Saturday 5 April 2014

Urban Decay in India (c. 300-c. 1000)

Overview

The book focuses on the decline of the towns and their desertion in late ancient and early medieval India on the basis of archaeological evidence. The author has material remains to study crafts, commerce and coinage, and identifies and illustrates signs of growth and decay for more than 130 excavated sites. The strata with poor remains are taken to indicate decrease in construction, manufacturing and commercial activities, and are hence associated with de-urbanization. The reasons for the urban eclipse are sought not only in the fall of empires but also in social disorder and the loss of long-distance trade. The disintegration of the town life is seen not as social regression but as part of the social transformation which generated classical feudalism and promoted rural expansion. The book explores the link between urban decay and land grants to officials, priests, temples and monasteries. It shows how the landed elements collected surplus and services directly from the peasants, and remunerated artisan servicing castes through land grants and grain supply. The monograph should interest students of pre-modern urban history and those who study processes of change in economy and society in Gupta and post-Gupta times. It may also provide basic information on the urban horizons of excavated sites during the second half of the first millennium BC and the following six centuries AD.

History of the Cricket World Cup

The History of the Cricket World Cup dates back to 1975, when the first of its kind known as The Prudential World Cup was played in England.

Prior to the World Cup

The first cricket Test match was played in 1877 between Australia and England. Cricket was contested at the 1900 Summer Olympics where Great Britain defeated France by 158 runs.[1] However, the International Olympic Committee cancelled cricket as an Olympic sport afterwards.
The first attempt at arranging an international cricket competition was the 1912 Triangular Tournament. It was a Test cricket tournament played in England between all three Test playing nations at the time; England, Australia and South Africa. Due to poor weather and a lack of public interest, the experiment was not repeated.[2] From then on, international Test cricket teams only generally engaged in bilateral series as opposed to tournaments or leagues involving more than two nations.
In the early 1960s, English county cricket teams began playing a shortened version of cricket, which only lasted for one day. Starting in 1962 as a 4-team knockout competition known as the Midlands Knock-Out Cup,[3] and the Gillette Cup in 1963, one-day cricket grew in popularity and in 1969 a national league called the Sunday League was created. The first One Day International came about from a rain-aborted Test match at Melbourne between England and Australia in 1971 and was played on the final scheduled day. The forty over match (eight balls per over) was used to fill the time as compensation for the frustrated crowd.[4]
The success and popularity of the domestic one-day competitions in England and other parts of the world as well as the early One-day Internationals prompted the International Cricket Council to consider organising a Cricket World Cup.[5]

The Prudential World Cups

The Prudential Cup trophy
The Men's Cricket World Cup was first held in 1975 in England, which was the only nation that was able to put forward the resources to stage an event of such magnitude.[6] The first three tournaments were officially known as the Prudential Cup after the financial services company Prudential plc who sponsored the event. The matches were of 60 overs per team and played in traditional white uniform and red balls. They were all played during the day. Eight teams participated in the first tournament: Australia, England, the West Indies, Pakistan, India, and New Zealand (the six Test nations at the time), with Sri Lanka and a composite team from East Africa. One notable omission was the South African cricket team who were not competing due to the international sports boycott. West Indies won the first Cricket World Cup by defeating Australia by 17 runs in the final.
The next two World Cups held in 1979 and 1983 were again hosted by England. The 1979 Cricket World Cup saw the introduction of the ICC Trophy, a competition used to select non-Test playing teams for the World Cup.[7] Sri Lanka and Canada qualified through the ICC Trophy in 1979. West Indies again won the World Cup tournament, defeating England by 92 runs. At their meeting which followed the World Cup, the International Cricket Conference agreed to make the competition a four-yearly event.
The 1983 event was hosted by England for a third consecutive time. By this time, Sri Lanka had become a Test playing nation, and Zimbabwe qualified through the ICC Trophy. India were crowned champions after upsetting the West Indies by 43 runs in the final. The odds of India winning the cup were quoted at 66 to 1 before the competition began.[5]

