Sri Lanka 4 for 161 (Jayawardene 61*, T Perera 35*) beat Australia 3 for 119 (Marsh 47*) by 2 runs (D/L method)
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Before the Ranji Trophy final, the Mumbai captain Ajit Agarkar had
talked about his side not having put together the perfect match this
season. True to their reputation of being at their best when it matters,
Mumbai delivered that perfect match on the biggest domestic stage to
reclaim their familiar position as Ranji champions.
Agarkar and Dhawal Kulkarni were so devastating with the new ball that
at one stage Saurashtra, who have built up a reputation for scoring big,
were in so precarious a position that journalists scrambled to find the
lowest totals in first-class history. They avoided those levels of
ignominy but were still rolled over for a measly 82, handing Mumbai a
handsome innings and 125-run victory.
Saurashtra had their best chance of a fightback when they had Mumbai six
down on the second evening and only 89 ahead. They let that lead swell
to 139 yesterday, and on third morning Hiken Shah strengthened Mumbai
further with more than two hours of resistance.
Saurashtra needed a solid start if they were to pose any challenge, but
their innings unravelled with unseemly haste. There was a poignant
moment in the first over as Shitanshu Kotak, who waited two decades to
play in a Ranji final, was caught-behind for a duck in what could be his
final first-class game. He dejectedly walked past the trophy, which had
been brought out and displayed on the boundary's edge, on his way to
the dressing-room.
The other opener, Sagar Jogiyani, has also had a game to forget. He had
fallen for 1 on the first day, muffed a chance to run out Wasim Jaffer
on the second and rounded off the game with a duck on the third.
Agarkar and Kulkarni were getting the ball to move both ways, and
maintained a tight line and length, but Saurashtra's batsmen looked so
out of their depth that the persistent doubts over their ability to
score outside the benign surfaces of Rajkot will not be swept away any
time soon. Saurashtra coach Debu Mitra admitted after the match that his
batsmen needed to spend more time on seaming tracks, and that they
didn't have enough experience of difficult batting conditions.
They fished at far too many deliveries that should have been left alone.
Mumbai operated with four slips and two gullies for much of the first
hour, and the catches duly arrived.
There was bounce as well for the new-ball bowlers, and it was one of
those lifting deliveries that removed Rahul Dave, hit high on the bat as
he edged to the cordon. Aarpit Vasavada, who provided much of
Saurashtra's resistance in the first innings, got a rough lbw decision
after being struck outside off. Jaydev Shah avoided a pair but was
bowled through the gate for 6.
At 11 for 5, the game was effectively over. Never have Saurashtra missed
Cheteshwar Pujara as badly as they did in this match. They may have
been outclassed in the final but, still, that won't take the shine off
Saurashtra's best season in nearly seven decades.
For Mumbai, another title is only a return to business as usual after
missing out in the previous two seasons. If the 40th trophy wasn't
enough to show their domestic dominance, it comes in a season when they
have won the Under-25 and U-16 titles too, and are battling it out in
the final of the U-19.






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