M. Chinnaswamy Stadium

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M. Chinnaswamy Stadium
Chinnaswamy Stadium May 2014.jpg
Inside view of the stadium
Ground information
LocationBangalore, Karnataka, India
Home clubKarnataka cricket team
Karnataka women's cricket team
Royal Challengers Bangalore
EstablishmentMay 1969 (54 years ago) (1969-05)
Capacity40,000
OwnerGovernment of Karnataka
OperatorKarnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA)
Tenants
End names
Pavilion End
BEML End[1]
International information
First Test22–27 November 1974:
 India v  West Indies
Last Test12–16 March 2022:
 India v  Sri Lanka
First ODI26 September 1982:
 India v  Sri Lanka
Last ODI19 January 2020:
 India v  Australia
First T20I25 December 2012:
 India v  Pakistan
Last T20I19 June 2022:
 India v  South Africa
Only women's Test31 October – 2 November 1976:
 India v  West Indies
First WODI12 December 1997:
 Australia v  South Africa
Last WODI8 July 2015:
 India v  New Zealand
First WT20I30 November 2014:
 India v  South Africa
Last WT20I28 March 2016:
 Sri Lanka v  South Africa
As of 19 June 2022
Source: Cricinfo

The M. Chinnaswamy Stadium is a cricket stadium in Bangalore, Karnataka, India. It is owned by Government of Karnataka and operated by Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA).[2]

Flanked by the picturesque Cubbon Park, Queen's Road, Cubbon and uptown MG Road, this five-decade-old stadium is situated in the heart of the city of Bangalore. It regularly hosts Test, ODI, T20I and first-class cricket matches, as well as musical, cultural events. The stadium is the home ground of the Karnataka state cricket team, Karnataka women's cricket team and IPL franchise Royal Challengers Bangalore.[3] It is owned by the Government of Karnataka and has been leased out to the KSCA for a period of 100 years.

Formerly known as the Karnataka State Cricket Association Stadium, it was later rechristened in tribute to Mangalam Chinnaswamy Mudaliar, a lawyer from Mandya and the founding member of the Mysore State Cricket Association.[4] He served the KSCA for four decades and was also president of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) from 1977 to 1980, latter's National Cricket Academy also situated in the premises of this stadium.

It is the first cricket stadium in the world to use solar panels to generate a bulk of the electricity needed to run the stadium.[5] The panels were procured through the "Go Green" initiative of the KSCA.[6][7] In 2016 a water purification plant was added, [8] and by January 2017 a system of aeration and drainage was in place to avoid matches being curtailed due to a wet outfield.[9]

History[edit]

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.[10][11]

The Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA) stadium, as it was known was later renamed as a tribute to M. Chinnaswamy Mudaliar, who was the BCCI President from 1977 to 1980 and had served the KSCA.[10][11] Born in Mandya in 1900, he was the founding member of the Mysore State Cricket Association and a lawyer by profession.[4] He helped by other eminent people, was instrumental in prevailing upon the Karnataka Government of Karnataka to allot the ground for cricket in the prime MG Road area in 1969.[12]

The first Test played at this stadium was on 22–27 November 1974.[11] Incidentally, this was the debut 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 2007, in the 3rd Test Match between India and Pakistan, Sourav Ganguly and Yuvraj Singh led a 300 run partnership fightback from 61/4, breaking several records. India's 365/5 at stumps was the highest first day score in 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.

Since 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. Chinnaswamy Stadium is also the home ground of the Bangalore franchise team, the Royal Challengers Bangalore. It was painted in red and yellow, the team colours of the Royal Challengers and also the colours of the Karnataka flag (cultural flag). This stadium also served as the venue for the 1996 Miss World pageant, when it first time held inthe country.[13]

Features[edit]

Karnataka state cricket association claim their stadium is world's only solar powered cricket stadium. They inspired to install solar system at the satdium from Germany's Freiburg football stadium, which is fully powered by solar energy. KSCA initiated the ₹4.5 Cr and 400 KW project in February 2015.[14]

The venue has 40,000 seats. It's ground is small thus it has small boundaries, its side boundaries are maximum 55-56 meters, due to it batting teams often score high totals there. the pitch of Chinnaswamy stadium[15] is batting friendly and it helps batsman to paly their shots with ease. It is evident by the fact that in 2023 Indian Premier League edition, teams scored 210 plus runs on four and 170+ on three occasions in 8 innings played there. As per Royal Challengers Bangalore's bowler Harshal Patel "It is hard to bowl at the Chinnaswamy. It is a small ground and the ball generally flies".[16][17][18][19][20]

Cricket World Cup matches[edit]

This stadium has hosted One Day International (ODI) matches for all editions of the World cups, when India was a host/co-host.