1987–1996

The 1987 Cricket World Cup held in India and Pakistan was the first World Cup hosted outside of England. It was also the first tournament where the West Indies were unable to reach the final. The games were reduced from 60 to 50 overs per innings, the current standard, because of the shorter daylight hours on the subcontinent when compared to England. Australia won the championship by defeating England by 7 runs, the closest margin so far in World Cup final history.
The 1992 Cricket World Cup held by Australia and New Zealand brought many changes to the game such as coloured clothing, white balls, day/night matches and an alteration to the fielding restrictions. It was the first tournament that the South African cricket team played in, following the end of the international sports boycott. Referred as the 'Cornered Tigers' at the time, Pakistan overcame a dismal start to emerge as winners, defeating England by 22 runs in the final at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.[8]
The 1996 championship was held in the Indian subcontinent for the second time, with the inclusion of Sri Lanka as host of some of its group stage matches. It occurred behind the backdrop of political upheaval in world cricket, after a spiteful Sri Lankan tour of Australia in 1995/96. After the no balling of Sri Lankan off spinner Muttiah Muralitharan by Darrell Hair in a Test match at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, the tour ended in a spiteful ODI final in Sydney which saw physical contact between Glenn McGrath and Sanath Jayasuriya, and the refusal of the Sri Lankans to shake hands at the end of the match. Some Australian players received death threats, which were compounded by a Tamil Tiger bombing in Colombo. Australia and West Indies refused to play their respective matches against Sri Lanka there, causing both matches to be awarded to Sri Lanka by default. After protracted negotiations, Kenya and Zimbabwe agreed to fulfil their fixtures in Sri Lanka. The Australian led boycott drew heavy criticism from subcontinental cricket officials, with former Indian captain Kapil Dev calling for Australia to be expelled.
On the field, the abrasive and dry subcontinent surfaces resulted in batting conditions being optimal early in the innings before the ball became softer and more difficult to strike. Of the five leading run-scorers, four were opening batsmen, with Mark Waugh becoming the first batsman to score three centuries in a tournament. Spin bowlers were the most effective, with four of the leading six wicket-takers. The quarter finals saw co-hosts India and Pakistan meet in Bangalore. After Pakistani captain Wasim Akram withdrew due to injury, Ajay Jadeja struck 40 from the last two overs from Waqar Younis, setting Pakistan a target of 288. Pakistan were going well at 109/1, but after Aamer Sohail confronted taunted Indian bowler Venkatesh Prasad after striking a boundary, Prasad bowled him immediately after, sparking a collapse of 3/19, all to Prasad. After falling 39 runs short, the Government of Pakistan launched an inquiry into the performance, after angry protests by the public which left one person dead, and accusations of match-fixing were levelled at Wasim. In the other quarter finals, Australia and Sri Lanka defeated New Zealand and England respectively, while South Africa, who were previously undefeated, were upset by the West Indies.
In the semi-final, Sri Lanka, headed towards a crushing victory over India at Eden Gardens (Calcutta) after their hosts slumped to 120/8 from being 98/1 in pursuit of 252, were awarded victory by default after riots broke out in protest against the Indian performance. In the other semi-final in Mohali, Australia defeated the West Indies after the Caribbean team lost their last seven wickets for 29 runs in their run-chase. Sri Lanka went on to claim their inaugural championship by defeating the favourites Australia in the final by seven wickets, held in Lahore. Tension remained between the two sides after the Australian series, with Sri Lankan captain Arjuna Ranatunga declaring Australian leg spinner Shane Warne in the media before the match, and proceeding to poke his tongue at Warne during the match after hitting a six. Aravinda de Silva was named man of the match, as he was in the semi-final.

Australian treble

The 1999 event returned to England after sixteen years with some matches also held in Ireland, Scotland and the Netherlands. After losing two matches in the group phase, one of the favourites, Australia needed to avoid defeat in seven consecutive matches to win the title. They subsequently were required to defeat South Africa in the final Super Six match at Headingley. After South Africa had reached 271, Australia were struggling when captain Steve Waugh hit a ball straight to Herschelle Gibbs, who dropped it after trying to throw the ball into the air in celebration, eliciting the barb from Waugh that he had "dropped the World Cup". Waugh struck an unbeaten century to guide Australia to their target in their Super Six match against South Africa off the final ball of the match. Australia then faced South Africa again in the semi-final and posted a target of 213. South Africa needed nine runs from the final over with one wicket remaining, with man of the tournament Lance Klusener on strike. He struck the first two balls to the fence, leaving one run from the remaining four balls. However, a mix-up between Klusener and Allan Donald on the fourth ball saw Donald drop his bat and be stranded mid-pitch to be run out. The match was a tie, allowing Australia to advance to the final due to earlier results. In the other semi-final, Pakistan, who had qualified first in both the group and Super Six phase, defeated New Zealand by nine wickets. In the final Australia dismissed Pakistan for 132 and reached the target in just over 20 overs, with eight wickets in hand.
A large crowd of over 10,000 fans welcome to the Australian team on completing the first World Cup hat-trick - Martin Place, Sydney.
South Africa, Zimbabwe and Kenya hosted the 2003 Cricket World Cup. The number of teams participating in the event increased from twelve to fourteen. Because of political pressure and security concerns respectively, Zimbabwe and Kenya were awarded their matches against England and New Zealand respectively, after the latter teams forfeited the matches. Kenya's victories against Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe, among others, along with New Zealand's forfeit helped them get a Semi-final berth against India, the best result by an associate. India went on to defeat the Kenyans to set up a final against Australia in Johannesburg, who had defeated Sri Lanka in the other Semi-final. In the final, Australia made 359 runs for the loss of two wickets, the largest ever total in a final, to defeat India by 125 runs.[9]
In 2007 the tournament was hosted by the West Indies; the Cricket World Cup became the first such tournament to be hosted on all six populated continents- Europe (1975, 1979, 1983, 1999); Asia (1987, 1996); Australasia (1992); Africa (2003); North and South America (2007).[10] Ireland making their World Cup debut tied with Zimbabwe and defeated Pakistan to progress to the second round, where they went on to defeating Bangladesh to get promoted to the main ODI table.[11] Following their defeat to Ireland, the Pakistani coach Bob Woolmer was found dead in his hotel room; contrasting reports from different sources say that he was either murdered or died of natural causes.[12] Australia defeated Sri Lanka in the final by 53 runs (D/L), in farcical light conditions, extending their undefeated run in the World Cup to 29 matches and winning three straight World Cups.[13]

