket stadium located in Rawalpindi, Punjab province of Pakistan. It is located close to Pir Meher Ali Shah University and Rawalpindi Arts Council and has an estimated capacity of 15,000. The first international match at the stadium was played on 19 January 1992, when Sri Lanka faced Pakistan in an ODI. The stadium hosted its first Test match in 1993, when Zimbabwe toured Pakistan.

Test cricket returned to Pakistan during the 2019 two-match Test series against Sri Lanka. The first test match was held from 11–15 December 2019 at the Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium.

History

Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium was established in 1992 and replaced Pindi Club Ground as an international stadium.

It is the home ground of Islamabad United and Northern cricket team. Before the construction of Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium, Rawalpindi Club Cricket Ground had been used as a venue for international matches, including one Test match against New Zealand that was held in March 1965.

Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium was a prime spot in the 1995–96 Cricket World Cup. With an eye on the that World Cup, Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) unveiled a new Test venue for the second Test against Zimbabwe in Rawalpindi, becoming the country's 14th Test ground. The floodlights were added in late 2001 when the Australians were set to tour the region. The stadium is just 20 minutes from the capital Islamabad.

This stadium was the home ground and international debut ground of the world's fastest bowler Shoaib Akhtar who is nicknamed the Rawalpindi Express.

In the 2nd ODI of 2004 Samsung ODI series, while other Indian batters are getting struggling with the pace and spin attack of Pakistan, Sachin Tendulkar played a courageous knock of 141 (135) in this ground.

Return of international cricket

In April 2018, the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) announced that the venue, along with several others in the country, would get a makeover to get them ready for future international matches and fixtures in the Pakistan Super League.

Pakistan vs Sri Lanka Test match

In October 2019, the PCB proposed hosting the two Test matches in Pakistan, instead of the UAE, at venues in Rawalpindi and Karachi. Sri Lanka Cricket said that they were "very positive" with regards to the progress of playing Test cricket in Pakistan. In November 2019, the PCB confirmed the dates and venues for the Test series, with the first test match taking place in Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium from 11 to 15 December. It was the first test match played at this venue after 15 years and first International match after 13 years.

2024–25 renovation

In preparation for the 2025 ICC Champions Trophy, the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) renovates the Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium to meet international standards. Initially budgeted at PKR 1.5 billion, costs rose to PKR 18 billion due to additional upgrades across multiple venues like Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore and National Stadium, Karachi. The refurbishment includes an upgraded main pavilion and media boxes, new seating, 350 LED floodlights, and improved hospitality boxes. Despite concerns about delays, PCB Chairman Mohsin Naqvi has assured timely completion. The stadium hosts three group-stage matches, featuring teams like Pakistan, Australia, South Africa, New Zealand, and Bangladesh.

On 8 May 2025 during the 2025 India–Pakistan strikes, a drone from India landed inside the stadium complex before the start of a Pakistan Super League Twenty20 match, prompting the Pakistan Cricket Board to transfer the games to the United Arab Emirates.

Cricket World Cup

This Stadium hosted three ODI matches during the 1996 Cricket World Cup.

1996 Cricket World Cup



ICC Champions Trophy

Main article: 2025 ICC Champions Trophy

  • Kane Williamson (NZ) surpassed Stephen Fleming as New Zealand's highest run-scorer in ICC ODI tournaments.
  • Rachin Ravindra (NZ) completed 1,000 runs in ODIs in 26 innings. He became the fifth-fastest New Zealand batter to reach this milestone in ODIs.
  • Rachin Ravindra (NZ) became the first New Zealand batter to score 4 centuries in ICC ODI events.
  • Glenn Phillips (NZ) completed 1,000 runs in ODIs.
  • As a result of this match, India and New Zealand qualified for the semi-finals and Pakistan and Bangladesh were eliminated.

No toss.

  • No play was possible due to rain.

Scorecard No toss.

  • No play was possible due to rain.

Records

  • First Test: Dec 9–14, 1993 – Pakistan v Zimbabwe
  • First ODI: 19 Jan 1992 – Pakistan v Sri Lanka.
  • First T20I: 7 Jan 2020 – Pakistan v Zimbabwe.