1987 ICC Cricket World Cup[edit]

14 October 1986
Scorecard
India 
252/7 (50 overs)
v
 New Zealand
236/8 (50 overs)
Navjot Sidhu 75 (71)
Dipak Patel 3/36 (10 overs)
Ken Rutherford 75 (95)
Maninder Singh 2/40 (10 overs)
India won by 16 runs
M.Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore, India
Umpires: David Archer and Dickie Bird
Player of the match: Kapil Dev

1996 ICC Cricket World Cup[edit]

9 March 1996
scorecard
India 
287/8 (50 overs)
v
 Pakistan
248/9 (49 overs)
Navjot Sidhu 93 (115)
Mushtaq Ahmed 2/56 (10 overs)
Aamer Sohail 55 (46)
Venkatesh Prasad 3/45 (10 overs)
India won by 39 runs
M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore, India
Umpires: Steve Bucknor and David Shepherd
Player of the match: Navjot Sidhu
  • Pakistan was fined 1 over for a slow over rate

2011 Cricket World Cup[edit]

27 February 2011
14:30 (D/N)
Scorecard
India 
338 (49.5 overs)
v
 England
338/8 (50 overs)
Sachin Tendulkar 120 (115)
Tim Bresnan 5/48 (10 overs)
Andrew Strauss 158 (145)
Zaheer Khan 3/64 (10 overs)
Match tied
M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru
Umpires: Billy Bowden (NZ) and Marais Erasmus (SA)
Player of the match: Andrew Strauss (Eng)
  • India won the toss and elected to bat.

Having scored 370 in their previous game, India elected to bat after winning the toss against England. Virender Sehwag, fresh from his 175 the previous game blazed away at the start of the innings, hitting a rapid 35 before falling to Tim Bresnan. Sachin Tendulkar then took over the innings, and was ably assisted by Gautam Gambhir. The duo continued at a very rapid pace and added 133 runs until Gambhir was bowled by Graeme Swann for 51. Tendulkar went on to get his hundred, his 47th in ODIs and fifth at World Cups, the most by anyone in the history of the tournament.[21] When he was eventually dismissed for 120, India were strongly placed at 236/3 in the 39th over. Yuvraj Singh and MS Dhoni continued on at a brisk pace, with Yuvraj reaching his fifty off just 45 balls. India passed 300 in the 45th over, but then Yuvraj and Dhoni fell off consecutive balls to trigger a collapse. Bresnan took three wickets in four balls to get his five-for, his first in ODIs,[22] and India did not bat their 50 overs, being all out for 338 with a ball left.

England got off to a very strong start in their chase, with both Andrew Strauss and Kevin Pietersen going a rapid pace. Pietersen was dismissed for 31 in a freak way off Munaf Patel, but Strauss went on to get his fifty. Jonathan Trott was unable to convert a start, but Strauss and Ian Bell then indulged in a sensational stand of 170 runs for the third wicket. The duo also easily kept the required run rate well under control, keeping it around 7. Strauss reached his century off just 99 balls, and Bell took 45 to reach his half-century. England were 280/2 after 42 overs, when Zaheer Khan produced a sensational over, getting Bell caught at mid-off for 69 and catching Strauss plumb in front for a brilliant 158, his highest score in ODIs.[23] Paul Collingwood and Matt Prior went cheaply, but some lusty blows from Bresnan and Swann kept England in the hunt, with 14 required off the last over. Swann managed 3 off the first 2 balls before Ajmal Shahzad hit a six off the third to leave England with just 5 from 3. A single and a two later meant that 2 was required off the last ball with all three results possible. Swann dug the last ball from Patel away for a single, which meant that the game was tied.


2 March 2011
14:30 (D/N)
Scorecard
England 
327/8 (50 overs)
v
 Ireland
329/7 (49.1 overs)
Jonathan Trott 92 (92)
Trent Johnston 2/58 (10 overs)
Kevin O'Brien 113 (63)
Graeme Swann 3/47 (10 overs)
Ireland won by 3 wickets
M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru
Umpires: Aleem Dar (Pak) and Billy Bowden (NZ)
Player of the match: Kevin O'Brien (Ire)
  • England won the toss and elected to bat.

