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Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium, Hyderabad

The Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium, formerly known as Fateh Maidan, is a multi-purpose sports stadium in Hyderabad, Telangana.[1] The stadium is primarily used for cricket and association football.

LB Stadium
Fateh Maidan
View of Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium
Ground information
LocationHyderabad, Telangana, India
Establishment1950
Capacity30,000
OwnerSports Authority of Telangana State
OperatorSports Authority of Telangana State
TenantsFateh Hyderabad F.C.
End names
Pavilion End
Hill Fort End
International information
First Test19 November, 1955:
 India v  New Zealand
Last Test2 December, 1988:
 India v  New Zealand
First ODI10 September, 1983:
 India v  Pakistan
Last ODI19 November, 2003:
 India v  New Zealand
Only women's Test10–13 December 1995:
 India v  England
First WODI8 January 1978:
 England v  New Zealand
Last WODI13 December 2003:
 India v  New Zealand
As of 10 December 2019
Source: Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium, Cricinfo

The stadium was renamed in 1967 in memory of Lal Bahadur Shastri, India's former Prime Minister. As of 19 August 2017, it has hosted 3 Tests and 14 ODIs.

History

During the eight-month siege of Golconda in 1687 the Mughal soldiers were camped on a vast open ground. After their victory, this ground was named as Fateh Maidan (Victory Square).[2] During Asaf Jahi period, Fateh Maidan was used as Polo Grounds.[3][4] Gymkhana ground in Secunderabad which was the home of Hyderabad Cricket Association did not have stands to accommodate the large number of spectators that used to watch the cricket matches.[5] The matches were therefore held at Fateh Maidan even though the grounds were not owned by Hyderabad Cricket Association but by Andhra Pradesh Sports Council. The first test match was hosted in November 1955 against New Zealand.[6] The stadium was renamed as Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium in 1967. Floodlights were introduced in 1993 during the Hero Cup match between the West Indies and Zimbabwe. The Stadium was the home ground for the Hyderabad cricket team.

In 2005, the use of Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium for International cricket was discontinued when Rajiv Gandhi International Cricket Stadium built across town hosted an ODI Match between India and South Africa. The stadium is now hosting Indian Cricket League matches and is the home ground for the 2008 Edelweiss 20's Challenge winners Hyderabad Heroes.

Lal Bahadur Stadium is situated behind the police control room, between the Nizam College and Public Gardens in Hyderabad. It is the venue for many national and international sporting events, especially for football and cricket. The stadium was previously known as Fateh Maidan.

It has the capacity to seat around 25,000 people. The swimming pool, shopping complex and the indoor stadium are the important aspects of this stadium. The ground has flood light facility and now is used as the Sports Authority of Telangana State (SATS).The games played here are mainly Cricket and Football.

Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium has hosted only three Test matches[7] – all against New Zealand. Polly Umrigar's double century and Subhash Gupte's 7 wickets in NZ's first innings were the most notable performances of the inaugural Test between these two teams and ended in a draw.[8] In 1988/89, local players Arshad Ayub with seven wickets in the match and Mohammad Azharuddin, who top scored with 81 runs led India to a 10 wicket victory[9] and a 2–1 Series victory.

ODI Cricket

 
Petroglyph of in Pateh Maidan Stadium Foundation Stone

The first ODI Match was played in the stadium during the 1983/84 season when India hosted Pakistan and won the match by four wickets.[10] The match between India and Pakistan on 20 March 1987 was a thriller which ended with the scores tied at 212 in 44 overs. India were declared the victors because they lost fewer wickets (six to Pakistan's seven).[11]

In one of the great matches played during the 1987 Cricket World Cup, David Houghton's 142 fell just short of lifting Zimbabwe to an epic victory. Apart from Houghton and Iain Butchart's 54, all other Zimbabwean batsmen scored single figures as New Zealand won by 3 runs.[12] The Hero Cup encounter (1992) between West Indies and Zimbabwe saw the first day/night match in the stadium. The match was easily won by West Indies. In all, the stadium has hosted seven-day/night matches. In the 1996 Cricket World Cup, the West Indies overhauled Zimbabwe's 151 in just 29.3 overs on their way to a semi-final appearance in the tournament.

