| Airtel Champions League Twenty20 | |
|---|---|
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| Administrator | BCCI, CA & CSA |
| Format | Twenty20 |
| First tournament | 2008 |
| Tournament format | Round-Robin and Knockout |
| Number of teams | 8 (2008), 12 (2009) |
| Current champion | |
| Most successful | |
| Most runs | |
| Most wickets | |
| Website | http://clt20.com/ |
The Airtel Champions League Twenty20 is an international Twenty20 cricket competition between clubs from India, Australia, England, South Africa, Sri Lanka, New Zealand and West Indies. The Twenty20 Champions League is chaired by Lalit Modi, who is the Chairman and Commissioner of the Indian Premier League and Vice-President of the BCCI. The competition was launched in 2008 as a response to the success of national Twenty20 domestic cricket leagues, most notably the Indian Premier League.[1] The first edition was set to take place from late September to early October 2008 in India, after the tournament organisers resolved various teething problems that had put the inaugural tournament under some doubt,[2] but it was later announced that the tournament would be held from December 3 to December 10, 2008.[3] The tournament was postponed again following terrorist attacks in Mumbai in November 2008[4] and later cancelled,[5] with the first tournament now scheduled for October 2009. Indian mobile service Bharti Airtel has bought the title sponsorship rights of the champions league for the reported amount of Rs. 170cr (USD 37 million).[6]
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An international tournament for domestic cricket teams is believed to have been first mooted by Lalit Modi, vice-president of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) in 1996, Lalit Modi is also the chairman and commissioner on the IPL.[7] The launch and subsequent success of Twenty20 cricket some years later was the influence behind a serious effort to get such a tournament off the ground. Twenty20 cricket was launched by the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) in 2003.[8] Its launch was a result of a long-term decline in the popularity of county championship and domestic limited-overs cricket. By reducing the number of overs per innings to twenty and by placing a three hour limit on matches, the format was designed to attract a younger crowd and to boost attendances.[8] Twenty20 proved a success, with an international version, International 20:20 Club Championship, launched in 2005 and a World Twenty20 Competition held in September 2007. This proved much more popular than the 50 over Cricket World Cup had been just five months previously.[9] The following year, the Indian Premier League (IPL) was launched, proving that there could be a market for a big-spending domestic Twenty20 cricket league.[10] The success of Twenty20 and the IPL lead many commentators to suggest that other forms of cricket would suffer, with some worrying about the effect of the popular fast-paced 'slogging' game on players' abilities in Test cricket.[10][11]
Immediately after the end of the first series of the IPL, the cricket authorities in England, India, Australia and South Africa entered into discussions to create a new international club competition, to capitalize on this success.[1] The new tournament's $2.5m winning prize was described as "unprecedented" in cricket.[1] A number of different formats for the tournament were considered, with original proposals containing a much lower prize fund.[12] The T20 Champions League's creation was announced on 7 June 2008, along with the announcement of planned restructuring of some of the domestic cricket tournaments involved, including the introduction of franchising in South Africa, England and Australia.[7]
the 2008 tournament was originally rumoured to only include teams from Australia, South Africa, India and England. The competition was confirmed as being open to:
The 2009 Champions League will be contested by 12 teams. It will start with a round robin format, with 4 pools of 3 teams. The top 2 teams from each pool will advance to a league stage, consisting of two pools of four teams. The top two from each league will progress to a knock-out competition of two rounds. A total 19 matches will be played over a 16 day period.
The 2009 tournament was played in India from October 8-23, and was won by the New South Wales Blues, who defeated Trinidad and Tobago in the final. Teams that qualified for the 2009 Twenty20 Champions League are listed below.
The theme music for Twenty20 Champions League is composed by Academy-Award-winner A.R.Rahman.
| Team | Country | Winner/Runner-up | Domestic Tournament |
|---|---|---|---|
| Deccan Chargers | Winner | 2009 Indian Premier League | |
| Royal Challengers Bangalore | Runner-up | 2009 Indian Premier League | |
| Delhi Daredevils | Top spot in Preliminary Round | 2009 Indian Premier League | |
| New South Wales Blues | Winner | 2008-09 KFC Twenty20 Big Bash | |
| Victoria Bushrangers | Runner-up | 2008-09 KFC Twenty20 Big Bash | |
| Cape Cobras | Winner | 2009 Standard Bank Pro 20 | |
| Diamond Eagles | Runner-up | 2009 Standard Bank Pro 20 | |
| Otago Volts | Winner | State Twenty20 | |
| Sussex Sharks | Winner | 2009 Twenty20 Cup | |
| Somerset Sabres | Runner-up | 2009 Twenty20 Cup | |
| Trinidad & Tobago | Winner | Stanford 20/20 | |
| Wayamba | Winner | Inter-Provincial Twenty20 |
| Year | Host Nation(s) | Final Venue | Final | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Winner | Result | Runner-up | |||
| 2008 | Cancelled due to 26/11 Mumbai Attacks | ||||
| 2009 | 159 for 9 (20 overs) |
New South Wales Blues won by 41 runs Scorecard | 118 all out (15.5 overs) |
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| 2010 | |||||
| Individual records | ||
|---|---|---|
| Most Runs | ||
| Batsman | Runs | Tournaments |
| 224 | 2009 | |
| 207 | 2009 | |
| 202 | 2009 | |
| Most Wickets | ||
| Bowler | Wickets | Tournaments |
| 12 | 2009 | |
| 10 | 2009 | |
| 10 | 2009 | |
| Most Catches | ||
| Wicketkeeper/Fielder | Catches | Tournaments |
| 5 | 2009 | |
| 5 | 2009 | |
| 4 | 2009 | |
| Most Sixes | ||
| Player | Sixes | Tournaments |
| 14 | 2009 | |
| 11 | 2009 | |
| 10 | 2009 | |
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Template:Pp-semi-protected
| Twenty20 Champions League | |
| Administrator | BCCI, ECB, CA & CSA |
|---|---|
| Format | Twenty20 |
| First tournament | 2008 |
| Tournament format | Round-Robin and Knockout |
| Number of teams | 8 (2008), 12 (2009) |
The Twenty20 Champions League is an international Twenty20 cricket competition between clubs from Australia, England, India, South Africa, Sri Lanka, New Zealand and West Indies. The Twenty20 Champions League is chaired by Lalit Modi, who is the Chairman and Commissioner of the Indian Premier League and Vice-President of the BCCI. The competition was launched in 2008 as a response to the success of national Twenty20 domestic cricket leagues, most notably the Indian Premier League.[1] The first edition was set to take place from late September to early October 2008 in India, after the tournament organisers resolved various teething problems that had put the inaugural tournament under some doubt,[2] but it was later announced that the tournament would be held from December 3 to December 10, 2008.[3] The tournament was postponed again following terrorist attacks in Mumbai in November 2008[4] and later cancelled,[5] with the first tournament now scheduled for October 2009.
