Chatrapalsinhji (1936–2009) was an Indian first-class cricketer. He is recorded among the cricketers who represented domestic teams in India during the mid-twentieth century.
Key facts
| Name | Chatrapalsinhji |
|---|---|
| Born | 1936 |
| Died | 2009 |
| Nationality | Indian |
| Sport | Cricket |
| Level | First-class cricket (domestic) |
Background
Chatrapalsinhji belonged to the generation of Indian cricketers who played the domestic game in the years following independence, a period when first-class cricket in India was organised principally around the Ranji Trophy, the Duleep Trophy and various zonal and invitational fixtures. Cricketers of his era often combined regional team appearances with associations to princely or institutional patrons, a feature that shaped Indian cricket through the 1950s and 1960s.
Career
He is identified in cricket records as an Indian first-class player active in domestic competition. Detailed statistical breakdowns of his appearances, batting and bowling style are limited in widely available references, and only the broad chronology of his life (1936–2009) is consistently documented.
Significance
While not among the most prominent figures of Indian cricket, Chatrapalsinhji forms part of the wider register of domestic cricketers whose careers contributed to the depth of the Ranji Trophy era. Such players are catalogued in cricket archives and databases as part of the historical record of Indian first-class cricket.
Related topics
- Ranji Trophy
- First-class cricket in India
- Board of Control for Cricket in India
- History of cricket in India
- Duleep Trophy
References
- Wikidata entity: Q18808307