Wankhede Stadium
Interactive map of Wankhede Stadium | |
| Address | Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose Rd, Churchgate, Mumbai (South), Maharashtra, India |
|---|---|
| Location | Churchgate, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India |
| Owner | Mumbai Cricket Association |
| Operator | Mumbai Cricket Association |
| Seating type | Stadium seating |
| Capacity | 33,100 (2011–present) 39,000 (1974–2010) |
| Surface | Grass |
| Public transit | at the Churchgate |
| Construction | |
| Opened | 1974 |
| Architect | Shashi Prabhu and Associates (1974), Shashi Prabhu and Associates and P.K. Das and Associates (2017) |
| Ground information | |
| Tenants | India national cricket team India women's national cricket team Mumbai cricket team Mumbai Indians Mumbai Indians (WPL) |
| End names | |
| Tata End Garware Pavilion End | |
| International information | |
| First Test | 23–29 January 1975: India v West Indies |
| Last Test | 1–5 November 2024: India v New Zealand |
| First ODI | 17 January 1987: India v Sri Lanka |
| Last ODI | 15 November 2023: India v New Zealand |
| First T20I | 22 December 2012: India v England |
| Last T20I | 23 February 2026: West Indies v Zimbabwe |
| First women's Test | 10–13 February 1984: India v Australia |
| Last women's Test | 21–24 December 2023: India v Australia |
| First WODI | 23 December 1997: Ireland v New Zealand |
| Last WODI | 2 January 2024: India v Australia |
| First WT20I | 31 March 2016: West Indies v New Zealand |
| Last WT20I | 10 December 2023: India v England |
| As of 1 November 2024 Source: Cricinfo | |
Wankhede Stadium (pronounced [ʋaːnkʰeɖe]) is an international cricket stadium in Mumbai, India. It is owned and operated by the Mumbai Cricket Association and is the home ground of the Mumbai Indians. It houses the headquarters of the Board of Control for Cricket in India, the MCA and the Indian Premier League.It is named after by former BCCI President S. K. Wankhede
The stadium is situated near Marine Drive in the Churchgate neighbourhood. Several old cricket clubs are near the stadium, including Hindu Gymkhana, Parsi Gymkhana and Cricket Club of India (CCI).
The stadium has been host to numerous high-profile cricket matches in the past, most notably the 2011 Cricket World Cup Final, in which India defeated Sri Lanka and became the first country to win the Cricket World Cup on home soil. It hosted the last match of Sachin Tendulkar's international career.