2011

Historical formats of final tournament

The number of teams in and the format of the final tournament has varied considerably over the years. In summary:
Year Host Nation(s) Teams # of
matches
Round 1 Latter stages
1975 England 8 15 2 group(s) of 4(play each other once) knockout of 4 teams
1979 England 8 15 2 group(s) of 4(play each other once) knockout of 4 teams
1983 England 8 27 2 group(s) of 4(play each other twice) knockout of 4 teams
1987 India\Pakistan 8 27 2 group(s) of 4(play each other twice) knockout of 4 teams
1992 AustraliaNew Zealand 9 39 1 group(s) of 9 (play each other once) knockout of 4 teams
1996 India\Pakistan\Sri Lanka 12 37 2 group(s) of 6(play each other once) knockout of 8 teams
1999 England\Ireland\Netherlands\Scotland 12 42 2 group(s) of 6(play each other once) round robin of 6 (Super6)(play other groups' teams once), knockout of 4 teams
2003 South Africa\Kenya\Zimbabwe 14 54 2 group(s) of 7(play each other once) 1 group(s) of 6 (Super6)(play other groups' teams once), knockout of 4 teams
2007 West Indies 16 51 4 group(s) of 4(play each other once) 1 group(s) of 8 (Super8)(play other groups' teams once), knockout of 4 teams
2011 India\Sri Lanka\Bangladesh 14 49 2 group(s) of 7 knockout of 8 teams
2015 Australia\New Zealand 14 49 2 group(s) of 7 knockout of 8 teams

Explanation

Early format

The format of the Cricket World Cup has changed greatly over the course of its history. The first four tournaments had eight teams each, divided into two groups of four teams each. There were two stages, a group stage and a knockout stage. In the 1975 and 1979 Cricket World Cups, each team played a round-robin, while in the following two tournaments, each team played the rest in their group twice. The top two teams in each group played the semi-finals and the winners of the semi-finals played against each other in the final.

Trial Formats

In the 1992 Cricket World Cup, all teams played each other once. The top four qualified for the knockout stage which was contested in similar fashion to the previous events. In the 1996 Cricket World Cup, the number of teams increased from nine to twelve and were divided into two groups. The top four teams of each group qualified for the knockout stage this time, which also included quarter-finals.

Super stage Era

The 1999 Cricket World Cup tournament had a similar group stage format, but there were dramatic changes in the second stage with a "Super Six" round replacing the quarter-finals. There were still two groups of six but only three teams from each group went into the subsequent stage. In the Super Six round, each qualifier from Group A played against each qualifier from Group B. The teams earned points from their wins in the Super Six and also brought points scored against the two other teams who qualified from the same group in the group stages. The top four teams from the Super Six played the semi-finals and the rest of the tournament followed in similar fashion to its predecessors. The 2003 event had a similar structure to the 1999 competition. The number of participants rose to fourteen, with seven teams in each pool in the group stage. The Super Six qualifiers also carried forward one point for each win in the group stage against non-qualifiers, a complexity which was dropped for the next world cup.[14]
The 2007 Cricket World Cup featured 16 teams allocated into four groups of four. Eleven teams having One Day International status qualified automatically for the tournament while the other five teams were selected from the ICC Trophy. Within each group, the teams played each other in a round-robin format and the top two teams advanced to the "Super 8" round. The eight remaining teams then played in a round-robin format, except that they did not play the other team that advanced from their respective group.[15] The top four teams from the Super 8 round advanced to the semi-finals and the winners of the semi-finals then contested the final.

Return to a Quarter-Final format

In 2007, the Super 8 Round suffered from lack of crowds as a result of the tournament being too long (24 matches), but also due to big teams like India and Pakistan being knocked out of the tournament in the Group Stage.(2007 Cricket world cup.) As a result the ICC decided to exclude 2 teams from the 2011 tournament - dividing 14 teams into two groups of 7 from which the top 4 teams from each group qualified for the Quarter Finals, this resulted in the addition of more matches into the earlier stages of the tournament as opposed to the 2nd stage. Also adding more knockout matches(7 as opposed to the 3 in 2007) to increase interest in TV audiences.