In the 1999/00 season, the stadium hosted the 2nd match in the 5-match ODI Series between India and New Zealand. Having suffered a defeat in Rajkot, India lost Sourav Ganguly in the second over (run-out) as a straight drive from Sachin richoched off Shayne O'Connor's fingers into the non-striker's stumps. Rahul Dravid and Tendulkar then put on a world-record 331 run partnership off 46.2 overs as India amassed on 376 runs and easily won the match by 174 runs.

In the final match played at Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium (2003), India played against New Zealand in the TVS Cup encounter that decided the second finalist (Australia already booked its spot). Tendulkar's century and Virender Sehwag's 130 created a platform for Dravid to equal the second fastest fifty by an Indian – 50 off 22 balls as India scored 353 runs and won the match comfortably by 145 runs.

Venue statistics

Match Information

Game Type No. of Games
Test Matches 3[13]
ODI 14[14]
Twenty20 0

Test Match statistics

Category Information
Highest Team Score India (498/4 – Decl. against New Zealand)
Lowest Team Score India (89 All-Out against New Zealand)
Best Batting Performance Polly Umrigar (223 Runs against New Zealand)
Best Bowling Performance Subhash Gupte (7/128 against New Zealand)

The highest scores were made by West Indies, scoring 498–4 in 1959 and 358 all out in 1948. The next highest score was made by New Zealand scoring 326 all out in Test cricket. The most runs scored here was by Polly Umrigar (223 runs), followed by Bert Sutcliffe (154 runs) and John Guy (123 runs). The most wickets taken here was by Erapalli Prasana (8 wickets) by Subhash Gupte (8 wickets)and Dayle Hadlee (7 wickets).

ODI Match statistics

Category Information
Highest Team Score India (376/2 in 50 Overs against New Zealand)
Lowest Team Score Zimbabwe (99 All Out in 36.3 Overs against West Indies)
Best Batting Performance Sachin Tendulkar (186* Runs against New Zealand)
Best Bowling Performance Manoj Prabhakar (5/35 against Sri Lanka)

The highest scores were made by India, scoring 376–2 in ODIs. The next highest scores were also made by India who scored 353-5 and South Africa who scored 261–7.

The most runs scored here was by Sachin Tendulkar (310 runs), followed by Rahul Dravid (297 runs) and Dave Houghton (164 runs). Anil Kumble (7 wickets), Ajit Agarkar (6 wickets) and Manoj Prabharkar (5 wickets) are the leading wicket-takers on this ground in ODIs.

List of Centuries

Key

  • * denotes that the batsman was not out.
  • Inns. denotes the number of the innings in the match.
  • Balls denotes the number of balls faced in an innings.
  • NR denotes that the number of balls was not recorded.
  • Parentheses next to the player's score denotes his century number at Edgbaston.
  • The column title Date refers to the date the match started.
  • The column title Result refers to the player's team result

Test Centuries

No. Score Player Team Balls Inns. Opposing team Date Result
1 223 Polly Umrigar   India - 1   New Zealand 19 November 1955 Draw[15]
2 118 Vijay Manjrekar   India - 1   New Zealand 19 November 1955 Draw[15]
3 100* A. G. Kripal Singh   India - 1   New Zealand 19 November 1955 Draw[15]
4 102 John Guy   New Zealand - 2   India 19 November 1955 Draw[15]
5 137* Bert Sutcliffe   New Zealand - 3   India 19 November 1955 Draw[15]

One Day Internationals

No. Score Player Team Balls Inns. Opposing team Date Result
1 142 Dave Houghton   Zimbabwe 137 2   New Zealand 10 October 1987 Lost[16]
2 124 Wayne Larkins   England 126 2   Australia 19 October 1989 Win[17]
3 186* Sachin Tendulkar   India 150 1   New Zealand 8 November 1999 Win[18]
4 153 Rahul Dravid   India 153 1   New Zealand 8 November 1999 Win[18]
5 130 Virender Sehwag   India 134 1   New Zealand 15 November 2003 Win[19]
6 102 Sachin Tendulkar   India 91 1   New Zealand 15 November 2003 Win[19]

