J&K tower over Karnataka to clinch maiden Ranji Trophy title
Karnataka went wicketless on Day 5 as J&K resumed at 186/4, underlining the visitors’ dominance in the final.
PTI
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J&K held the eight-time former champions to a draw, punctuated by a 291-run first innings lead to lock the crown (PTI)
Hubballi, 28 Feb
Jammu and Kashmir scripted an extraordinary tale of resilience in Indian domestic cricket to claim their maiden Ranji Trophy title by out-batting traditional heavyweights Karnataka here on Saturday, capping a glorious season that saw them tackle favourites and fellow upstarts with equal tact and confidence.
The
bald facts will tell that Jammu and Kashmir held the eight-time former
champions to a draw, punctuated by a 291-run first innings lead to lock the
crown, an advantage they extended to 633 runs after scoring 342/4 in their
second innings on the fifth and final day here.
Opener
Qamran Iqbal's second first-class hundred (160 not out) and Sahil Lotra's
maiden first-class ton (101 not out) added sheen to the historical occasion.
But
the day was always meant to be more than just cold numbers; it was meant to
tell the story of determination and the power of a dream that was more than six
decades in the making.
It
was 67 years ago when Jammu and Kashmir made their debut in India's premier
domestic competition, which is now 92 years old.
In
the past, J&K had entered the quarterfinals in 2013-14, 2019-20, and 2024-25
seasons but succumbed to a train of cataclysmic events and their own frayed
nerves.
But
over the last five days here at the KSCA Stadium, they hardly resembled
first-time final entrants, out-maneuvering a side brimming with India stars
with consummate ease.
That
Karnataka failed to take a single wicket on the fifth day after J&K resumed
from overnight 186 for four will reinforce the dominance of the tourists in the
final.
It
was a team effort in its truest sense that led the lesser-fancied side to the
title.
Pacer
Auqib Nabi was a towering presence in the final as he has been throughout this
season, taking five wickets for the seventh time this season.
Lotra
made a fifty and a hundred, skipper Paras Dogra, who became the second batter to
go past 10,000 Ranji Trophy runs, while Yawer Hassan, Abdul Samad, and Kanhaiya
Wadhawan made one half-century each.
They
are not household names, perhaps, even in their own state. But this humble
bunch produced a magnificent joint effort across 10 Ranji matches in the season
that would put a blush on Atlas's face.
After
the current season began in silence in Srinagar following a whipping by Mumbai,
Jammu and Kashmir's glorious journey towards the title clash unfurled like a
slow-breaking wave.
And
nothing encapsulated J&K's spirit better than the semifinal against Bengal
at Kalyani.
Unlike
in the final against Karnataka, they were thrown into turmoil after Bengal took
the first-innings lead -- small yet good enough to serve their purpose.
But
Nabi bowled them back to contention, masterminding Bengal's dismissal for 88 in
the second innings. It, perhaps, made the J&K players aware of the awaiting
destiny in Hubballi.
They
embraced it gleefully.
Shubham
Pundir scored a classy hundred, the foundation for J&K's massive first
innings total of 584, and the visitors hardly let the advantage slip.
Karnataka
itself had shown remarkable consistency since the beginning of the season,
and a ninth Ranji Trophy title was taken for granted.
It
was not a wrong notion either on account of their form and skill levels.
But
the unsuspecting domestic heavyweight was swept off its feet by a flyweight,
not by a knockout punch but by tactical superiority and game awareness.
Karnataka
will ponder over the next few days where it all went wrong for them in the
title clash, and nothing conveyed the dejection in their hearts more than the sight
of KL Rahul bowling a few overs.
Harsh
views will be exchanged in the boardroom, and a few heads will roll.
But
for now, the incredible feel-good news of a J&K victory will cut across the
entrenched lines of the territories' socio-economic and political spheres.
We
might just have witnessed the breaking down of some barriers at the sun-kissed
Hubballi stadium, holding the power to move a whole new generation of
youngsters to cricket and to sport in general.
Perhaps,
there will be an infrastructure upswing in the area, as Nabi hoped during a
recent chat with PTI -- a cricket stadium in every district.
The
historic moment came at 2.10pm, when both the skippers sitting inside a
freshly-painted but modest dressing room here agreed to shake hands, sending
the J&K camp into delirium.
There will be chaos within the team and across the snow-clad region, now. But this time, it will be more joyous in nature.
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