India–Pakistan cricket rivalry

Pakistan vs India
India-pakistan-flag.jpg
Teams involved India India
Pakistan Pakistan
First contested 16–19 October 1952 (Test)
1 October 1978 (ODI)
14 September 2007 (T20I)
Number of meetings Tests: 59
ODIs: 126
T20Is: 6
Most wins Tests:Pakistan Pakistan (12)
ODIs:Pakistan Pakistan (72)
T20Is:India India (5)
Most recent meeting 2014 T-20 World Cup
India beat Pakistan by 7 wickets with 9 balls remaining
21 March 2014
Shere Bangla National Stadium, DhakaThe partition of British India in 1947 that led to the creation of an independent India and Pakistan was characterised by intense and bloody conflict between Hindus, Muslims and Sikhs that left one million people dead. An estimated ten million people migrated to the nation of their choice. The bloody legacy of the partition and the subsequent emergence of territorial disputes and wars being fought over them have all added to the growth of intense rivalries in field hockey, association football but especially in cricket, which had been developed during British colonial rule. Many of the players in the first post-independence teams of India and Pakistan had played together as team-mates in regional and local tournaments.
Pakistan became a permanent member of the International Cricket Council in 1948, and their tour of India was their first in Test cricket history. They lost the first Test in Delhi to India, but won the second Test in Lucknow, which led to an angry reaction from the home crowd against the Indian players. India clinched the Test series after winning the third Test in Bombay, but the intense pressure affected the players of both teams to the point that they pursued mainly defensive tactics that led to drawn matches and whole series without a victor. When India toured Pakistan in 1955, thousands of Indian fans were granted visas to go to the Pakistani city of Lahore to watch the Test match. But both the 1955 series and Pakistan's tour of India in 1961 ended in a drawn series with no test yielding a winner or loser. Complaints about the fairness of umpires also became routine. The Indo-Pakistani War of 1965 and subsequent Indo-Pakistani War of 1971 put a hold on India-Pakistan cricket that lasted till 1978, when India toured Pakistan and cricket resumed for a brief period. In the post-1971 period, politics became a direct factor in the holding of cricketing events. India has suspended cricketing ties with Pakistan several times following terrorist attacks or other hostilities. The resumption of cricketing ties in 1978 came with the emergence of heads of government in both India and Pakistan who were not directly connected with the 1971 war and coincided with their formal initiatives to normalize bilateral relations. Shortly after a period of belligerency during the Operation Brasstacks war games, Pakistani president Zia-ul-Haq was invited to watch the India-Pakistan test match being played in the Indian city of Jaipur. This form of cricket diplomacy has occurred several times afterwards as well. Pakistan toured India in 1979, but an Indian tour of Pakistan in 1984 was cancelled mid-way due to the assassination of Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. In the late 1980s and for most of the 1990s, India and Pakistan squared-off on neutral venues such as Sharjah in the United Arab Emirates and in Toronto, Canada, where large audiences of expatriates regularly watched them play. The series between the teams in Canada in the 1990s and early 2000s were officially known as the "Friendship Cup".[3] The rise of multinational competitions such as the Cricket World Cup, ICC World Twenty20 the Austral-Asia Cup and the Asia Cup led to more regular albeit briefer contests.
In 1999, immediately following Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee's historic visit to Pakistan, the Pakistani team toured India for Test matches and played in an ODI competition before the Kargil War again put bilateral relations in deep freeze. Prime Minister Vajpayee's peace initiative of 2003 led to India touring Pakistan after a gap of almost 15 years. Subsequent exchange tours were held in 2005 and 2006 before the 2008 Mumbai attacks led to the suspension of India's planned tour of Pakistan in 2009 and all future engagements in Pakistan. India was scheduled to begin the tour of Pakistan from 13 January to 19 February 2009, but was cancelled because of the tension existing between the two countries after the terrorist attacks in Mumbai.[4]
The rise of domestic terrorism led to Pakistan not hosting international cricket since the Sri Lankan team was attacked in 2009, and Pakistan was stripped of its co-host status for the ICC Cricket World Cup 2011. India and Pakistan qualified for the first semi-final in Chandigarh, India, and the Indian government invited the Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani to watch the match along with his Indian counterpart, Dr. Manmohan Singh. Bilateral ties finally resumed when BCCI invited the Pakistan national team to tour India for 3 ODIs and 2 T20s in December 2012. The three ODIs were held in New Delhi, Kolkata and Chennai with Ahmedabad and Bangalore hosted two Twenty20 fixtures.[5]
In March 2013, 66 Kashmiri students studying at Swami Vivekanand Subharti University in Meerut, India were expelled and briefly threatened with sedition charges because they cheered for the Pakistani cricket team during a televised match against India at the Asia Cup.[6]

Matches

The first ever test match between India and Pakistan was played at Delhi from 16–19 October 1952. It was a four day test, India required just three days to beat Pakistan by an innings and 70 runs. India won the 5-match series 2–1 and then, the following 10 tests were draws. Pakistan's first series win against India came after 26 years, in the 1978–79 series.
Pakistan leads India in the number of wins in Tests (12–9) and One Day Internationals (72–50).[7] While India leads Pakistan in T20s (5-1).
The most interesting of all ODI matches between India and Pakistan was final of Austral-Asia Cup 1986 when Legendary Pakistani batsman Javed Miandad hit six to Cheetan Sharma on the last ball of the match and won the title for Pakistan.Several people had died due to the shock of victory and defeat during last over of this match. The two teams have their next World Cup encounter in 2015 Cricket World Cup.[7][8]

Head-to-head statistics

Overall


Tests[9] ODIs[10] T20Is[11]
Matches played 59 126 6
Won by Pakistan 12 72 1
Won by India 9 50 5
Draw/Tie/No result 38 4 0
As of 21 March, 2014.

Major Tournaments Won

Main Tournament Titles India Pakistan
Cricket World Cup 2 1
World Twenty20 1 1
Champions Trophy 2 0
Asia Cup 5 2
U19 World Cup 3 2

Defunct Tournaments Won

Main Tournament Titles India Pakistan
World Championship of Cricket 1 0
Austral-Asia Cup 0 3
Asian Test Championship 0 1

