Out of the seven turncoats, five MLAs lost to the Congress contestants in Viramgam, Jamnagar (Rural), Balasinor, Thasra, and Mansa seats.
The two Congress defectors who managed to win as BJP candidates are C K Raulji and Dharmendrasinh Jadeja, who emerged victorious from Godhra and Jamnagar (North) seats respectively.
In a photo-finish contest, Raulji defeated his nearest rival Rajendrasinh Parmar of Congress by a wafer-thin margin of 258 votes, whereas Jadeja trounced Jivabhai Kumbharvadiya of Congress by a huge margin of around 40,000 votes.
The turncoats who bit the dust against official Congress nominees are Tejashreeben Patel, Raghavji Patel, Amit Chaudhary, Mansinh Chauhan and Ramsinh Parmar.
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Tejashreeben Patel, once known as a fierce critic of the BJP, lost to Congress' Lakha Bharwad in the Viramgam seat.
Similarly, Raghavji Patel went down fighting against Congress nominee Vallabh Dharaviya in his home turf of Jamnagar (Rural).
Congress rebels Mansinh Chauhan and Ramsinh Parmar were humbled by Congress nominees in Balasinor and Thasra seats, respectively.
In a tight contest, former Mansa MLA Amit Chaudhary missed the victory by over 520 votes. He was defeated by his Congress opponent Suresh Patel.
Though the Congress had struggled to get Patel elected, the veteran leader eventually won the nail-biting contest.
Out of the 14 MLAs, three legislators--Balwantsinh Rajput, who had contested against Ahmed Patel, Tejashreeben Patel and Prahlad Patel -- had joined the BJP before the Rajya Sabha elections, whereas eight others joined the BJP later.
However, Vaghela, his son Mahendrasinh Vaghela, and another MLA did not join the BJP.
Out of the rest eight MLAs, seven were given tickets by the saffron party.
Though Karamshi Patel (Makwana), who represented Sanand seat in 2012, had shifted his loyalty to the BJP, the ruling party replaced him with his son Kanu Makwana who retained his father's seat by defeating Congress' Pushpa Dabhi.