India national football team results |
---|
|
This is a list of the India national football team's results from 1924 to 1947 (pre-independence) that, for various reasons, are not accorded the status of official International A Matches. India competed as Calcutta Indians and Calcutta Wanderers during the initial years. [1] [2]
September 1924 | Rangoon XI | 0–1 | Calcutta Indians | Rangoon |
24 September 1924 | Singapore FA | 0–4 | Calcutta Indians | Singapore |
H. Bose Samad R. Ganguly | Stadium: Anson Road Stadium Referee: C. Salter |
25 September 1924 | Singapore Chinese FA | 0–1 | Calcutta Indians | Singapore |
M. Dutt | Stadium: Anson Road Stadium Attendance: 10,000 Referee: R.H. Gale |
28 September 1924 | Hercules | 0–2 | Calcutta Indians | Batavia |
Stadium: B.V.C.-veld, Weltevreden Attendance: 20,000 Referee: W. van Galen |
29 September 1924 | Batavia FC (BVC) | 0–1 | Calcutta Indians | Batavia |
P Chatterjee | Stadium: B.V.C.-veld, Weltevreden Referee: J. Hetharia |
2 October 1924 | West Java FA (WJVB) | 0–0 | Calcutta Indians | Batavia |
Stadium: B.V.C.-veld, Weltevreden Referee: F.X.A. Drilling |
5 October 1924 | Hoogere Burger School (HBS) | 1–0 | Calcutta Indians | Surabaya |
Cana | Stadium: T.H.O.R.-veld Attendance: 10,000 Referee: Henny van Alphen |
9 October 1924 | Soerabaja FA (SVB) | 0–1 | Calcutta Indians | Surabaya |
Stadium: T.H.O.R.-veld Attendance: 6,000 Referee: Wegeman |
13 October 1924 | Hercules | 2–1 | Calcutta Indians | Batavia |
Willy Galstaun | Chatterjee | Stadium: B.V.C.-veld, Weltevreden Attendance: 20,000 Referee: W. van Galen |
15 October 1924 | Bandoeng FA (BVB) | 0–0 | Calcutta Indians | Bandung |
Referee: Foltynski |
21 October 1924 | Bandoeng FA (BVB) | 5–1 | Calcutta Indians | Bandung |
De Jager 5', 20' Middleton 10' Giesel 41' ? 55' (o.g.) | ? | Referee: Foltynski |
20 October 1926 | Duke of Wellington's | 5–2 | Calcutta Wanderers | Singapore |
Hawthorn 5' Osborne Basford | Samad pen.' Rahman |
21 October 1926 | Singapore FA | 2–4 | Calcutta Wanderers | Singapore |
Chan Hee 5' Wan Puteh | N. Gossain T. Shome T. Das |
24 October 1926 | Hercules | 2–1 | Calcutta Wanderers | Batavia |
26 October 1926 | Semarang FA (VSO) | 2–0 | Calcutta Wanderers | Semarang |
28 October 1926 | Bandoeng FA (BVB) | 2–0 | Calcutta Wanderers | Bandung |
30 October 1926 | Oliveo | 1–2 | Calcutta Wanderers | Batavia |
31 October 1926 | West Java FA (WJVB) | 6–0 | Calcutta Wanderers | Batavia |
3 November 1926 | Hercules | 2–1 | Calcutta Wanderers | Batavia |
5 November 1926 | Vios | 2–1 | Calcutta Wanderers | Batavia |
10 November 1926 | Singapore Chinese FA | 3–0 | Calcutta Wanderers | Singapore |
? o.g.' Un Sun |
1933 Friendly | Ceylon | 0–1 | India | British Ceylon |
Gostha Paul |
9 June 1934 | Natal XI | 0–6 | India | Durban |
Report | Bhattacharya 1' Ramanna | Stadium: Curries Fountain Attendance: 10,000 |
11 June 1934 | Natal XI | 3–1 | India | Pietermaritzburg |
13 June 1934 | Transvaal XI | 1–7 | India | Johannesburg |
A. Naidu | Report | Lakshminarayan Ramanna | Stadium: Natalspruit Indian Sports Ground Attendance: 4000 |
16 June 1934 | Transvaal XI | 1–6 | India | Pretoria |
Govinder | Bhattacharya Lakshminarayan | Stadium: Caledonian Football Ground |
1934 | South Africa | 0–2 | India | Johannesburg |
Attendance: 6,000 |
1934 | South Africa | 0–2 | India | Durban |
1934 | Natal Sunday League XI | 1–7 | India |
1934 | Boards XI | 0–9 | India |
1934 | Eastern Province XI | 1–6 | India |
7 July 1934 | South Africa | 1–4 | India | Cape Town |
Adams | Report | Lakshminarayan S. Chaudhuri S. Dutt |
1934 | Nicualand | 1–6 | India |
1934 | Northern Natal | 1–8 | India |
1934 | Witwatersrand | 0–1 | India |