Tests

RecordRunsTeam/playerOppositionDate
Highest team total657ENG EnglandPAK Pakistan1 December 2022
Lowest team total139/10West Indies West IndiesPAK Pakistan29 November 1997
Highest individual score270IND Rahul DravidPAK Pakistan13 April 2004
Highest partnership323PAK Aamer Sohail & Inzamam-ul-HaqWest Indies West Indies29 November 1997

One Day Internationals

RecordRunsTeam/playerOppositionDate
Highest team total337/3PAK PakistanNZ New Zealand29 April 2023
Lowest team total104/10ZIM ZimbabweSri Lanka Sri Lanka29 November 1997
Highest individual score188*SA Gary KirstenUAE United Arab Emirates16 February 1996
Highest partnership204PAK Saleem Malik & Inzamam-ul-HaqSri Lanka Sri Lanka19 November 1992

T20 Internationals

RecordRunsTeam/playerOppositionDate
Highest team total194/4NZ New ZealandPAK Pakistan24 April 2023
Lowest team total90NZ New ZealandPAK Pakistan12 April 2024
Highest individual score104NZ Mark ChapmanPAK Pakistan24 April 2023
Highest partnership121*NZ Mark Chapman & James NeeshamPAK Pakistan24 April 2023

List of five wicket hauls

Key

SymbolMeaning
DateDay the Test started or ODI was held
InnInnings in which five-wicket haul was taken
OversNumber of overs bowled.
RunsNumber of runs conceded
WktsNumber of wickets taken
EconRuns conceded per over
DrawnThe match was drawn.

Tests

23 five-wicket hauls have been taken in Test matches at the ground.

No.BowlerDateTeamOpposing teamInnOversRunsWktsResult
1Waqar YounisPakistan won
2Heath StreakPakistan won
3Wasim AkramPakistan won
4Mushtaq AhmedPakistan won
5Chris CairnsPakistan won
6Mohammad ZahidPakistan won
7Saqlain MushtaqDrawn
8Courtney WalshPakistan won
9Stuart MacGillAustralia won
10Anrich NortjePakistan won
11Hasan AliPakistan won
12George LindePakistan won
13Hasan AliPakistan won
14Noman AliDrawn
15Will JacksEngland won
16Mehidy Hasan MirazBangladesh won
17Khurram ShahzadBangladesh won
18Hasan MahmudBangladesh won
19Sajid KhanPakistan won
20Noman AliPakistan won
21Keshav MaharajSouth Africa won
22Asif AfridiSouth Africa won
23Simon HarmerSouth Africa won

One Day Internationals

Five five-wicket hauls have been taken in One Day Internationals at the ground.

No.BowlerDateTeamOpposing teamInnOversRunsWktsEconResult
1Saqlain MushtaqPakistan won
2Shaheen AfridiPakistan won
3Iftikhar AhmedPakistan won
4Mohammad HasnainTied
5Blessing MuzarabaniTied

References

References

  1. "rawalpindi-cricket-stadium overview". ESPNcicinfo.
  2. "Full Scorecard of Pakistan vs Sri Lanka 5th ODI 1991/92 - Score Report {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  3. "Full Scorecard of Pakistan vs Zimbabwe 2nd Test 1993/94 - Score Report {{!}} ESPNcricinfo.com".
  4. "Documentary: Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium".
  5. (2005-10-25). "Pakistan ground guide: Rawalpindi". [[BBC News]].
  6. "Full Scorecard of New Zealand vs Pakistan 1st Test 1964/65 - Score Report".
  7. "Pakistan plans makeover for stadiums". International Cricket Council.
  8. "PCB propose Rawalpindi and Karachi as venues for Sri Lanka Test series". ESPN Cricinfo.
  9. "SLC 'very positive' about touring Pakistan in December". ESPN Cricinfo.
  10. "Pakistan to play Sri Lanka Tests in front of home crowds". Pakistan Cricket Board.
  11. "Pakistan pacers shine as Tests come home, but Sri Lanka hold steady". ICC Cricket.com.
  12. Yaqoob, Mohammad. (2025-02-13). "Venues’ upgrade cost increase forces PCB to seek overdraft".
  13. "Renovation of Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium nears completion ahead of ICC Champions trophy".
  14. Express, Tribune. (2025-01-11). "ICC delegation to assess Rawalpindi stadium for Champions Trophy 2025".
  15. Ali, Rizwan. (2025-05-09). "Pakistan moves its T20 cricket tournament to Dubai because of concerns over India conflict".
  16. "Michael Bracewell's career-best 4-26 restricts Bangladesh". Cricbuzz.
  17. "Mustafizur removes Conway to bring back life into the game for Bangladesh". [[International Cricket Council.
  18. "India, New Zealand qualify for Champions Trophy 2025 semifinals; Pakistan, Bangladesh knocked out". IndiaTV News.
  19. "Statistics - Statsguru - Test Matches - Bowling Records". ESPN Cricinfo.
  20. "Statistics - Statsguru - One-Day Internationals - Bowling Records". ESPN Cricinfo.
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