List of Five Wicket Hauls

Key

Symbol Meaning
  The bowler was man of the match
  10 or more wickets taken in the match
§ One of two five-wicket hauls by the bowler in the match
Date Day the Test started or ODI was held
Inn Innings in which five-wicket haul was taken
Overs Number of overs bowled.
Runs Number of runs conceded
Wkts Number of wickets taken
Econ Runs conceded per over
Batsmen Batsmen whose wickets were taken
Drawn The match was drawn.

Tests

No. Bowler Date Team Opposing team Inn Overs Runs Wkts Econ Batsmen Result
1 Subhash Gupte 19 November 1955   India   New Zealand 2 76.4 128 7 1.66 Drawn[15]
2 E. A. S. Prasanna 15 October 1969   India   New Zealand 1 29 51 5 1.75 Drawn[20]

One DAY Internationals

No. Bowler Date Team Opposing team Inn Overs Runs Wkts Econ Batsmen Result
1 Manoj Prabhakar 18 February 1994   India   Sri Lanka 1 10 35 5 3.50 India won[21]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium Ground Profile". Retrieved 8 April 2006.
  2. ^ Imam, Syeda (1974). The Untold Charminar. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-81-8475-971-6.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 14 December 2015.
  4. ^ Raya, Lallana (2002). Legacy of the Nizam's. Vani Prakashan. p. 148. ISBN 9788170551645.
  5. ^ Ramnarayan V. "Memories of Fateh Maidan".
  6. ^ "Lal Bahadur Stadium".
  7. ^ "Fateh Maidan: Test Matches". ESPN Cricinfo. 17 June 2011. Retrieved 17 June 2011.
  8. ^ "Scorecard – India v/s New Zealand 1st Test Match – 1955/56 Season". Cricinfo. Retrieved 7 April 2007.
  9. ^ "Scorecard – India v/s New Zealand 3rd Test Match – 1988/89 Season". Cricinfo. Retrieved 7 April 2007.
  10. ^ "Scorecard – India v/s Pakistan 1st ODI Match- 1983/84 Season". Cricinfo. Retrieved 7 April 2007.
  11. ^ "Scorecard – India v/s Pakistan 3rd ODI Match- 1986/87 Season". Cricinfo. Retrieved 7 April 2007.
  12. ^ "Scorecard – New Zealand v/s Zimbabwe 4th ODI Match – 1987 Cricket World Cup". Cricinfo. Retrieved 7 April 2007.
  13. ^ "Match result information of Test Matches played in Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium". Cricinfo. Retrieved 7 April 2007.
  14. ^ "Match result information of ODI Matches played in Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium". Cricinfo. Retrieved 7 April 2007.
  15. ^ a b c d e f "1st Test, New Zealand tour of India at Hyderabad (Deccan), Nov 19-24 1955". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
  16. ^ "4th Match, Reliance World Cup at Hyderabad (Deccan), Oct 10 1987". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
  17. ^ "2nd Match, MRF World Series (Nehru Cup) at Hyderabad (Deccan), Oct 19 1989". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
  18. ^ a b "2nd ODI, New Zealand tour of India at Hyderabad (Deccan), Nov 8 1999". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
  19. ^ a b "9th Match (D/N), TVS Cup (India) at Hyderabad (Deccan), Nov 15 2003". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
  20. ^ "3rd Test, New Zealand tour of India at Hyderabad (Deccan), Oct 15-20 1969". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
  21. ^ "2nd ODI, Sri Lanka tour of India at Hyderabad (Deccan), Feb 18 1994". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 24 August 2019.

