1945–46 Ranji Trophy

1945-46 Ranji Trophy
Ranji trophy.jpg
The Ranji Trophy, which the winners get.
Administrator(s)BCCI
Cricket formatFirst-class cricket
Tournament format(s)Knockout
ChampionsHolkar
Participants21
Most runsHemu Adhikari (Baroda) (555)[1]
Most wicketsAmir Elahi (Baroda) (30)[2]

The 1945–46 Ranji Trophy was the 12th season of the Ranji Trophy. Holkar won the title defeating Baroda in the final.

Highlights

  • Holkar scored 912 for 8 decl against Mysore in the semifinal. This was the highest score in Indian first class cricket till Hyderabad made 944 for 6 against Andhra in 1993-94
  • Six batsmen scored hundreds for Holkar - Kamal Bhandarkar 142, Chandu Sarwate 101, Madhav Jagdale 164, C. K. Nayudu 101, Bhausaheb Nimbalkar 172 and Pratap Singh 100. This has never been equalled.
  • There were seven century partnerships in the Holkar innings. All wickets from one to eight, except the second, made more than a hundred runs
  • B. K. Garudachar took 4 wickets for 301 runs. This is the most expensive bowling in Indian cricket and third in all first class cricket.
  • Chandu Sarwate took 9 for 61 in the Mysore first innings in addition to his hundred. It is the only instance of a century and nine wickets in an innings in Indian cricket.
  • Mysore conceded the match on the fourth day.
  • Baroda won the Zonal finals and the Semifinals by spin of coin, as both match couldn't produce a winner. The Zonal finals drew with first innings incomplete and the semifinal ended in a tie.
  • Vijay Merchant averaged 405.00 with the bat (405 in two innings, once out). This is the highest batting average achieved for any Ranji season.
  • C. K. Nayudu scored 200 for Holkar v Baroda in the final at the age of 50 years and 142 days. He is the oldest Indian cricketer to score a double hundred in first class cricket. Nayudu is the fifth oldest double centurion in all first class cricket, after Dave Nourse, John King, Archie MacLaren and Jack Hobbs.

Zonal Matches

South Zone

 
Round 1Round 2
 
      
 
14 Dec 1945 — Bangalore
 
 
Mysore158 & 292
 
26 Jan 1946 — Bangalore
 
Madras172 & 166
 
Mysore188 & 309
 
21 Dec 1945 — Nagpur
 
Hyderabad176 & 220
 
Central Provinces and Berar154 & 127
 
 
Hyderabad399
 

West Zone

 
Round 1Round 2Round 3
 
          
 
 
 
 
25 Jan 1946 — Bombay
 
 
Bombay560/5d
 
29 Dec 1945 — Karachi
 
Sind234 & 306
 
Sind416 & 61/1
 
9 Feb 1946 — Bombay
 
Maharashtra258 & 250/9d
 
Bombay645
 
19 Dec 1945 — Jamnagar
 
Baroda (T)465/6
 
Baroda328 & 363/5d
 
2 Feb 1946 — Baroda
 
Nawanagar218 & 138/8
 
Baroda243 & 277
 
14 Dec 1945 — Rajkot
 
Western India215 & 104/8
 
Western India199 & 158
 
 
Gujarat164 & 190
 

(T) - Advanced to next round by spin of coin.

East Zone

 
Round 1Round 2
 
      
 
20 Dec 1945 — Kanpur
 
 
United Provinces99 & 221
 
19 Jan 1946 — Calcutta
 
Bengal126 & 239
 
Bengal119 & 266
 
15 Dec 1945 — Indore
 
Holkar288 & 102/5
 
Holkar433
 
 
Bihar142 & 104
 

North Zone

 
Round 1Round 2Round 3
 
          
 
 
 
 
10 Jan 1946 — Patiala
 
 
Southern Punjab472
 
28 Dec 1945 — Delhi
 
Delhi181 & 98
 
Delhi91 & 203/7
 
7 Feb 1946 — Patiala
 
North West Frontier Province141 & 150
 
Southern Punjab658/8d
 
 
Northern India250
 
 
2 Feb 1946 — Rajputana
 
 
Rajputana220 & 114
 
 
Northern India212 & 125/1
 
 
 
 

Inter-Zonal Knockout matches

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
2 Mar 1946 – Indore
 
 
Holkar912/8d
 
22 Mar 1946 – Indore
 
Mysore190 & 509/6
 
Holkar342 & 273
 
4 Mar 1946 – Patiala
 
Baroda198 & 361
 
Southern Punjab167 & 146
 
 
Baroda (T)106 & 207
 

(T) - Advanced to finals by spin of coin.

Final

22–27 March 1946
Scorecard
Holkar (H)
v
342 (149.3 overs)
C. K. Nayudu 200
Ahmed Patel 3/52
148 (77 overs)
Vijay Hazare 87*
C. S. Nayudu 5/66
273 (118.5 overs)
Hiralal Gaekwad 79*
Vivek Hazare 4/49
361 (136.5 overs)
M. M. Naidu 91
C. S. Nayudu 5/148
Holkar won by 106 runs
Yeshwant Club Ground, Indore
Umpires: Jamshed Patel and T. A. Ramachandran
  • Holkar won the toss and decided to bat

Scorecards and averages

References

  1. ^ "Ranji Trophy, 1945/46 / Records / Most runs". Retrieved 23 August 2014.
  2. ^ "Ranji Trophy, 1945/46 / Records / Most wickets". Retrieved 23 August 2014.

External links


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