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Gulabrai Sipahimalani Ramchand (1927–2003) was an Indian cricketer who played Test cricket for India between 1952 and 1960. An all-rounder who batted in the middle order and bowled medium pace, he captained the Indian Test team in five matches, leading India to a memorable Test victory over Australia at the Brabourne Stadium, Bombay, in 1959.
| Full name | Gulabrai Sipahimalani Ramchand |
|---|---|
| Born | 26 July 1927, Karachi, British India |
| Died | 8 September 2003 |
| Role | All-rounder (right-hand batsman, right-arm medium pace) |
| National side | India |
| Test career | 1952–1960 |
| Captaincy | India (5 Tests, 1959–60) |
| Domestic teams | Bombay, Sind |
Ramchand was born in Karachi in 1927, in what was then undivided British India. Following the Partition of India in 1947, he settled in Bombay and went on to represent Bombay in the Ranji Trophy, then one of the strongest sides in Indian domestic cricket. He had earlier appeared for Sind in pre-Partition first-class cricket.
Ramchand made his Test debut for India in 1952. As a genuine all-rounder, he was useful both with the new ball and in the middle order, and remained a regular in the Indian Test side through much of the 1950s.
Ramchand was appointed captain of India for the home series against Australia in 1959–60, leading the team in five Test matches. Under his captaincy, India recorded a notable Test win over Richie Benaud's Australia at the Brabourne Stadium in Bombay — one of India's earliest victories against Australia in Test cricket. The Australians, however, took the series.
He was known as a hard-hitting middle-order batsman capable of accelerating the scoring rate, and a steady medium-pace bowler who often opened the attack for India in an era when the side relied heavily on its spinners.
Ramchand is remembered as one of India's leading all-rounders of the 1950s and as the captain under whom India achieved a rare home Test victory over Australia. His career bridged the early decades of independent Indian cricket, when the team was still establishing itself as a Test-playing nation.