The 1990–91 Ranji Trophy was the 57th season of the Ranji Trophy cricket tournament. Haryana defeated Bombay by 2 runs in the closest Ranji final in history.
Administrator(s) | BCCI |
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Cricket format | First-class cricket |
Tournament format(s) | League and knockout |
Champions | Haryana (1st title) |
Participants | 27 |
Most runs | Amarjit Kaypee (Haryana) (940)[1] |
Most wickets | Chetan Sharma (Haryana) (39)[2] |
Group stage
edit
North Zoneedit
Central Zoneedit
East Zoneedit
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South Zoneedit
West Zoneedit
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Knockout stage
editPre-Quarter-finals | Quarter-finals | Semi-finals | Finals | |||||||||||
16 Apr 1991 — Delhi | ||||||||||||||
Delhi | 389 & 371/4 | |||||||||||||
2 Feb 1991 — Indore | ||||||||||||||
Bombay (F) | 390 & 719/8d | |||||||||||||
Madhya Pradesh | 377 & 165 | |||||||||||||
24 Apr 1991 — Bombay | ||||||||||||||
Bombay | 493 & 50/0 | |||||||||||||
Bombay (F) | 855/6d & 446/4d | |||||||||||||
Hyderabad | 498 & 36/0 | |||||||||||||
16 Apr 1991 — Ranchi | ||||||||||||||
Bihar | 203 | |||||||||||||
Hyderabad (F) | 298/6 | |||||||||||||
3 May 1991 — Bombay | ||||||||||||||
Bombay | 410 & 352 | |||||||||||||
Haryana | 522 & 242 | |||||||||||||
16 Apr 1991 — Calcutta | ||||||||||||||
Bengal (R) | 652/9 | |||||||||||||
2 Feb 1991 — Pune | ||||||||||||||
Karnataka | 791/6d | |||||||||||||
Maharashtra | 311 & 268/2 | |||||||||||||
24 Apr 1991 — Calcutta | ||||||||||||||
Karnataka (F) | 638 & 307/2d | |||||||||||||
Bengal | 440 | |||||||||||||
Haryana (F) | 605 & 274/5 | |||||||||||||
16 Apr 1991 — Faridabad | ||||||||||||||
Haryana (F) | 339 & 429/9d | |||||||||||||
Uttar Pradesh | 295 & 221/7 | |||||||||||||
(F) - Advanced to next round on First Innings Lead.
(R) - Advanced to next round on better Run Rate.
Semi-finals
editBombay got off to a poor start after electing to bat on the opening day of the first semi-final. They lost both openers to Rajesh Yadav and were reduced to 30/2. Captain Sanjay Manjrekar, joined by Dilip Vengsarkar, added 283 runs for the third wicket. Despite not being in good touch, the latter made 121.[3] With his relentless batting for a total of five sessions (666 minutes) filled with fine strokeplay, Manjrekar made 377, the second highest individual score in the history of the Ranji trophy. He put on 118 and 268 runs with hard-hitting Sachin Tendulkar (70) and Vinod Kambli (126) for the fourth and fifth wickets, taking the team to 807/6 at the end of day two.[4] However, 48 penalty runs against Hyderabad meant Bombay's score stood at 855/6, then the second highest innings total in Ranji Trophy history. Hyderabad's reply with the bat began with the loss of opener Chelluri Jaikumar in the first over. R. A. Swaroop (123) and M. V. Sridhar then put together 285 runs, breaking Hyderabad's record for the best second-wicket partnership. The new ball before end of day's play brought Bombay the wickets of Swaroop and M. V. Ramanamurthy. Swaroop playing attacking cricket early in the day hitting eleven boundaries to reach his half-century.[5] From being 255/3 overnight, Hyderabad were dismissed after tea, handing their opponents a 357-run lead. The only notable partnerships were those of Sridhar (184) with Vivek Jaisimha and Venkatapathy Raju that yielded respectively 111 and 94 runs.[6] Virtually through to the final on account of first innings lead and only a day of play left, the Bombay batsmen once again displayed "ruthless... arrogance" in their second innings. Both openers made half-centuries, and Kambli made a century (127 off 114 balls), becoming the fourth Bombay batsman to score a century in both innings of a Ranji Trophy match. Tendulkar batted in similar fashion, making 88 off 66 deliveries, an innings that included five sixes and eight fours. Chandrakant Pandit also made an unbeaten century. Bombay declared at 446/4 after tea, with their opponents making 36 runs without losing a wicket, before proceedings were halted with ten of the stipulated overs in the last hour uncompleted.[7]
In the second semi-final, Bengal's decision to field after winning the toss on a batting wicket at the Eden Gardens, Kolkata, backfired after Haryana put on 305 on day one. Captain Kapil Dev arrived when his team were at 186/4, and took his team to end of play without further loss of wickets.[8] Day two saw three of Haryana's batsmen making centuries — Dev (141), Ajay Banerjee (111) and Vijay Yadav (106) — helping their team go past their highest ever innings total of 583.[9] In reply to Haryana's total of 605, Bengal began strongly reaching 124 without losing a wicket before Dev picked two wickets in an over, reducing them to 128/2. Arun Lal reached his 17th Ranji century,[10] before Dev dismissed him for 136 with a rising delivery that took his edge. Sourav Ganguly's controversial dismissal led to stoppage of play for 20 minutes due to crowd trouble.[11] Dev claimed Haryana's final two wickets helping his team gain a 165-run first innings lead on the final day. Haryana's second innings saw Amarjit Kaypee making his fifth century of the season while Ajay Jadeja made 85. The match ended in a draw with Haryana progressing to their second Ranji final, on first innings lead.[12]
24–28 April 1991
Scorecard |
v
|
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36/0 (7 overs)
Chelluri Jaikumar 15* |
- Bombay won the toss and elected to bat.
- Yogendra Bhandari (Haryana) made his first-class debut.[10]
Final
editScorecards and averages
editReferences
edit- ^ "Ranji Trophy, 1990/91 / Records / Most runs". Retrieved 20 December 2014.
- ^ "Ranji Trophy, 1990/91 / Records / Most wickets". Retrieved 20 December 2014.
- ^ Natarajan, H. (25 April 1991). "Manjrekar, Vengsarkar in good touch". The Indian Express. p. 16.
- ^ Natarajan, H. (26 April 1991). "Manjrekar (377) stars in Bombay run-riot". The Indian Express. p. 16.
- ^ Natarajan, H. (27 April 1991). "Hyderabad have a tough climb ahead". The Indian Express. p. 16.
- ^ Natarajan, H. (28 April 1991). "Bombay almost through to final". The Indian Express. p. 18.
- ^ Natarajan, H. (29 April 1991). "Kambli completes second ton". The Indian Express. p. 16.
- ^ Magazine, Pradeep (25 April 1991). "Kapil wrests back the initiative". The Indian Express. p. 16.
- ^ Magazine, Pradeep (26 April 1991). "Three tons in Haryana's big total". The Indian Express. p. 16.
- ^ a b Magazine, Pradeep (27 April 1991). "Arun Lal cracks 17th Ranji century". The Indian Express. p. 16.
- ^ Magazine, Pradeep (28 April 1991). "Haryana poised to take lead". The Indian Express. p. 18.
- ^ Magazine, Pradeep (29 April 1991). "Haryana through to final". The Indian Express. p. 16.
External links
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