England batted first with Jonathan Trott making 92 from 92 balls. During his innings, Trott reached 1,000 runs in ODI cricket, from just 21 innings, equalling the record set by Vivian Richards and teammate Kevin Pietersen.[24] England finished on 327/8 from their 50 overs. In reply, Ireland lost their captain, William Porterfield with the very first ball, and were struggling at 111/5. Kevin O'Brien then made 100 in just 50 balls, the fastest century in World Cup history.[25] Ireland chased down the 327 set by England, winning by three wickets. It was the largest successful run chase in World Cup history,[26] until Pakistan surpassed this in 2023.[27]


6 March 2011
14:30 (D/N)
Scorecard
Ireland 
207 (47.5 overs)
v
 India
210/5 (46 overs)
William Porterfield 75 (104)
Yuvraj Singh 5/31 (10 overs)
Yuvraj Singh 50* (75)
Trent Johnston 2/16 (5 overs)
India won by 5 wickets
M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru
Umpires: Billy Bowden (NZ) and Rod Tucker (Aus)
Player of the match: Yuvraj Singh (Ind)
  • India won the toss and elected to field.

Yuvraj Singh became the first player to score a 50 and take 5 wickets in a World Cup match.[28]


13 March 2011
14:30 (D/N)
Scorecard
Australia 
324/6 (50 overs)
v
 Kenya
264/6 (50 overs)
Michael Clarke 93 (80)
Nehemiah Odhiambo 3/57 (10 overs)
Collins Obuya 98* (129)
Shaun Tait 2/49 (8 overs)
Australia won by 60 runs
M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru
Umpires: Asad Rauf (Pak) and Richard Kettleborough (Eng)
Player of the match: Collins Obuya (Ken)
  • Australia won the toss and elected to bat.

Kenya's total of 264 is their highest score in World Cup matches, beating their previous best of 254 against Sri Lanka in the 1996 Cricket World Cup.[29]


16 March 2011
14:30 (D/N)
Scorecard
Canada 
211 (45.4 overs)
v
 Australia
212/3 (34.5 overs)
Hiral Patel 54 (45)
Brett Lee 4/46 (8.4 overs)
Shane Watson 94 (90)
John Davison 1/29 (4 overs)
Australia won by 7 wickets
M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru
Umpires: Billy Bowden (NZ) and Amiesh Saheba (Ind)
Player of the match: Shane Watson (Aus)
  • Canada won the toss and elected to bat.

2023 Cricket World Cup[edit]

20 October 2023
14:00 (D/N)
Scorecard
Australia 
367/9 (50 overs)
v
 Pakistan
305 (45.3 overs)
David Warner 163 (124)
Shaheen Afridi 5/54 (10 overs)
Imam-ul-Haq 70 (71)
Adam Zampa 4/53 (10 overs)
Australia won by 62 runs
M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru
Umpires: Chris Brown (NZ) and Richard Illingworth (Eng)
Player of the match: David Warner (Aus)
  • Pakistan won the toss and elected to field.
  • Adam Zampa (Aus) took his 150th wicket in ODIs.[30]

26 October 2023
14:00 (D/N)
Scorecard
England 
156 (33.2 overs)
v
 Sri Lanka
160/2 (25.4 overs)
Ben Stokes 43 (73)
Lahiru Kumara 3/35 (7 overs)
Pathum Nissanka 77* (83)
David Willey 2/30 (5 overs)
Sri Lanka won by 8 wickets
M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru
Umpires: Chris Brown (NZ) and Adrian Holdstock (SA)
Player of the match: Lahiru Kumara (SL)
  • England won the toss and elected to bat.

4 November 2023
10:30
Scorecard
New Zealand 
401/6 (50 overs)
v
 Pakistan
200/1 (25.3 overs)
Rachin Ravindra 108 (94)
Mohammad Wasim Jr. 3/60 (10 overs)
Fakhar Zaman 126* (81)
Tim Southee 1/27 (5 overs)
Pakistan won by 21 runs (DLS method)
M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru
Umpires: Richard Kettleborough (Eng) and Paul Wilson (Aus)
Player of the match: Fakhar Zaman (Pak)
  • Pakistan won the toss and elected to field.
  • No further play was possible due to rain.
  • Hasan Ali (Pak) took his 100th wicket in ODIs.[31]
  • South Africa qualified for the semi-finals as a result of this match.[32]