1934 | Kimberley Xi | unknown | India |
1934 | South Africa | unknown | India | Durban |
Report |
4 July 1936 Friendly | India | 1–1 | China | Calcutta, India |
Noor Mohammed | Report | Suen Kam Shun | Stadium: Calcutta FC Ground Attendance: 100,000 |
30 May 1938 Friendly | India | 2–2 | Burma | Calcutta, India |
Lakshminarayan | Pugsley | Stadium: Calcutta FC Ground |
August 1938 | India | 6–1 | South Australia | Adelaide, Australia |
A.Nandi Prosad K.Bhattacharya | Stadium: Hindmarsh Oval Attendance: 3,000 |
August 1938 | India | 1–4 | Victoria (Australia) | Melbourne, Australia |
K. Prosad | Stadium: Melbourne Cricket Ground |
August 1938 | India | 4–6 | New South Wales | Sydney, Australia |
Rahim | Stadium: Sydney Showground Attendance: 25,000 |
August 1938 | India | 1–2 | Northern Districts (Australia) | Cessnock, Australia |
Lumsden | Heeney | Stadium: Baddeley Park |
5 September 1938 | India | 6–5 | Queensland | Brisbane, Australia |
Rahim Noor Mohammed A. Nandi Lumsden B. Sen A. Premlal | Report | Brittain pen.' | Stadium: Brisbane Exhibition Ground Attendance: 5,000 |
7 September 1938 | India | 5–2 | Ipswich | Ipswich, Australia |
Noor Mohammed 10' Lumsden 17', 90' Rahim 40' | Report | Donaldson | Stadium: North Ipswich Reserve Attendance: 2,000 |
September 1938 | India | 5–2 | Queensland | Toowoomba, Australia |
Lumsden pen' K. Bhattacharya 46' Rahim 89' | Report | Kitching Young | Stadium: Athletic Oval |
22 September 1938 | India | 6–4 | South Coast | New South Wales, Australia |
Report | Attendance: 4,000 |
28 September 1938 | India | 4–6 | Granville | New South Wales, Australia |
Noor Mohammed Lumsden 45' | Report | R.Sanders Hextell S McDonald | Stadium: Clyde Oval |
8 October 1938 | India | 1–5 | Western Australia | Perth, Australia |
K. Prosad | Report | W. Waddell | Stadium: WACA Ground Attendance: 2,000 |
11 October 1938 | India | 3–1 | Western Australia | Perth, Australia |
Report | Stadium: WACA Ground Attendance: 2,000 |
The Currie Cup is South Africa's premier domestic rugby union competition featuring teams representing either entire provinces or substantial regions within provinces. Although it is the premier domestic competition, four South African franchises also compete in the United Rugby Championship competition, including for the 'South African Shield'. for the highest placed South African team.
International cricket in South Africa between 1971 and 1981 consisted of four private tours arranged by English sports promoter Derrick Robins, two tours by a private team called the "International Wanderers", and one women's Test match. The apartheid policy followed by the South African Governments of the day meant that no Test match playing nation was willing to tour, thereby depriving world cricket of leading stars such as Graeme Pollock, Barry Richards, Clive Rice and Eddie Barlow.
Barry Anderson Richards is a former South African first-class cricketer. A right-handed "talent of such enormous stature", Richards is considered one of South Africa's most successful batsmen. He was able to play only four Test matches – all against Australia – before South Africa's exclusion from the international scene in 1970. In that brief career, against a competitive Australian attack, Richards scored 508 runs at the high average of 72.57. Richards' contribution in that series was instrumental in the 4–0 win that South Africa inflicted on the side, captained by Bill Lawry. His first century, 140, was scored in conjunction with Graeme Pollock's 274 in a famous 103-run partnership. Mike Procter, whose South African and English career roughly paralleled that of Richards, was prominent in that series as a bowler.