List of ODIs

Key

  • (D/L) denotes that the Duckworth–Lewis method was used in the match
  • # denotes that the team batting second were chasing a revised target
Legend
World Cup
Champions Trophy
Asia Cup
No. Date Winning team Margin of victory Venue Man of the match
1 1 Oct 1978  India 4 runs Ayub National Stadium, Quetta Mohinder Amarnath (IND), 51 & 2/38
2 13 Oct 1978  Pakistan 8 wickets Jinnah Stadium, Sialkot Hasan Jamil (PAK), 3/18
3 3 Nov 1978  Pakistan Conceded Zafar Ali Stadium, Sahiwal Asif Iqbal (PAK), 62 & 1/44
4 3 Dec 1982  Pakistan 14 runs Municipal Stadium, Gujranwala Javed Miandad (PAK), 106*
5 17 Dec 1982  Pakistan 37 runs Ibn-e-Qasim Bagh Stadium, Multan Zaheer Abbas (PAK), 118 & 2/33
6 31 Dec 1982  India 18 runs # Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore Javed Miandad (PAK), 119*
7 21 Jan 1983  Pakistan 8 wickets National Stadium, Karachi Zaheer Abbas (PAK), 113
8 10 Sep 1983  India 4 wickets Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium, Hyderabad Mohinder Amarnath (IND), 60*
9 2 Oct 1983  India 4 wickets Sawai Mansingh Stadium, Jaipur Sandeep Patil (IND), 51
10 13 Apr 1984  India 54 runs Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Surinder Khanna (IND), 56
11 12 Oct 1984  Pakistan 46 runs Ayub National Stadium, Quetta Manzoor Elahi (PAK), 36 & 2/18
12 31 Oct 1984 No result n/a Jinnah Stadium, Sialkot n/a
13 20 Feb 1985  India 6 wickets Melbourne Cricket Ground Mohammad Azharuddin (IND), 93*
14 10 Mar 1985  India 8 wickets Melbourne Cricket Ground Kris Srikkanth (IND), 67
15 22 Mar 1985  India 38 runs Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Imran Khan (PAK), 6/14
16 17 Nov 1985  Pakistan 48 runs Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Mudassar Nazar (PAK), 67 & 2/43
17 18 Apr 1986  Pakistan 1 wicket Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Javed Miandad (PAK), 116*
18 5 Dec 1986  Pakistan 3 wickets Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Manzoor Elahi (PAK), 1/32 & 50*
19 27 Jan 1987  Pakistan 3 wickets Nehru Stadium, Indore Abdul Qadir (PAK), 2/42 & 39
20 18 Feb 1987  Pakistan 2 wickets Eden Gardens, Calcutta Saleem Malik (PAK), 72*
21 20 Mar 1987  India Lost fewer wickets Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium, Hyderabad n/a
22 22 Mar 1987  Pakistan 6 wickets Nehru Stadium, Pune Saleem Jaffar (PAK), 3/25
23 24 Mar 1987  Pakistan 41 runs VCA Ground, Nagpur Wasim Akram (PAK), 48* & 3/26
24 26 Mar 1987  Pakistan 5 wickets Keenan Stadium, Jamshedpur Manoj Prabhakar (IND), 106
25 10 Apr 1987  Pakistan 8 wickets Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Dilip Vengsarkar (IND), 95*
26 19 Oct 1988  Pakistan 34 runs Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Saleem Malik (PAK), 101
27 31 Oct 1988  India 4 wickets Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka Arshad Ayub (IND), 5/21
28 15 Oct 1989  Pakistan 6 wickets Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Navjot Sidhu (IND), 108
29 20 Oct 1989  Pakistan 38 runs Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Saleem Malik (PAK), 102
30 28 Oct 1989  Pakistan 77 runs Eden Gardens, Calcutta Imran Khan (PAK), 47*
31 18 Dec 1989  Pakistan 7 runs Municipal Stadium, Gujranwala Saeed Anwar (PAK), 42*
32 20 Dec 1989 No result n/a National Stadium, Karachi n/a
33 22 Dec 1989  Pakistan 38 runs Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore Aaqib Javed (PAK), 3/28
34 27 Apr 1990  Pakistan 26 runs Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Waqar Younis (PAK), 4/42
35 18 Oct 1991  India 60 runs Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Sanjay Manjrekar (IND), 72
36 23 Oct 1991  Pakistan 4 runs Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Aamer Sohail (PAK), 91
37 25 Oct 1991  Pakistan 72 runs Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Aaqib Javed (PAK), 7/37
38 4 Mar 1992  India 43 runs Sydney Cricket Ground Sachin Tendulkar (IND), 54* & 1/37
39 15 Apr 1994  Pakistan 6 wickets Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Saeed Anwar (PAK), 71
40 22 Apr 1994  Pakistan 39 runs Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Aamer Sohail (PAK), 69 & 2/22
41 7 Apr 1995  Pakistan 97 runs Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Aaqib Javed (PAK), 5/19
42 9 Mar 1996  India 39 runs M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore Navjot Sidhu (IND), 93
43 5 Apr 1996  Pakistan 8 wickets # The Padang, Singapore Aamer Sohail (PAK), 1/46 & 76*
44 12 Apr 1996  Pakistan 38 runs Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Aamer Sohail (PAK), 105
45 15 Apr 1996  India 28 runs Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Sachin Tendulkar (IND), 118 & 2/40
46 16 Sep 1996  India 8 wickets Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club Sachin Tendulkar (IND), 89*
47 17 Sep 1996  Pakistan 2 wickets Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club Saleem Malik (PAK), 70*
48 18 Sep 1996  India 55 runs Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club Rahul Dravid (IND), 46
49 21 Sep 1996  Pakistan 97 runs Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club Ijaz Ahmed (PAK), 90
50 23 Sep 1996  Pakistan 52 runs Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club Mushtaq Ahmed (PAK), 5/36
51 21 May 1997  Pakistan 35 runs M. A. Chidambaram Stadium, Chennai Saeed Anwar (PAK), 194
52 20 Jul 1997 No result n/a Sinhalese Sports Club Ground, Colombo n/a
53 13 Sep 1997  India 20 runs Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club Ajay Jadeja (IND), 49
54 14 Sep 1997  India 7 wickets Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club Sourav Ganguly (IND), 2/16 & 32
55 17 Sep 1997 No result n/a Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club n/a
56 18 Sep 1997  India 34 runs Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club Sourav Ganguly (IND), 5/16
57 20 Sep 1997  India 7 wickets Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club Sourav Ganguly (IND), 2/29 & 75*
58 21 Sep 1997  Pakistan 5 wickets Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club Sourav Ganguly (IND), 96 & 2/33
59 28 Sep 1997  Pakistan 5 wickets Niaz Stadium, Hyderabad Aaqib Javed (PAK), 4/29
60 30 Sep 1997  India 4 wickets National Stadium, Karachi Sourav Ganguly (IND), 89
61 2 Oct 1997  Pakistan 9 wickets Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore Ijaz Ahmed (PAK), 139*