9 November 2023
14:00 (D/N)
Scorecard
Sri Lanka 
171 (46.4 overs)
v
 New Zealand
172/5 (23.2 overs)
Kusal Perera 51 (28)
Trent Boult 3/37 (10 overs)
Devon Conway 45 (42)
Angelo Mathews 2/29 (4 overs)
New Zealand won by 5 wickets
M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru
Umpires: Adrian Holdstock (SA) and Joel Wilson (WI)
Player of the match: Trent Boult (NZ)
  • New Zealand won the toss and elected to field.
  • Trent Boult (NZ) became the 3rd bowler to have taken 600 wickets for New Zealand in all international cricket formats. He also became the first ever bowler to have taken 50 wickets for New Zealand at the Cricket World Cup.[33]
  • Mitchell Santner (NZ) equaled Daniel Vettori's record for most wickets taken by a New Zealand player in a Cricket World Cup edition.[34]

12 November 2023
14:00 (D/N)
Scorecard
India 
410/4 (50 overs)
v
 Netherlands
250 (47.5 overs)
Shreyas Iyer 128* (94)
Bas de Leede 2/82 (10 overs)
Teja Nidamanuru 54 (39)
Mohammed Siraj 2/29 (6 overs)
India won by 160 runs
M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore
Umpires: Chris Gaffaney (NZ) and Michael Gough (Eng)
Player of the match: Shreyas Iyer (Ind)

2016 World Twenty20[edit]

20 March
19:30 (D/N)
Scorecard
Sri Lanka 
122/9 (20 overs)
v
 West Indies
127/3 (18.2 overs)
Thisara Perera 40 (29)
Samuel Badree 3/12 (4 overs)
Andre Fletcher 84* (64)
Milinda Siriwardana 2/33 (4 overs)
West Indies won by 7 wickets
M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru
Umpires: Aleem Dar (Pak) and Johan Cloete (SA)
Player of the match: Andre Fletcher (WI)
  • West Indies won the toss and elected to field.

21 March
19:30 (D/N)
Scorecard
Bangladesh 
156/5 (20 overs)
v
 Australia
157/7 (18.3 overs)
Mahmudullah 49* (29)
Adam Zampa 3/23 (4 overs)
Usman Khawaja 58 (45)
Shakib Al Hasan 3/27 (4 overs)
Australia won by 3 wickets
M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru
Umpires: Ian Gould (Eng) and Richard Kettleborough (Eng)
Player of the match: Adam Zampa (Aus)
  • Australia won the toss and elected to field.
  • Saqlain Sajib (Ban) made his T20I debut.
  • David Warner (Aus) became the fourth player to score more than 6,000 runs in T20 cricket.[36]

23 March
19:30 (D/N)
Scorecard
India 
146/7 (20 overs)
v
 Bangladesh
145/9 (20 overs)
Suresh Raina 30 (23)
Mustafizur Rahman 2/34 (4 overs)
Tamim Iqbal 35 (32)
Ravichandran Ashwin 2/20 (4 overs)
India won by 1 run
M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru
Umpires: Aleem Dar (Pak) and Bruce Oxenford (Aus)
Player of the match: Ravichandran Ashwin (Ind)
  • Bangladesh won the toss and elected to field.
  • Bangladesh were eliminated as a result of this match.[37]
  • This was the fourth one-run win in a World Twenty20 match.[38]
  • This was the first time three wickets fell from the last three balls for a chasing side in a T20I match.[38]
  • MS Dhoni became the fifth player for India to pass 1,000 runs in T20Is.[38]

Domestic Cricket[edit]

The arena is regular venue of domestic cricket. It is home ground of Karnataka cricket team. Since 2008, it is the home ground of IPL team Royal Challengers Bangalore. The first ever game of the IPL was held at the venue. In 1998-99 Ranji trophy final at the venue, Karnataka won against Madhya Pradesh (MP). In June 2022, 2021-22 edition final of the tournament MP won its maiden title by defeating Mumbai cricket team. 2022-23 Ranji semifinal held at the venue Saurashtra cricket team defeated Karnataka.[39][40]

In the final of the 2019-20 Vijay Hazare trophy Karnataka defeated Tamilnadu there. In October 2018, in the tournament's edition Mumbai won the final by defeating Delhi at the venue.[41][42]

Events[edit]

Miss World 1996 beauty pageant was held in this stadium, it was the first ever that this event was organised in India. Irene Skliva of Greece became the winner.