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Template:Seemain
vs Kolkata in the Indian Premier League. Chennai have qualified for the first edition of the T20 Champions League]]
An international tournament for domestic cricket teams is believed to have been first mooted by Lalit Modi, vice-president of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) in 1996, Lalit Modi is also the chairman and commissioner on the IPL.[6] The launch and subsequent success of Twenty20 cricket some years later was the influence behind a serious effort to get such a tournament off the ground. Twenty20 cricket was launched by the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) in 2003.[7] Its launch was a result of a long-term decline in the popularity of county championship and domestic limited-overs cricket. By reducing the number of overs per innings to twenty and by placing a three hour limit on matches, the format was designed to attract a younger crowd and to boost attendances.[7] Twenty20 proved a success, with an international version launched in 2005 and a World Twenty20 Competition held in September 2007. This proved much more popular than the 50 over Cricket World Cup had been just five months previously.[8] The following year, the Indian Premier League (IPL) was launched, proving that there could be a market for a big-spending domestic Twenty20 cricket league.[9] The success of Twenty20 and the IPL lead many commentators to suggest that other forms of cricket would suffer, with some worrying about the effect of the popular fast-paced 'slogging' game on players' abilities in Test cricket.[9][10]
Immediately after the end of the first series of the IPL, the cricket authorities in England, India, Australia and South Africa entered into discussions to create a new international club competition, to capitalize on this success.[1] The new tournament's £2.5m winning prize was described as "unprecedented" in cricket.[1] A number of different formats for the tournament were considered, with original proposals containing a much lower prize fund.[11] The T20 Champions League's creation was announced on 7 June 2008, along with the announcement of planned restructuring of some of the domestic cricket tournaments involved, including the introduction of franchising in South Africa, England and Australia.[6]
Although the 2008 tournament was originally rumoured to only include teams from Australia, South Africa, India and England, it was announced on 4 July, 2008, that two teams from Pakistan's domestic tournament were also invited. At the same, time England's participation was also put into doubt, following differences between the ECB & BCCI over the inclusion of rebel Indian Cricket League (ICL) players.[12] Eventually, it was arranged so that the 2008 Twenty20 Champions League would have consisted of 8 teams from 5 countries. The qualifiers are:
This format is expected to change to include 12 teams for the 2009 edition. The winner of New Zealand's State Twenty20 competition is expected to be one of the new participants.
The 2009 Champions League will be contested by 12 teams. It will start with a round robin format, with 4 pools of 3 teams. The Top 2 teams from each pool will advance to the knockout stages. A total 19 matches will be played over a 16 day period.
In the 2009 edition 12 teams will participate the tournament. Top 3 teams of IPL, top 2 teams of Australia, England and South Africa and top teams from West Indies, New Zealand and Sri Lanka will take part in the tournament. The winners of Pakistan's domestic Twenty20 tournament wil not take part as scheduled as their government has barred travel to India.[13] The tournament will be held in India from October 8-23. Teams that have qualified for the 2009 Twenty20 Champions League are listed below.
| Team | Country | Winner/Runner-up | Domestic Tournament |
|---|---|---|---|
| New South Wales Blues | Australia | Winner | 2008-09 KFC Twenty20 Big Bash |
| Victoria Bushrangers | Australia | Runner-up | 2008-09 KFC Twenty20 Big Bash |
| Cape Cobras | South Africa | Winner | 2009 Standard Bank Pro 20 |
| Diamond Eagles | South Africa | Runner-up | 2009 Standard Bank Pro 20 |
| Otago Volts | New Zealand | Winner | State Twenty20 |
| Deccan Chargers | Template:Country data India India | Winner | 2009 Indian Premier League |
| Royal Challengers Bangalore | Template:Country data India India | Runner-up | 2009 Indian Premier League |
| Delhi Daredevils | Template:Country data India India | Top spot in Preliminary Round | 2009 Indian Premier League |
| tbc | England | Winner | 2009 Twenty20 Cup |
| tbc | England | Runner-up | 2009 Twenty20 Cup |
| Trinidad & Tobago | West Indies | Winner | Stanford 20/20 |
| Wayamba | Sri Lanka | Winner | Inter-Provincial Twenty20 |
| Year | Host Nation(s) | Final Venue | Final | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Winner | Result | Runner-up | |||
| 2008 | Template:Country data India India | Template:Country data India M. A. Chidambaram Stadium,Chennai | Cancelled | ||
| 2009 | Template:Country data India India | Template:Country data India TBD | |||
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