India Red 161 (Abhinav 77, Sandeep 4-62) and 486 (Abhinav 169, Chatterjee 114, Gurkeerat 82, Gopal 5-123) beat India Green 151 (Tiwary 50, Nathu 6-53) and 277 (Raina 90,Uthappa 72, Kuldeep 6-88) by 219 runs

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Suresh Raina guides one towards the off-side Associated Press

India Green din't even venture a batathon on the final day as they lost their three remaining wickets in less than an hour to hand India Red a 219-run victory in Greater Noida. Left-arm wristspinner Kuldeep Yadav added one wicket to his five-for on day three to finish with nine wickets in the match, which lasted only 10.2 overs on the final day.

With the match all but out of grasp, Suresh Raina, resuming on 42, dashed towards a hundred but eventually fell ten runs short; it was Kuldeep, after being caned around by Raina, who got him out. Ashok Dinda and Pragyan Ojha offered no illusions of sticking it out, as they were removed either side of Raina's dismissal. India Red secured six points by virtue of the outright win in the country's maiden first-class game with the pink ball.

Parthiv Patel on... The pink-ball experience: I thought we all came with some preconceived thought that the ball would move around, there would be a lot of movement. But, it wasn't to be; I thought it didn't move as much as we thought. The conditions were really good. [It was an] ideal four-day wicket where it did a bit on the first day, then turn a bit and good to bat on. Sighting the ball: In fact, during the day I thought we could see the ball better because of the shine on the ball. I don't think there was any problem sighting the ball, even during the night. Only thing which I felt was we are not used to have the pink ball coming towards us. When we practice with practice balls it gives you that kind of colour feeling; it was just a matter of getting used to it. Pink Kookaburra and red SG Test ball: SG Test does reverse a bit but with the kind of glaze which stays on this ball it doesn't reverse as much. And, since there is guidelines of 4mm grass and lush outfield, the ball doesn't get roughed up. Reverse swing… I don't know whether it will happen with this ball or not. But, if we play on a drier wicket or maybe a drier outfield, and then you don't know. That will be one big [thing] if we all might want to see. Because in subcontinental conditions I don't think an international game would be played with this much grass on the wicket. Future of pink-ball cricket: There is definitely a future, but it would be too early to say. I think as we play a lot of games we will know a lot of things. Yesterday, we realised that dew also would be a factor. In the first two days there was no dew but yesterday there was. The new ball did move slightly more than what it did on the first day.

Raina's patience against Kuldeep in the first over of the day was a red herring; in the next over he took two fours off Nathu Singh, the second of which saw him back away and glide a short ball uppishly over third man. Raina had hit top gear and Kuldeep would bear the brunt of it in his next over as he conceded three fours. Raina hared out of the crease on all the three occasions, and alternated between hitting straight and inside out.

While Dinda had been shielded from the strike all this while, he could last no more than two balls against Nathu in the next over as his meek pull only went as far as mid-on. Nathu then welcomed Ojha by pinging him on the helmet, but he stuck around to watch his captain play a few more shots. Raina continued to take a liking to his Uttar Pradesh team-mate Kuldeep, and smashed his way to three more boundaries.

However, it was Kuldeep who would eventually come out on top of this tussle. In the last ball of the 56th over, Raina tried to follow a six with a controlled lob, but it was snaffled at mid-off. Akshay Wakhare helped himself to Ojha's wicket in the next over to bring the match to a close after India Green managed 60 runs in the session.

At the presentation ceremony, Raina lauded Kuldeep and provided a positive appraisal of the pink ball. He was also appreciative of the crowd, which made its presence felt - in numbers and decibel levels - over the four days. "I was discussing with Yuvi pa [Yuvraj Singh] as well, the more we play, the better we'll get at it," Raina said. India Red captain Yuvraj Singh felt the pink ball moved a lot more than the SG ball. "It was pretty exciting, the pink ball doesn't go old. It was coming onto the bat nicely," he said.

Abhinav Mukund, who was named Man-of-the-match for his 77 and 169, said he didn't have any issues with sighting the ball throughout the game. "I was getting into good positions. I've been training well back home, especially batting under lights," he said.

"That experience helped me here. I think a lot of people had issues sighting the ball, but I didn't have any issues with visibility. The wicket was damp, that's perhaps why so many wickets fell on the first day. I worked hard during the off-season. I got leaner and stronger. I worked on my batting as well. Hopefully this season marks a turnaround for me."

India Red next play Gautam Gambhir's India Blue from August 29 at the same venue.