Records and statistics[edit]

On 14 June 2018, after being granted 'Test Status' by the ICC in 2017, Afghanistan played their first ever test match at this venue against India.[43]

Test match records[edit]

Batting[edit]

Bowling[edit]

Team records[edit]

Partnership records[edit]

All records correct as of 10 November 2015.

One day international match records[edit]

Highest total: 383–6India v Australia 2 November 2013. The second was 347–2Australia v India, the third and fourth highest scores were tied at 338 in the India-England in 2011 world cup match.

Highest Run Chase : 329–7Ireland scored 329 (in 49.1 overs) against England's 327 runs from 50 overs, 2 March 2011, during world cup match.

Highest individual score: 209 scored by Rohit Sharma

The most runs were scored by Sachin Tendulkar (534 runs) followed by Rohit Sharma (437 runs) and Virender Sehwag (328 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)

IPL records[53][edit]

Highest total - 263 - RCB v Pune Warriors, 2013

Highest individual score - CH Gayle, 175 (66 balls) for RCB v Pune Warriors, 2013

Best Bowling figures - S Badree, 4/9 for RCB v MI, 2017

Gallery[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. "Chinnaswamy Stadium". www.bcci.tv. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
  2. "M.Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru". The Times of India. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Statistics / Statsguru / Test matches / Partnership records / M. Chinnaswamy Stadium / Partnership runs". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 10 November 2015.
  4. 4.0 4.1 S. S. Shreekumar (2021). Karnataka Cricket's Hall of Fame And It's Corridors. Chennai: Clever Fox Publishing. p. 103. ISBN 9789390850730.
  5. "A sunny pitch at Chinnaswamy stadium". The Hindu. 10 April 2015. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  6. "Chinnaswamy Stadium's history". TheSportsDB.
  7. "Chinnaswamy Stadium". Sports24. 13 October 2010.
  8. Anirudh R Gangavaram (21 April 2016). "KSCA to modernize the Chinnaswamy stadium". CricTracker.
  9. "Historic: Bengaluru's M Chinnaswamy Stadium gets next-generation outfield to fight rain delays". OneIndia. 3 August 2017 – via MyKhel.
  10. 10.0 10.1 "M Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore, India". Hindustan Times. 26 February 2005. Retrieved 21 February 2021.
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 "Bengaluru's M Chinnaswamy Stadium: Where iconic matches were fought". Bangalore Mirror. 15 October 2017. Retrieved 21 February 2021.
  12. "'The frank, honest MC I knew'". The New Indian Express. 5 November 2012. Retrieved 17 February 2022.
  13. "Miss World Crowned As Indians Protest". The New York Times. Reuters. 24 November 1996.
  14. Joshi, Bharath (24 March 2015). "Bengaluru's Chinnaswamy stadium: World's first solar-powered cricket ground". The Economic Times. ISSN 0013-0389. Retrieved 7 October 2023.
  15. https://cricketwatch.co.in/m-chinnaswamy-stadium-bengaluru-pitch-report-in-hindi/
  16. Sunam, Ashim (23 April 2023). "Short boundaries big challenge: Harshal". The Times of India. Retrieved 7 October 2023.
  17. "ICC CWC 2023 smallest ground..." The Free Press Journal. Retrieved 7 October 2023.
  18. "M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru". The Board of Control for Cricket in India. Retrieved 21 January 2021.
  19. Husain, Adil (26 April 2023). "M Chinnaswamy Stadium Pitch Report, RCB vs KKR: Small Boundaries at Bengaluru Set to Ignite High-Scoring Encounter as Royal Challengers Bangalore face-off against Kolkata Knight Riders, Check Team Stats, Record, & All Details here". Inside Sport India. Retrieved 7 October 2023.
  20. Husain, Adil (15 April 2023). "Chinnaswamy Pitch Report, RCB vs DC: Small Boundaries Sets Stage for Run-Fest, Leg Spinners to Play Pivotal Role in Middle Overs, Check Team Stats, Record, & All Details here". Inside Sport India. Retrieved 7 October 2023.
  21. Soneji, Pranav. "Cricket World Cup: England and India in thrilling tie". BBC Sport. Retrieved 27 February 2010.
  22. "Andrew Strauss helps England tie with India in World Cup thriller". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 27 February 2010.
  23. Hoult, Nick. "Cricket World Cup 2011: England and India share in dramatic tie in Bangalore". The Telegraph. London. Retrieved 27 February 2010.
  24. "Kevin's record ton helps Ireland stun England". pakistantimes. Archived from the original on 24 July 2011. Retrieved 3 March 2010.
  25. Sheringham, Sam. "Cricket World Cup: Brilliant Ireland shock England". BBC Sport. Retrieved 3 March 2010.
