Brabourne Stadium
Brabourne Stadium is a cricket ground in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India, owned by the Cricket Club of India (CCI). It is regarded as India’s first permanent sporting venue, built on reclaimed land near Marine Drive close to Churchgate railway station.
Table of Contents
Quick Facts
| Location | Churchgate, Mumbai, Maharashtra |
| Foundation laid | 22 May 1936 |
| Opened | 7 December 1937 |
| Capacity | Reported between approximately 20,000 and 35,000 |
| Owner | Cricket Club of India |
| Named after | Lord Brabourne, Governor of Bombay |
| First Test | 1948–49, India vs West Indies |
History
The Cricket Club of India was incorporated in 1933, with R. E. Grant Govan — then president of the BCCI — becoming its first president. Although CCI was originally registered in New Delhi, Bombay was chosen as the site for its new ground, reflecting the city’s status as the historical home of Indian cricket. Built on 90,000 square yards of reclaimed land, the stadium opened on 7 December 1937, named in honour of Lord Brabourne at the suggestion of the Maharaja of Patiala.
The ground quickly became the venue for the Bombay Pentangular tournament, previously held at the Bombay Gymkhana. Its early years produced legendary rivalries, most notably between Vijay Merchant and Vijay Hazare — highlighted by Hazare’s 309 for the Rest team in the 1943–44 Pentangular final, and Merchant’s still-standing ground record of 359 not out in a Ranji Trophy match against Maharashtra the same season.
Brabourne hosted Test cricket from 1948 to 1972, staging 17 Tests, before a dispute between the CCI and the Bombay Cricket Association (BCA) over ticket allocations led the BCA to build its own ground nearby — the Wankhede Stadium, opened in 1975. After this, Brabourne largely lost its status as Mumbai’s primary international venue, though it continued to host domestic first-class matches.
International cricket returned to Brabourne in the 21st century: it hosted matches during the 2006 ICC Champions Trophy and staged India’s first-ever T20I on home soil in 2007. In December 2009, it hosted a Test match after a 36-year gap — at the time, the longest interval between two Tests at the same ground in cricket history.
Notable Events
- 1943–44 – The Merchant–Hazare batting duel produces record-breaking individual innings in the Bombay Pentangular.
- 1952 – India defeats Pakistan at Brabourne to win its first-ever Test series.
- 1993 – Jonty Rhodes takes a world-record five catches for South Africa against West Indies in a Hero Cup ODI.
- 1997–98 – Sachin Tendulkar scores the first double century of his first-class career at the venue, for Mumbai against Australia.
- 2007 – Hosts India’s first T20I on home soil, against Australia.
- 2009 – Hosts a Test 36 years after its previous one, an India–Sri Lanka match in which India scored 726/9, its highest Test total at the time.
Records
- Highest score at the venue: Vijay Merchant, 359* (Ranji Trophy, 1943–44) — the highest individual score ever recorded on this ground.
- Highest Test score by India at the venue: 726/9 declared vs Sri Lanka (2009).
- Vijay Hazare scored a century in each of his four Test appearances at Brabourne — the most centuries by any player at the ground.
Facilities and Layout
The ground’s North Stand housed the BCCI’s headquarters and the 1983 Cricket World Cup trophy until 2006, when both were relocated to the newly built Cricket Centre at Wankhede Stadium. The stadium comprises a clubhouse pavilion and three public stands — West, North, and East — with play taking place between the Pavilion End and the Churchgate End.
Access
Brabourne Stadium is located in Churchgate, South Mumbai, within walking distance of Marine Drive and Churchgate railway station.
Related Stadiums
- Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai — the stadium built after Brabourne’s ticket-allocation dispute with the Bombay Cricket Association.
- Eden Gardens, Kolkata — India’s oldest cricket venue, predating Brabourne by several decades.
- MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chennai — a fellow historic ground from the same early-Test era.
- Maharashtra Cricket Association Stadium, Pune — another prominent Maharashtra cricket venue.
This article is written in a Wikipedia-style format for reference and general information purposes.