62 14 Dec 1997  Pakistan 4 wickets Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Saeed Anwar (PAK), 104
63 11 Jan 1998  India 18 runs Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka Mohammad Azharuddin (IND), 100
64 14 Jan 1998  India 8 wickets Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka Sachin Tendulkar (IND), 3/45 & 95
65 16 Jan 1998  Pakistan 6 wickets Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka Mohammad Hussain (PAK), 4/33
66 18 Jan 1998  India 3 wickets Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka Sourav Ganguly (IND), 124
67 12 Sep 1998  India 6 wickets Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club Sourav Ganguly (IND), 3/33 & 54
68 13 Sep 1998  Pakistan 51 runs Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club Moin Khan (PAK), 69*
69 16 Sep 1998  Pakistan 77 runs Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club Inzamam-ul-Haq (PAK), 81
70 19 Sep 1998  Pakistan 134 runs Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club Shahid Afridi (PAK), 109
71 20 Sep 1998  Pakistan 5 wickets Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club Aamer Sohail (PAK), 2/59 & 97*
72 24 Mar 1999  Pakistan 143 runs Sawai Mansingh Stadium, Jaipur Saeed Anwar (PAK), 95
73 1 Apr 1999  Pakistan 7 wickets PCA Stadium, Mohali Ijaz Ahmed (PAK), 89*
74 4 Apr 1999  Pakistan 123 runs M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bangalore Azhar Mahmood (PAK), 25 & 5/38
75 8 Apr 1999  Pakistan 116 runs Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Inzamam-ul-Haq (PAK), 107
76 13 Apr 1999  India 6 wickets Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Sadagoppan Ramesh (IND), 82
77 16 Apr 1999  Pakistan 8 wickets Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Wasim Akram (PAK), 3/11
78 8 Jun 1999  India 47 runs Old Trafford, Manchester Venkatesh Prasad (IND), 5/27
79 10 Jan 2000  Pakistan 2 wickets Brisbane Cricket Ground Yousuf Youhana (PAK), 63
80 21 Jan 2000  Pakistan 32 runs Bellerive Oval, Hobart Abdul Razzaq (PAK), 70* & 5/48
81 25 Jan 2000  India 48 runs Adelaide Oval Sourav Ganguly (IND), 141
82 28 Jan 2000  Pakistan 104 runs WACA Ground, Perth Wasim Akram (PAK), 31* & 3/10
83 23 Mar 2000  India 5 wickets Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Mohammad Azharuddin (IND), 54
84 26 Mar 2000  Pakistan 98 runs Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium Inzamam-ul-Haq (PAK), 121*
Waqar Younis (PAK), 5/31
85 3 Jun 2000  Pakistan 44 runs Bangabandhu National Stadium, Dhaka Yousuf Youhana (PAK), 100*
86 1 Mar 2003  India 6 wickets SuperSport Park, Centurion Sachin Tendulkar (IND), 98
87 13 Mar 2004  India 5 runs National Stadium, Karachi Inzamam-ul-Haq (PAK), 122
88 16 Mar 2004  Pakistan 12 runs Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium Sachin Tendulkar (IND), 141
89 19 Mar 2004  Pakistan 4 wickets Arbab Niaz Stadium, Peshawar Yasir Hameed (PAK), 98
90 21 Mar 2004  India 5 wickets Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore Inzamam-ul-Haq (PAK), 123
91 24 Mar 2004  India 40 runs Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore VVS Laxman (IND), 107
92 25 Jul 2004  Pakistan 59 runs R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo Shoaib Malik (PAK), 143 & 2/42
93 21 Aug 2004  Pakistan 66 runs (D/L) VRA Cricket Ground, Amstelveen Shoaib Malik (PAK), 68 & 3/18
94 19 Sep 2004  Pakistan 3 wickets Edgbaston, Birmingham Yousuf Youhana (PAK), 81*
95 13 Nov 2004  Pakistan 6 wickets Eden Gardens, Kolkata Salman Butt (PAK), 108*
96 2 Apr 2005  India 87 runs Nehru Stadium, Kochi Virender Sehwag (IND), 108
97 5 Apr 2005  India 58 runs ACA-VDCA Stadium, Visakhapatnam Mahendra Singh Dhoni (IND), 148
98 9 Apr 2005  Pakistan 106 runs Keenan Stadium, Jamshedpur Rana Naved-ul-Hasan (PAK), 6/27
99 12 Apr 2005  Pakistan 3 wickets Sardar Patel Stadium, Ahmedabad Inzamam-ul-Haq (PAK), 60*
100 15 Apr 2005  Pakistan 5 wickets Green Park Stadium, Kanpur Shahid Afridi (PAK), 102
101 17 Apr 2005  Pakistan 159 runs Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi Shoaib Malik (PAK), 72
102 6 Feb 2006  Pakistan 7 runs (D/L) Arbab Niaz Stadium, Peshawar Salman Butt (PAK), 101
103 11 Feb 2006  India 7 wickets Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium Irfan Pathan (IND), 3/43
104 13 Feb 2006  India 5 wickets Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore Mahendra Singh Dhoni (IND), 72*
105 16 Feb 2006  India 5 wickets Multan Cricket Stadium R. P. Singh (IND), 4/40
106 19 Feb 2006  India 8 wickets National Stadium, Karachi Yuvraj Singh (IND), 107*
107 18 Apr 2006  Pakistan 6 wickets Sheikh Zayed Cricket Stadium, Abu Dhabi Younis Khan (PAK), 71*
108 19 Apr 2006  India 51 runs Sheikh Zayed Cricket Stadium, Abu Dhabi Rahul Dravid (IND), 92
109 5 Nov 2007  India 5 wickets Nehru Stadium, Guwahati Mahendra Singh Dhoni (IND), 63
110 8 Nov 2007  Pakistan 4 wickets PCA Stadium, Mohali Younis Khan (PAK), 117
111 11 Nov 2007  India 46 runs Green Park Stadium, Kanpur Yuvraj Singh (IND), 77 & 1/18
112 15 Nov 2007  India 6 wickets Roop Singh Stadium, Gwalior Sachin Tendulkar (IND), 97
113 18 Nov 2007  Pakistan 31 runs Sawai Mansingh Stadium, Jaipur Shoaib Malik (PAK), 89 & 3/61
114 10 Jun 2008  India 140 runs Sher-e-Bangla Cricket Stadium, Dhaka Virender Sehwag (IND), 89
115 14 Jun 2008  Pakistan 25 runs Sher-e-Bangla Cricket Stadium, Dhaka Younis Khan (PAK), 108
116 26 Jun 2008  India 6 wickets National Stadium, Karachi Suresh Raina (IND), 84
117 2 Jul 2008  Pakistan 8 wickets National Stadium, Karachi Younis Khan (PAK), 123*
118 26 Sep 2009  Pakistan 54 runs SuperSport Park, Centurion Shoaib Malik (PAK), 128
119 19 Jun 2010  India 3 wickets Rangiri Dambulla International Stadium Gautam Gambhir (IND), 83
120 30 Mar 2011  India 29 runs PCA Stadium, Mohali Sachin Tendulkar (IND), 85
121 18 Mar 2012  India 6 wickets Sher-e-Bangla Cricket Stadium, Mirpur Virat Kohli (IND), 183
122 30 Dec 2012  Pakistan 6 wickets M. A. Chidambaram Stadium, Chennai Mahendra Singh Dhoni (IND), 113*
123 3 Jan 2013  Pakistan 85 runs Eden Gardens, Kolkata Nasir Jamshed (PAK), 106
124 6 Jan 2013  India 10 runs Feroz Shah Kotla, Delhi Mahendra Singh Dhoni (IND), 36
125 15 Jun 2013  India 8 wickets (D/L) Edgbaston, Birmingham Bhuvneshwar Kumar (IND), 2/19
126 2 Mar 2014  Pakistan 1 wicket Sher-e-Bangla Cricket Stadium, Mirpur Mohammad Hafeez (PAK), 75 & 2/38