Coordinates: 17°23′57.6″N 78°28′24.0″E / 17.399333°N 78.473333°E / 17.399333; 78.473333

External links

  • Cricinfo Website - Ground Page
  • Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium
  • cricketarchive Website - Ground Page

bahadur, shastri, stadium, hyderabad, bahadur, shastri, stadium, formerly, known, fateh, maidan, multi, purpose, sports, stadium, hyderabad, telangana, stadium, primarily, used, cricket, association, football, stadiumfateh, maidanview, bahadur, shastri, stadiu. The Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium formerly known as Fateh Maidan is a multi purpose sports stadium in Hyderabad Telangana 1 The stadium is primarily used for cricket and association football LB StadiumFateh MaidanView of Lal Bahadur Shastri StadiumGround informationLocationHyderabad Telangana IndiaEstablishment1950Capacity30 000OwnerSports Authority of Telangana StateOperatorSports Authority of Telangana StateTenantsFateh Hyderabad F C End namesPavilion EndHill Fort EndInternational informationFirst Test19 November 1955 India v New ZealandLast Test2 December 1988 India v New ZealandFirst ODI10 September 1983 India v PakistanLast ODI19 November 2003 India v New ZealandOnly women s Test10 13 December 1995 India v EnglandFirst WODI8 January 1978 England v New ZealandLast WODI13 December 2003 India v New ZealandAs of 10 December 2019Source Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium CricinfoThe stadium was renamed in 1967 in memory of Lal Bahadur Shastri India s former Prime Minister As of 19 August 2017 it has hosted 3 Tests and 14 ODIs Contents 1 History 2 ODI Cricket 3 Venue statistics 3 1 Match Information 3 2 Test Match statistics 3 3 ODI Match statistics 4 List of Centuries 4 1 Key 4 2 Test Centuries 4 3 One Day Internationals 5 List of Five Wicket Hauls 5 1 Key 5 2 Tests 5 3 One DAY Internationals 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditDuring the eight month siege of Golconda in 1687 the Mughal soldiers were camped on a vast open ground After their victory this ground was named as Fateh Maidan Victory Square 2 During Asaf Jahi period Fateh Maidan was used as Polo Grounds 3 4 Gymkhana ground in Secunderabad which was the home of Hyderabad Cricket Association did not have stands to accommodate the large number of spectators that used to watch the cricket matches 5 The matches were therefore held at Fateh Maidan even though the grounds were not owned by Hyderabad Cricket Association but by Andhra Pradesh Sports Council The first test match was hosted in November 1955 against New Zealand 6 The stadium was renamed as Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium in 1967 Floodlights were introduced in 1993 during the Hero Cup match between the West Indies and Zimbabwe The Stadium was the home ground for the Hyderabad cricket team In 2005 the use of Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium for International cricket was discontinued when Rajiv Gandhi International Cricket Stadium built across town hosted an ODI Match between India and South Africa The stadium is now hosting Indian Cricket League matches and is the home ground for the 2008 Edelweiss 20 s Challenge winners Hyderabad Heroes Lal Bahadur Stadium is situated behind the police control room between the Nizam College and Public Gardens in Hyderabad It is the venue for many national and international sporting events especially for football and cricket The stadium was previously known as Fateh Maidan It has the capacity to seat around 25 000 people The swimming pool shopping complex and the indoor stadium are the important aspects of this stadium The ground has flood light facility and now is used as the Sports Authority of Telangana State SATS The games played here are mainly Cricket and Football Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium has hosted only three Test matches 7 all against New Zealand Polly Umrigar s double century and Subhash Gupte s 7 wickets in NZ s first innings were the most notable performances of the inaugural Test between these two teams and ended in a draw 8 In 1988 89 local players Arshad Ayub with seven wickets in the match and Mohammad Azharuddin who top scored with 81 runs led India to a 10 wicket victory 9 and a 2 1 Series victory