  26. "World Cup shock as Ireland beat England after record fastest ton". theage.com. Melbourne. Retrieved 3 March 2010.
  27. "ODI World Cup 2023: Pakistan completes highest run chase in WC history". Sportstar. 10 October 2023. Retrieved 11 October 2023.
  28. "Yuvraj Singh, ICC World Cup 2011". 6 March 2011.
  29. McGlashan, Andrew. "Australia win easily but Kenya regain pride". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 16 March 2010.
  30. "Stoinis, Zampa come up clutch to down Pakistan". Cricket Australia. Retrieved 21 October 2023.
  31. "World Cup 2023 PAK vs NZ: Pakistan's Hasan Ali completes 100 ODI wickets". Business Standard. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  32. "World Cup 2023: South Africa join India as 2nd team to qualify for semi-finals as Pakistan beat New Zealand". Today India. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  33. "Trent Boult becomes New Zealand's first bowler to claim 50 wickets in ODI World Cup". The Hindu. 9 November 2023. Retrieved 11 November 2023.
  34. "NZ vs SL: Boult enters 600 wickets club, Santner equals Daniel Vettori's major World Cup record". India TV. 9 November 2023. Retrieved 11 November 2023.
  35. 35.0 35.1 "Records galore as India post their second-best World Cup total against Netherlands". The Times of India. 12 November 2023. Retrieved 13 November 2023.
  36. "Zampa's match-winning performance, Khawaja's maiden T20I fifty". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 21 March 2016.
  37. "Bangladesh bow out of World Twenty20 losing last-over thriller against India by 1 run". BD News24. Retrieved 23 March 2016.
  38. 38.0 38.1 38.2 "One-run wins, three-in-three at the death". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 23 March 2016.
  39. Gupta, Gaurav (27 June 2022). "Ranji Trophy final: Chandrakant Pandit finds redemption at Chinnaswamy Stadium". The Times of India. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
  40. "Arpit Vasavada guides Saurashtra to Ranji Trophy final". The Indian Express. PTI. 12 February 2023. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
  41. "Karnataka beat Tamil Nadu Karnataka won by 60 runs (VJD) - Karnataka vs Tamil Nadu, Vijay Hazare Trophy, Final M Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore October 25, 2019 Match Summary, Report | ESPNcricinfo.com". ESPNcricinfo. 25 October 2019. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
  42. "Vijay Hazare Trophy: Mumbai beat Delhi to lift title for third time". The Indian Express. PTI. 20 October 2018. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
  43. "Only Test, Afghanistan tour of India at Bengaluru, Jun 14-15 2018: Match Summary". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 24 August 2018.
  44. "Statistics / Statsguru / Test matches / Batting records/ M. Chinnaswamy Stadium / Runs scored". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 10 November 2015.
  45. "Statistics / Statsguru / Test matches / Batting records / M. Chinnaswamy Stadium / Runs scored (Non-India)". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 10 November 2015.
  46. "Statistics / Statsguru / Test matches / Batting records / M. Chinnaswamy Stadium / Runs scored in an innings". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 10 November 2015.
  47. "Statistics / Statsguru / Test matches / Bowling records / M. Chinnaswamy Stadium / Wickets taken". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 10 November 2015.
  48. "Statistics / Statsguru / Test matches / Bowling records / M. Chinnaswamy Stadium / Wickets taken (Non-India)". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 10 November 2015.
  49. "Statistics / Statsguru / Test matches / Bowling records / M. Chinnaswamy Stadium / Wickets taken in an innings". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 10 November 2015.
  50. "Statistics / Statsguru / Test matches / Bowling records / M. Chinnaswamy Stadium / Wickets taken in a match". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 10 November 2015.
  51. "Statistics / Statsguru / Test matches / Team records / M. Chinnaswamy Stadium / Team score". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 10 November 2015.
  52. "Statistics / Statsguru / Test matches / Team records / M. Chinnaswamy Stadium / Team score (lowest)". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 10 November 2015.
  53. "IPL Records M. Chinnaswamy Stadium Karnataka Bangalore". T20 Head to Head. 1 March 2023. Retrieved 20 March 2023.

External links[edit]

Template:Test cricket grounds in India

Coordinates: 12°58′43.7″N 77°35′58.4″E / 12.978806°N 77.599556°E / 12.978806; 77.599556

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