List of test series

Series Years Host First match Tests IND PAK Drawn/No Result Winner
1 1952–53 India 16 October 1952 5 2 1 2 India
2 1954–55 Pakistan 1 January 1955 5 0 0 5 Drawn
3 1960–61 India 2 December 1960 5 0 0 5 Drawn
4 1978–79 Pakistan 16 October 1978 3 0 2 1 Pakistan
5 1979–80 India 21 November 1979 6 2 0 4 India
6 1982–83 Pakistan 10 December 1982 6 0 3 3 Pakistan
7 1983–84 India 14 September 1983 3 0 0 3 Drawn
8 1984–85 Pakistan 17 October 1984 2 0 0 2 Drawn
9 1986–87 India 3 February 1987 5 0 1 4 Pakistan
10 1989–90 Pakistan 15 November 1989 4 0 0 4 Drawn
11 1998–99 India 28 January 1999 2 1 1 0 Drawn
11 1998–99 India 20 February 1999 1 0 1 0 Pakistan
12 2003–04 Pakistan 28 March 2004 3 2 1 0 India
13 2004–05 India 8 March 2005 3 1 1 1 Draw
14 2005–06 Pakistan 13 January 2006 3 0 1 2 Pakistan
15 2007–08 India 22 November 2007 3 1 0 2 India
Total
India: 8
Pakistan: 7

58 9 12 38 India: 4
Pakistan: 5
Draw: 7

Test records

Team

Most runs in an innings
Runs Team Venue Season
700-5  Pakistan Gaddafi Stadium 1989/90
679-7 d  Pakistan Gaddafi Stadium 2005/06
675-5 d  India Multan Cricket Stadium 2003/04
674-6  Pakistan Iqbal Stadium 1984/85
652  Pakistan Iqbal Stadium 1982/83
Last updated: 27 November 2011[12]
Fewest runs in a completed innings
Runs Team Venue Season
106  India University Ground 1952/53
116  Pakistan M. Chinnaswamy Stadium 1986/87
126  India Feroz Shah Kotla 1979/80
145  India M. Chinnaswamy Stadium 1986/87
 India National Stadium, Karachi 1954/55
Last updated: 27 November 2011[13]
Greatest win margins (by innings)
Margin Winning team Venue Season
Innings and 131 runs  India Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium 2003/04
Innings and 119 runs  Pakistan Niaz Stadium 1982/83
Innings and 86 runs  Pakistan National Stadium, Karachi 1982/83
Innings and 70 runs  India Feroz Shah Kotla 1952/53
Innings and 52 runs  India Multan Cricket Stadium 2003/04
Last updated: 27 November 2011[14]
Greatest win margins (by runs)
Margin Teams Venue Season
341 runs  Pakistan National Stadium, Karachi 2005/06
212 runs  India Feroz Shah Kotla 1998/99
195 runs  India Eden Gardens 2004/05
168 runs  Pakistan M. Chinnaswamy Stadium 2004–05
131 runs  India Wankhede Stadium 1979/80
Last updated: 27 November 2011[14]
Smallest victories
  • Pakistan – Pakistan beat India by 12 runs at MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chennai on 28–31 January 1999.
  • India – India beat Pakistan by 131 runs at Mumbai on 16–20 December 1979.
Most extras conceded in an innings
  • Pakistan – 76 extras at Bangalore on 8–12 December 2007.
  • India – 55 extras at Faisalabad on 23–28 November 1989.

