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Indian Petrochemicals Corporation Ltd Sports Complex Ground | |
Ground information | |
---|---|
Location | Vadodara, Gujarat, India |
Establishment | 1990 |
Capacity | 20,000 |
Owner | Reliance Industries |
Architect | Rakesh Parikh |
Operator | Baroda Cricket Association |
Tenants | Indian Cricket Team Baroda cricket team |
End names | |
n/a | |
International information | |
First ODI | 28 October 1994: India v New Zealand |
Last ODI | 10 December 2010: India v New Zealand |
First WODI | 16 December 1997: South Africa v Pakistan |
Last WODI | 14 October 2019: India v South Africa |
First WT20I | 2 April 2013: India v Bangladesh |
Last WT20I | 5 April 2013: India v Bangladesh |
As of 25 February 2024 Source: Reliance Stadium, ESPNcricinfo |
Reliance Stadium or Indian Petrochemicals Corporation Ltd Sports Complex Ground also known as the IPCL Ground is located in Vadodara, Gujarat.
The stadium is owned by Reliance Industries and is also known as, Reliance Stadium. The stadium is the home ground of the Baroda cricket team, one of India's domestic teams.
The stadium has hosted 10 ODI matches since 1994, the last one in 2010 (part of the India New Zealand series December 2010), but has yet to stage a Test match.
One of the four first-class and two international grounds in Vadodara, the IPCL Sports Complex Ground is part of the sprawling IPCL complex, situated about 10 kilometers from the city centre. The ground was owned and maintained by the Reliance Industries and has taken preference over the oldest cricket ground in Asia the Moti Bagh Stadium for ODIs. [ citation needed ]
The batsmen have traditionally enjoyed this high-scoring venue with a true wicket that holds up throughout the length of a 50-over game.[ citation needed ]
The stadium has hosted following ODI matches till date.
Team (A) | Team (B) | Winner | Margin | Year |
---|---|---|---|---|
India | New Zealand | India | By 7 Wickets | 1994 |
Netherlands | New Zealand | New Zealand | BY 119 Runs | 1996 |
India | Zimbabwe | India | By 13 Runs | 1998 |
India | South Africa | India | By 4 Wickets | 2000 |
India | West Indies | West Indies | By 5 Wickets | 2002 |
India | Sri Lanka | India | By 5 Wickets | 2005 |
India | West Indies | India | By 160 runs | 2007 |
India | Australia | Australia | By 9 Wickets | 2007 |
India | Australia | Australia | By 4 runs | 2009 |
India | New Zealand | India | By 9 Wickets | 2010 |
Game Statistics:
Category | Information |
---|---|
Highest Team Score | India (341/3 in 50 overs against West Indies) |
Lowest Team Score | India (148 all out in 39.4 overs against Australia) |
Best Batting Performance | Gautam Gambhir (126 runs) |
Most Prolific Batsman | Sachin Tendulkar (442 Runs) |
Best Bowling Performance | Mitchell Johnson (5/26 against India) |
No. | Score | Player | Team | Balls | Inns. | Opposing team | Date | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 108 | Ken Rutherford | New Zealand | 102 | 1 | India | 28 October 1994 | Lost [1] |
2 | 115 | Sachin Tendulkar | India | 136 | 2 | New Zealand | 28 October 1994 | Won [1] |
3 | 122 | Sachin Tendulkar | India | 138 | 2 | South Africa | 17 March 2000 | Won [2] |
4 | 101 | Chris Gayle | West Indies | 107 | 2 | India | 18 March 2002 | Won [3] |
5 | 100* | Sachin Tendulkar | India | 76 | 1 | West Indies | 31 January 2007 | Won [4] |
6 | 126* | Gautam Gambhir | India | 117 | 2 | New Zealand | 4 December 2010 | Won [5] |
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 |
Drawn | The match was drawn. |
No. | Bowler | Date | Team | Opposing team | Inn | Overs | Runs | Wkts | Econ | Batsmen | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Mitchell Johnson † | 11 October 2007 | Australia | India | 1 | 10 | 26 | 5 | 2.6 | Australia Won |
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