ODI Cricket Edit Petroglyph of in Pateh Maidan Stadium Foundation Stone The first ODI Match was played in the stadium during the 1983 84 season when India hosted Pakistan and won the match by four wickets 10 The match between India and Pakistan on 20 March 1987 was a thriller which ended with the scores tied at 212 in 44 overs India were declared the victors because they lost fewer wickets six to Pakistan s seven 11 In one of the great matches played during the 1987 Cricket World Cup David Houghton s 142 fell just short of lifting Zimbabwe to an epic victory Apart from Houghton and Iain Butchart s 54 all other Zimbabwean batsmen scored single figures as New Zealand won by 3 runs 12 The Hero Cup encounter 1992 between West Indies and Zimbabwe saw the first day night match in the stadium The match was easily won by West Indies In all the stadium has hosted seven day night matches In the 1996 Cricket World Cup the West Indies overhauled Zimbabwe s 151 in just 29 3 overs on their way to a semi final appearance in the tournament In the 1999 00 season the stadium hosted the 2nd match in the 5 match ODI Series between India and New Zealand Having suffered a defeat in Rajkot India lost Sourav Ganguly in the second over run out as a straight drive from Sachin richoched off Shayne O Connor s fingers into the non striker s stumps Rahul Dravid and Tendulkar then put on a world record 331 run partnership off 46 2 overs as India amassed on 376 runs and easily won the match by 174 runs In the final match played at Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium 2003 India played against New Zealand in the TVS Cup encounter that decided the second finalist Australia already booked its spot Tendulkar s century and Virender Sehwag s 130 created a platform for Dravid to equal the second fastest fifty by an Indian 50 off 22 balls as India scored 353 runs and won the match comfortably by 145 runs Venue statistics EditMatch Information Edit Game Type No of GamesTest Matches 3 13 ODI 14 14 Twenty20 0Test Match statistics Edit Category InformationHighest Team Score India 498 4 Decl against New Zealand Lowest Team Score India 89 All Out against New Zealand Best Batting Performance Polly Umrigar 223 Runs against New Zealand Best Bowling Performance Subhash Gupte 7 128 against New Zealand The highest scores were made by West Indies scoring 498 4 in 1959 and 358 all out in 1948 The next highest score was made by New Zealand scoring 326 all out in Test cricket The most runs scored here was by Polly Umrigar 223 runs followed by Bert Sutcliffe 154 runs and John Guy 123 runs The most wickets taken here was by Erapalli Prasana 8 wickets by Subhash Gupte 8 wickets and Dayle Hadlee 7 wickets ODI Match statistics Edit Category InformationHighest Team Score India 376 2 in 50 Overs against New Zealand Lowest Team Score Zimbabwe 99 All Out in 36 3 Overs against West Indies Best Batting Performance Sachin Tendulkar 186 Runs against New Zealand Best Bowling Performance Manoj Prabhakar 5 35 against Sri Lanka The highest scores were made by India scoring 376 2 in ODIs The next highest scores were also made by India who scored 353 5 and South Africa who scored 261 7 The most runs scored here was by Sachin Tendulkar 310 runs followed by Rahul Dravid 297 runs and Dave Houghton 164 runs Anil Kumble 7 wickets Ajit Agarkar 6 wickets and Manoj Prabharkar 5 wickets are the leading wicket takers on this ground in ODIs List of Centuries EditKey Edit denotes that the batsman was not out Inns denotes the number of the innings in the match Balls denotes the number of balls faced in an innings NR denotes that the number of balls was not recorded Parentheses next to the player s score denotes his century number at Edgbaston The column title Date refers to the date the match started The column title Result refers to the player s team resultTest Centuries Edit No Score Player Team Balls Inns Opposing team Date Result1 223 Polly Umrigar India 1 New Zealand 19 November 1955 Draw 15 2 118 Vijay Manjrekar India 1 New Zealand 19 November 1955 Draw 15 3 100 A G Kripal Singh India 1 New Zealand 19 November 1955 Draw 15 4 102 John Guy New Zealand 2 India 19 November 1955 Draw 15 5 137 Bert Sutcliffe New Zealand 3 India 19 November 1955 Draw 15 One Day