Individual

Highest score in an innings
Best bowling figures in an innings
Best bowling figures in a match
Most runs conceded in an innings
Highest wicket taker in India vs Pakistan matches

ODI records

Highest innings totals
Rank Score Team Venue Date
1 356–9 (50 overs)  India ACA-VDCA Stadium 5 April 2005
2 349–7 (49.5 overs)  India National Stadium, Karachi 13 March 2004
3 344–8 (50 overs)  Pakistan National Stadium, Karachi 13 March 2004
4 330–4 (47.5 overs)  India Sher-e-Bangla Cricket Stadium 18 March 2012
5 330–8 (50 overs)  India Sher-e-Bangla Cricket Stadium 10 June 2008
Source: Cricinfo.com. Last updated 18 March 2012.
Lowest innings score
Rank Score Team Venue Date
1 79 (34.2 overs)  India Jinnah Stadium Sialkot 13 October 1978
2 87 (32.5 overs)  Pakistan Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium 22 March 1985
3 112 (30.2 overs)  India Gaddafi Stadium 22 December 1989
4 116 (45.0 overs)  Pakistan Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club 14 September 1997
5 125 (45.0 overs)  India Sharjah Cricket Association Stadium 16 April 1999
Source: Cricinfo.com. Last updated 18 March 2012.
Most career runs
Runs Player Period
2,474 (66 innings) India Sachin Tendulkar 1989–2012
2,403 (64 innings) Pakistan Inzamam-ul-Haq 1992–2006
2,002 (48 innings) Pakistan Saeed Anwar 1989–2003
2,005 (55 innings) India Rahul Dravid 1996–2012
1,657 (59 innings) India Mohammad Azharuddin 1985–2000
Last updated: 3 January 2013[15]
Highest individual score
Runs Player Venue Date
194 Pakistan Saeed Anwar M. A. Chidambaram Stadium 21 May 1997
183 India Virat Kohli Sher-e-Bangla Cricket Stadium 18 March 2012
148 India Mahendra Singh Dhoni ACA-VDCA Stadium 5 April 2005
143 Pakistan Shoaib Malik R. Premadasa Stadium 25 July 2004
141 India Sachin Tendulkar Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium 16 March 2004
Last updated: 18 March 2012[16]
Highest partnerships
Best bowling figures
Biggest victory margins
  • Pakistan – 159 run victory at Delhi on 17 April 2005
Pakistan – 303/8 (50.0 overs)
India – 144 (37 overs)
  • India – 140 run victory at Dhaka on 10 June 2008
India – 330/9 (50.0 overs)
Pakistan – 190 (35.4 overs)
Smallest victory margins
  • Pakistan – 4 runs at Sharjah on 23 October 1993
Pakistan – 257/8 (50.0 overs)
India – 253/7 (50.0 overs)
India – 212/6 (44.0 overs maximum)
Pakistan – 212/7 (44.0 overs maximum)[17]
Most extras in one ODI
Most catches by an individual in an innings
  • India – 4 catches
Sunil Gavaskar at Sharjah on 22 March 1985
Mohammad Azharuddin at Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club on 13 September 1997
Sachin Tendulkar at Dhaka on 11 January 1998
  • Pakistan – 4 catches
Younis Khan at Keenan Stadium, Jamshedpur on 9 April 2005
Most wickets in a career
Wickets Player Matches Average
60 Pakistan Wasim Akram 48 25.15
57 Pakistan Saqlain Mushtaq 35 24.38
54 India Anil Kumble 34 24.25
Pakistan Aaqib Javed 39 24.64
India Javagal Srinath 36 30.68
Last updated: 3 January 2013[18]
ODI matches summary (1978-2014)
  • Total 126 Matches – 50 won by India, 72 won by Pakistan, No Result 4
  • 30 matches in India – 11 won by India, 19 won by Pakistan
  • 27 matches in Pakistan – 11 won by India, 14 won by Pakistan, No Result 2
  • 69 matches in other countries – 28 won by India, 39 won by Pakistan, No Result 2

Players who have played for both teams

After the partition in 1947, Pakistan emerged to play cricket. But India had already been playing cricket matches pre-independence. No player has ever played for India after playing for Pakistan. Three players have played for Pakistan after appearing for India. They are:
  • Amir Elahi – India (one test vs. Australia at Sydney in 1947), Pakistan (1952–53)
  • Gul Mohammad – India (1946–55), Pakistan (one test vs. Australia at Karachi in 1956)
  • Abdul Hafeez Kardar – India (1946–48), Pakistan (1948–58)
Although Pakistan was created in 1947, Gul Mohammad continued to represent India until 1954, and played for India against Pakistan in Pakistan's first tour of India in 1951-52.