This article describes the history of South African cricket from the aftermath of the First World War in 1919 to the end of the Second World War in 1945.
When the First World War ended in November 1918, thousands of Australian servicemen were in Europe as members of the First Australian Imperial Force (AIF) and many remained until the spring of 1919. In England, a new first-class cricket season was planned, the first since 1914, and an idea that came to fruition was the formation of an Australian touring side made up of servicemen. Agreement was reached with the Australian Corps HQ in London, commanded by Field Marshal William Birdwood, 1st Baron Birdwood, and the Australian Imperial Force Touring XI was formed, initially under the captaincy of pre-war Test player Charlie Kelleway. Kelleway departed after only six matches following a dispute about the fixtures list. A players' meeting elected future Test player Herbie Collins as team captain for the remainder of the tour, despite the fact that Collins' military rank was lance corporal and there were seven officers in the party. The bulk of the team remained intact for nearly nine months from May 1919, playing 33 matches in Great Britain, ten in South Africa on their way home and then another three in Australia itself before disbanding in February 1920. Of the 46 matches, 39 are adjudged first-class and the team had only four defeats, all of these in England. The players lived on their army pay and all profits from gate money went to an AIF Sports Control Board.
The 1996 Super 12 season was the inaugural season of the Super 12, contested by teams from Australia, New Zealand and South Africa. The season ran from February to May 1996, with each team playing all the others once. At the end of the regular season, the top four teams entered the playoff semifinals, with the first placed team playing the fourth and the second placed team playing the third. The winner of each semifinal qualified for the final, which was contested between the Auckland Blues and Natal Sharks, with the Blues winning 45–21 to win the first Super 12 title.
The history of cricket in Zimbabwe, formerly Rhodesia and before 1965 Southern Rhodesia, includes Rhodesia first forming a first-class cricket team in August 1890, and the inaugural Test appearance of Zimbabwe in October 1992.
This article describes the history of South African cricket from its known beginnings until the end of the First World War in 1918.
Henry Richard Fotheringham is a retired South African cricketer.
This article describes the history of South African cricket from 1971 to 1990. Following the D'Oliveira affair in 1968, feeling against South Africa's application of apartheid to sport grew to the extent that by 1971 the country was isolated in sporting terms. The Test series against Australia in 1969–70 was to be their last for 22 years.
This article describes the history of South African cricket from the end of the Second World War in 1945 to the start of South Africa's cricket isolation in 1970.
South Africa resumed official international cricket in 1991 after the moratorium imposed by the International Cricket Conference in 1970 was lifted. This was the first edition of the sir Vivian Richards trophy. This had restricted official contact with South Africa as a response to the policy of apartheid and South Africa's refusal to select non-white players for their international sporting teams. It formed part of the wider sporting boycott of South Africa during the apartheid era. The South African national team made a short tour of India in 1991. It then played in the 1992 Cricket World Cup in Australia and New Zealand. The decade saw a number of tours of South Africa by major international teams as well as the continued playing of domestic competitions.
The Nissan Shield was a one day cricket tournament in South Africa. This was a knockout competition based on the English Gillette Cup.
The National Football League (NFL) was the first professional association football league in South Africa, established in 1959. At first the NFL received stiff opposition from the SAFA, the amateur governing body which controlled the major football grounds in the county. The SAFA was a member of FIFA at the time.
This is a list of the England national football team's results from 1870 to the present day that, for various reasons, are not accorded the status of official International A Matches.
This is a list of the Australia national soccer team's results from 1922 to the present day that, for various reasons, are not accorded the status of official International A Matches.
S. B. Joel's XI was a team of English cricketers that toured South Africa between November 1924 and February 1925 and played 14 first-class matches and seven other games. The tour was an unofficial one: an official tour of Australia organised by the Marylebone Cricket Club took place at the same time.
Alfred Edward Cooper was a South African cricketer who played at first-class level for Griqualand West and Transvaal).
This is a list of the India national football team's results from 1948 to 1999 that, for various reasons, are not accorded the status of official International A Matches.