Rohinton Baria Trophy Explained

The All-India Inter-University Cricket Championship held for the Rohinton Baria Gold Trophy (or simply, Rohinton Baria Trophy) is India's premier inter-university cricket tournament. It has been contested annually since the 1935/36 season.

History

The trophy was donated in 1935 by Ardeshir Dadabhoy Baria of Bombay in memory of his son Rohinton, for a tournament to be played between the Indian universities. Initially, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) organised the tournament, but the Inter-University Sports Board of India (IUSB) took over in 1940/41.[1]

The university teams compete in zones before the winners and runners-up from each zone play off in semi-finals and finals. Until 1989/90, when the format was changed to a one-day 50-over contest, the finals were usually held over three or four days at the campus of one of the finalists or at a neutral venue. Sometimes matches were played to a finish regardless of time; the 1956-57 match went on for eight days and finished when Bombay University, having set Delhi University 728 to win, dismissed them for 611 in 304.1 overs.[2] [3]

Apart from Indian universities, Ceylon University also participated from 1947/48 to 1969/70.[4] The only university from the future Pakistan to compete before Partition was the University of the Punjab in Lahore, which won the title four times.

In its early decades participation in the tournament helped prepare many future Test and first-class players, especially in the larger universities.[5] In their team that won the 1940/41 final, Bombay University had four future Indian Test players (Ranga Sohoni, Hemu Adhikari, Chandra Sarwate and Sadu Shinde),[6] while in their 1958/59 champion team they had five future Test players (Arvind Apte, Dilip Sardesai, Ajit Wadekar – who scored 324 in the final – Farokh Engineer and Ramakant Desai).[7] In their 1945-46 team Punjab University included seven players (Nazar Mohammad, Imtiaz Ahmed, Maqsood Ahmed, Abdul Hafeez Kardar, Fazal Mahmood, Khan Mohammad and Shujauddin Butt) who later played a prominent part in Pakistan's Test successes in the 1950s.[8] In the 1966–67 final Sunil Gavaskar played for Bombay University, in 1972-73 Mohinder Amarnath led Delhi University to victory, and Sanjay Manjrekar's six consecutive centuries for Bombay University propelled him into Bombay's Ranji Trophy team.

According to the writer and former Rohinton Baria Trophy and Ranji Trophy player Venkatraman Ramnarayan, the Rohinton Baria provided a valuable "finishing school" for future leaders, and a model of dignified behaviour on the sports field which is now lacking.[9] With the rise of widespread junior competitions and coaching for young players, interest in inter-university cricket has waned in recent decades.[10] According to Harsha Bhogle, who played for Osmania University, the growth of under-19 cricket destroyed university cricket.[11]

Winners

Season Winner Runner-up 3rd Place 4th Place
1935/36 N/A N/A
1936/37 N/A N/A
1937/38 N/A N/A
1938/39 N/A N/A
1939/40 N/A N/A
1940/41 N/A N/A
1941/42 N/A N/A
1942/43 N/A N/A
1943/44 N/A N/A
1944/45 N/A N/A
1945/46 N/A N/A
1946/47 N/A N/A
1947/48 N/A N/A
1948/49 N/A N/A
1949/50 N/A N/A
1950/51 N/A N/A
1951/52 N/A N/A
1952/53 N/A N/A
1953/54 N/A N/A
1954/55 N/A N/A
1955/56 N/A N/A
1956/57 N/A N/A
1957/58 N/A N/A
1958/59 N/A N/A
1959/60 N/A N/A
1960/61 N/A N/A
1961/62 N/A N/A
1962/63 N/A N/A
1963/64 N/A N/A
1964/65 N/A N/A
1965/66 N/A N/A
1966/67 N/A N/A
1967/68 N/A N/A
1968/69 N/A N/A
1969/70 N/A N/A
1970/71 N/A N/A
1971/72 N/A N/A
1972/73 N/A N/A
1973/74 N/A N/A
1974/75 N/A N/A
1975/76 N/A N/A
1976/77 N/A N/A
1977/78 Bombay University
1978/79 Allahabad University
1979/80 Guru Nanak Dev University
1980/81 Calcutta University
1981/82 Calcutta University
1982/83 Panjab University
1983/84 Bangalore University
1984/85 Calcutta University
1985/86 Aligarh Muslim University
1986/87 Calcutta University
1987/88 Poona University
1988/89 Rajasthan University
1989/90 Panjab University
1990/91 Guru Nanak Dev University
1991/92 Delhi University
1992/93 Kurukshetra University
1993/94
1994/95 Ranchi University? ?
1995/96 ? ? ? ?
1996/97 ? ? ?
1997/98 ? ? ?
1998/99 Osmania University? ?
1999/00 ? ?
2000/01 ? Osmania University
2001/02 Mumbai University? ?
2002/03 Ranchi University
2003/04 ?? ? ?
2004/05 Calcutta UniversityMysore University
2005/06 ? ? ?
2006/07 Saurashtra University
2007/08 Mumbai UniversityGuru Nanak Dev University
2008/09 Mumbai UniversityRashtrasant Tukadoji Maharaj Nagpur University
2009/10 Mumbai UniversitySRM Institute of Science and Technology
2010/11 Madras University
2011/12 Jain University
2012/13 Jiwaji University
2013/14 Jain University
2014/15 SRM Institute of Science and Technology
2015/16 Aligarh Muslim University
2016/17 Chaudhary Charan Singh University
2017/18 Mumbai University
2018/19 Mysore University
2019/20 Mysore University

Notes:-

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: What is the Rohinton Baria Trophy?. NDTV Sports. 27 January 2013. 12 August 2022.
  2. Web site: Bombay University v Delhi University 1956-57. CricketArchive. 2 October 2015.
  3. Web site: Mukherjee. Abhishek. Bombay and Delhi Universities play cricket for 8 continuous days. Cricket Country. 19 January 2017 . 17 August 2023.
  4. Web site: Other matches played by Ceylon University. CricketArchive. 2 October 2015. 2 October 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20151002230939/http://www.cricketarchive.com/Archive/Teams/5/5426/Other_Matches.html. dead.
  5. Web site: Fuloria. Devashish. Varsity cricket back in the spotlight. ESPNcricinfo. 2 October 2015.
  6. Web site: Bombay University v Benares Hindu University 1940/41 . CricketArchive. 2 October 2015.
  7. Web site: Bombay University v Delhi University 1958-59 . CricketArchive. 2 October 2015.
  8. Web site: Calcutta University v Punjab University 1945-46 . CricketArchive. 2 October 2015.
  9. News: Wisden India . V. . Ramnarayan . 2 October 2015. Oh, for the finishing school world cricket misses now. 15 August 2014.
  10. News: Wisden India . Shamya . Dasgupta . 2 October 2015. Cricket can soar if it spreads its wings . 15 September 2014.
  11. Web site: Fuloria . Devashish . ESPNcricinfo . Varsity cricket back in the spotlight . 4 March 2013.