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Mumbai Cricket Association

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(Redirected from Bombay Cricket Association)

Mumbai Cricket Association
मुंबई क्रिकेट संघटना
SportCricket
JurisdictionMumbai, Thane and Navi Mumbai [citation needed]
AbbreviationMCA
Founded1930; 94 years ago (1930)
Regional affiliationBoard of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI)
HeadquartersCricket Centre, Wankhede Stadium, Churchgate, Mumbai
PresidentAjinkya Naik
Vice president(s)Sanjay Naik
Men's coachOmkar Salvi
Women's coachn/a
Official website
mumbaicricket.com

The Mumbai Cricket Association (formerly Bombay Cricket Association) is the governing body for cricket in Mumbai and surrounding regions such as Thane, Navi Mumbai. Its headquarters is situated at Wankhede Stadium in Churchgate.

It governs Mumbai cricket team and sanctions cricket tournaments in Mumbai district. Its Mumbai team is among the most dominant in India's First-class cricket. It has won Ranji Trophy for record 41 times. Cricketers such as Vijay Merchant, Sunil Gavaskar and Sachin Tendulkar etc. have played for MCA's team. Its team is historically known as batting powerhouse and for "Khadoos" style of play.[1]

The association was established in 1930 as Bombay Cricket Association. Its name was changed after Bombay got renamed as Mumbai.[2] It is one of three cricket associations that govern cricket in Maharashtra in different regions. The others are Vidarbha Cricket Association controlling the Vidarbha region and Maharashtra cricket association that governs cricket in the rest of Maharashtra.

History

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In 1972, under the presidency tenure of S.K. Wankhede, MCA built its own cricket stadium, which was named after S.K. Wankhede as Wankhede Stadium. MCA renovated it before 2011 ICC cricket World Cup. It is the home ground of Mumbai cricket team.[3] Since 2007 BCCI's headquarters Cricket centre is situated in the premises of MCA.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "The most khadoos of them all". ESPNcricinfo.
  2. ^ "MCA elections: Vijay Patil elected president, Naik chosen BCCI AGM representative". 4 October 2019.
  3. ^ "Garware Club House History".
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