Internationals Edit No Score Player Team Balls Inns Opposing team Date Result1 142 Dave Houghton Zimbabwe 137 2 New Zealand 10 October 1987 Lost 16 2 124 Wayne Larkins England 126 2 Australia 19 October 1989 Win 17 3 186 Sachin Tendulkar India 150 1 New Zealand 8 November 1999 Win 18 4 153 Rahul Dravid India 153 1 New Zealand 8 November 1999 Win 18 5 130 Virender Sehwag India 134 1 New Zealand 15 November 2003 Win 19 6 102 Sachin Tendulkar India 91 1 New Zealand 15 November 2003 Win 19 List of Five Wicket Hauls EditKey Edit Symbol Meaning The bowler was man of the match 10 or more wickets taken in the match One of two five wicket hauls by the bowler in the matchDate Day the Test started or ODI was heldInn Innings in which five wicket haul was takenOvers Number of overs bowled Runs Number of runs concededWkts Number of wickets takenEcon Runs conceded per overBatsmen Batsmen whose wickets were takenDrawn The match was drawn Tests Edit No Bowler Date Team Opposing team Inn Overs Runs Wkts Econ Batsmen Result1 Subhash Gupte 19 November 1955 India New Zealand 2 76 4 128 7 1 66 Bert Sutcliffe Eric Petrie Noel McGregor Noel Harford Matt Poore Harry Cave Jack Alabaster Drawn 15 2 E A S Prasanna 15 October 1969 India New Zealand 1 29 51 5 1 75 Bruce Murray Bevan Congdon Brian Hastings Dayle Hadlee Bruce Taylor Drawn 20 One DAY Internationals Edit No Bowler Date Team Opposing team Inn Overs Runs Wkts Econ Batsmen Result1 Manoj Prabhakar 18 February 1994 India Sri Lanka 1 10 35 5 3 50 Aruna Gunawardene Hashan Tillakaratne Aravinda de Silva Roshan Mahanama Arjuna Ranatunga India won 21 See also Edit Hyderabad portalList of Test cricket grounds Rajiv Gandhi International Cricket StadiumReferences Edit Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium Ground Profile Retrieved 8 April 2006 Imam Syeda 1974 The Untold Charminar Penguin Books ISBN 978 81 8475 971 6 Polo in its Heyday Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 14 December 2015 Raya Lallana 2002 Legacy of the Nizam s Vani Prakashan p 148 ISBN 9788170551645 Ramnarayan V Memories of Fateh Maidan Lal Bahadur Stadium Fateh Maidan Test Matches ESPN Cricinfo 17 June 2011 Retrieved 17 June 2011 Scorecard India v s New Zealand 1st Test Match 1955 56 Season Cricinfo Retrieved 7 April 2007 Scorecard India v s New Zealand 3rd Test Match 1988 89 Season Cricinfo Retrieved 7 April 2007 Scorecard India v s Pakistan 1st ODI Match 1983 84 Season Cricinfo Retrieved 7 April 2007 Scorecard India v s Pakistan 3rd ODI Match 1986 87 Season Cricinfo Retrieved 7 April 2007 Scorecard New Zealand v s Zimbabwe 4th ODI Match 1987 Cricket World Cup Cricinfo Retrieved 7 April 2007 Match result information of Test Matches played in Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium Cricinfo Retrieved 7 April 2007 Match result information of ODI Matches played in Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium Cricinfo Retrieved 7 April 2007 a b c d e f 1st Test New Zealand tour of India at Hyderabad Deccan Nov 19 24 1955 ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 24 August 2019 4th Match Reliance World Cup at Hyderabad Deccan Oct 10 1987 ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 24 August 2019 2nd Match MRF World Series Nehru Cup at Hyderabad Deccan Oct 19 1989 ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 24 August 2019 a b 2nd ODI New Zealand tour of India at Hyderabad Deccan Nov 8 1999 ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 24 August 2019 a b 9th Match D N TVS Cup India at Hyderabad Deccan Nov 15 2003 ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 24 August 2019 3rd Test New Zealand tour of India at Hyderabad Deccan Oct 15 20 1969 ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 24 August 2019 2nd ODI Sri Lanka tour of India at Hyderabad Deccan Feb 18 1994 ESPN Cricinfo Retrieved 24 August 2019 Coordinates 17 23 57 6 N 78 28 24 0 E 17 399333 N 78 473333 E 17 399333 78 473333External links EditCricinfo Website Ground Page Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium cricketarchive Website Ground Page Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium Hyderabad amp oldid 1142084869, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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