ODI– N/A
T20– N/A
Note– There was no ODI and T20 at the moment.
ODI– N/A
T20– N/A
Note– There was no ODI and T20 at the moment.
• Nawanagar (1936–1942)
• Hindus (1936–1946)
• Maharashtra (1943–1944)
• Gujarat (1944–1951)
• Bengal (1948–1949)
• Saurashtra (1950–1951)
• Bombay (1951–1956)
• Rajasthan (1956–1962)
• KS Duleepsinhji (nephew of the legendary batter Ranjitsinhji) as a batting coach
• First cricketer ever to attain 100 runs and brought 5 wickets in a identical check match.
• One of solely three non-England ‘away’ gamers whose names seem on each batting and bowling honours boards at Lords (The different two are Keith Miller and Sir Gary Sobers)
• First Indian to attain hundred and a duck in a identical check match.
• 2nd highest opening partnership in check cricket along with Pankaj Roy in 6 January 1956 towards New Zealand at Madras Cricket Club Ground (now M. A. Chidambaram Stadium) in Chennai.
• 2nd most wickets taken hit-wicket (3) after GD McKenzie from Australia.
• 2nd most double a whole bunch in a check sequence after Sir Don Bradman.
• First Indian to open the batting and bowling in a identical check match towards England on 12 January 1952 in Kanpur.
• One of the one three cricketers to bat at each place in a match after Sydney Gregory (Australia) and Wilfred Rhodes (England).
• 2nd quickest participant to succeed in the Test double of 1,000 runs and 100 wickets after Ian Botham in 23 check matches.
• First Indian to attain 1000 check runs and take 100 check wickets.
• One of solely two cricketers to play for India after attaining the age of 40. The different title is Sachin Tendulkar.
• First century scored by an Indian towards Australia in 1948.
• First cricketer to select up 50 wickets or extra in a single season in England’s Bolton Cricket League.
• Only bowler towards whom Sir Don Bradman received stumped in first-class cricket.
• Only Indian batter to attain two double a whole bunch in a single check sequence towards New Zealand in 1952.
• First Indian cricketer to endorse any business product (Brylcream).
• Honorary life membership of the MCC in 1967
• Padma Bhushan by the Government of India in 1973
Saraswati Mankad (second spouse)
• Ashok Mankad (Test cricketer:he died in 2008 at Sportsfield flats in Mumbai throughout sleep)
• Atul Mankad (First-class cricketer:he died in 2011 in Mumbai after a quick sickness)
• Rahul Mankad (First-class cricketer)
Harsh Mankad (Indian Tennis participant and a youthful son of Late Ashok Mankad)
Bowler– Ray Lindwall (Australia) and Keith Miller (Australia)