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Sangakkara's ODI record among List A records shattered in India's domestic One Day competition

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Team and individual List A records tumbled as Tamil Nadu posted a mammoth 506/2, owing to a double century from Narayan Jagadeesan and a century from B Sai Sudharsan, in their Vijay Hazare Trophy match against Arunachal Pradesh at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru.

Batting first, Tamil Nadu openers Sai Sudharsan and Jagadeesan put on a record-breaking 416-run stand for the first wicket. Previously, the record was held by Chris Gayle and Marlon Samuels, who combined to score 372 runs for the second wicket in 2015 against Zimbabwe.

Once Sudarshan fell, Jagadeesan continued the carnage and went on to record the highest-ever List A score in history. He went past both the men's record held by Alistair Brown (268) as well as the women's high score by Sripali Weerakkody (271*) en route to his 141-ball 277.

He got to the 200-run mark in just 114 balls, which is the joint-fastest List A double hundred. He now shares the record with Australia's Travis Head, who took as many balls to score his double ton against Queensland in the Marsh Cup in October 2021.

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Narayan Jagadeesan has been on a roll lately with scores of 128, 168, 107 and 114* in his last four games for Tamil Nadu in the Vijay Hazare trophy. His double-hundred today makes him the first player in List A history to score five consecutive centuries, going past the legendary Kumar Sangakkara, South Africa's Alviro Petersen and up-and-coming India star Devdutt Padikkal, all of whom have scored four hundreds on the trot.

Team records were not spared either as England's world-record List A total of 498/4 against the Netherlands in June lasted only a little over five months. Tamil Nadu finished their innings on 506/2, now the highest List A total in the world.

Chasing an impossible 507 for the win, Arunachal Pradesh were bowled out for a meagre 71. The 435-run win means Tamil Nadu now hold the record for the largest margin of victories by runs in List A cricket, breaking the 32-year-old record set by Somerset who beat Devon by 346 runs in the National Westminster Bank Trophy in 1990.