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2009 Champions League Twenty20

International cricket tournament

2009 Champions League Twenty20

International cricket tournament

FieldValue
name2009 Champions League Twenty20
imageCLT20.svg
administrator
cricket formatTwenty20
tournament formatRound-robin and knockout
hostIndia
championsNew South Wales Blues
count1
participants12
matches23
player of the seriesBrett Lee
most runsJP Duminy (224)
most wicketsDwayne Bravo (12)
website[www.clt20.com](http://clt20.com/)
previous_year2008
previous_tournament2008 Champions League Twenty20
next_year2010
next_tournament2010 Champions League Twenty20
runner upTrinidad and Tobago

| player of the series = Brett Lee The 2009 Champions League Twenty20 was the first edition of the Champions League Twenty20, an international club cricket tournament. It was held in India between 8 October and 23 October 2009 and featured domestic teams from Australia, England, India, New Zealand, South Africa, Sri Lanka and the West Indies. The New South Wales Blues were the winners of the tournament, defeating Trinidad and Tobago in the final.

Format

The tournament had 23 matches, and is divided into three stages: the group; league; and knockout stages.

During group stage teams were divided into four groups, with each group having three teams. Each team played both of the other teams in their group once with the top two teams in each group advancing to the league stage, in which two new groups were created, each of four teams. Another round-robin tournament was played in each league, although teams that faced each other during the group stage did not play each other again, with the result from their first meeting carried forward. The top two teams from each league advanced to the knockout stage, which consisted of two semi-finals followed by a final.

The total prize money for the competition was US$6 million. In addition to the prize money, each team receives a participation fee of $500,000.

Qualification

This tournament featured 12 teams, an increase from the eight teams for the planned 2008 tournament. Teams were added from New Zealand, Sri Lanka, and the West Indies and the inclusion of a team from Pakistan was removed due to the decline in the relationship between the Indian and Pakistani cricket boards following from the 2008 Mumbai attacks. Lalit Modi, the chairman of the tournament, claimed the Pakistan government was unwilling to give Pakistan players clearance to travel to India,

Cricket boardTournamentNumber of teamsTeams
Australia[2008–09 KFC Twenty20 Big Bash](2008-09-kfc-twenty20-big-bash)2 (winners and runners-up)
England and Wales[2009 Twenty20 Cup](2009-twenty20-cup)2 (winners and runners-up)
India[2009 Indian Premier League](2009-indian-premier-league)3 (top three teams)
New Zealand2008–09 State Twenty201 (winners)Otago Volts
South Africa[2008–09 Standard Bank Pro20](2008-09-standard-bank-pro20)2 (winners and runners-up)
Sri Lanka[2008–09 Inter-Provincial Twenty20](2008-09-inter-provincial-twenty20)1 (winners)Wayamba
West Indies2008 Stanford 20/201 (winners)Trinidad and Tobago

Players

Ross Taylor in October 2009 as RCB Player

Main article: 2009 Champions League Twenty20 squads

There were a number of cases where players were a part of more than one of the teams which had qualified for the tournament. In these cases the player was allowed to only play for the team from the country he was eligible to represent in international cricket unless another team paid US$200,000 compensation. Only Dirk Nannes was named in more than one preliminary squad – those of Delhi Daredevils and his "home" team, the Victorian Bushrangers. Delhi paid Victoria US$200,000 to retain Nannes.

Venues

Three venues were used during the competition, the M. Chinnaswamy Stadium in Bangalore, the Feroz Shah Kotla Stadium in Delhi and the Rajiv Gandhi Stadium in Hyderabad. The semi-finals were played at Delhi and Hyderabad and the final at Hyderabad.

Reception

The tournament was generally not received favourably due to the lack of team recognition outside of the three Indian sides. Matches not involving these teams drew low television ratings and attendances whilst the three Indian teams performed poorly.

Group stage fixture

:All times shown are in Indian Standard Time (UTC+05:30).

Group A

|win_T&T=2 |rs_T&T=299 |or_T&T=40.0 |rc_T&T=252 |ob_T&T=40.0

|name_T&T=Trinidad and Tobago

Group B

Group C

Group D

League stage fixtures

League A

|win_T&T=3 |rs_T&T=534 |or_T&T=58.3 |rc_T&T=465 |ob_T&T=60.0

|name_T&T=Trinidad and Tobago

League B

Knockout stage

|score-width=95px |team-width=170px |seed-width=

|RD1-seed2=A2 |RD1-team2=** New South Wales Blues** |RD1-score2=169/7 (20 ov) |RD1-seed1=B1 |RD1-team1= Victorian Bushrangers |RD1-score1=90/9 (20 ov)

|RD1-seed3=B2 |RD1-team3= Cape Cobras| |RD1-score3=175/5 (20 ov) |RD1-seed4=A1 |RD1-team4=Trinidad and Tobago |RD1-score4=178/3 (19.2 ov)

|RD2-seed1=A2 |RD2-team1= New South Wales Blues |RD2-score1=159/9 (20 ov) |RD2-seed2=A1 |RD2-team2=Trinidad and Tobago |RD2-score2=118 (15.5 ov)

Attendance: 38,422

Statistics

Most runs

PlayerTeamRuns
JP DuminyCape Cobras224
David WarnerNew South Wales Blues207
Phillip HughesNew South Wales Blues202
Ross TaylorRoyal Challengers Bangalore152
Kieron PollardTrinidad and Tobago146
  • Source: CricInfo

Most wickets

PlayerTeamWickets
Dwayne BravoTrinidad and Tobago12
Moisés HenriquesNew South Wales Blues10
Clint McKayVictorian Bushrangers10
Three players took nine wickets
  • Source: CricInfo

References

References

  1. (24 May 2009). "Champions League expanded from eight to 12 teams". [[Cricinfo]].
  2. Alter, Jamie. (7 October 2009). "Stage set for cricket's latest twist". ESPN.
  3. (2009-08-19). "Decision looms for CLT20 players". Cricket Australia.
  4. (2009-10-07). "English teams eye Twenty20 glory". [[BBC Sport]].
  5. (23 September 2009). "T20 Champions League winners to get USD 2.5 million". The Indian Express.
  6. (7 October 2009). "Meet the teams". ESPN.
  7. Samiuddin, Osman. (26 May 2009). "Pakistan not consulted over Champions League exclusion". ESPN.
  8. (27 August 2009). "Dirk Nannes to play for Delhi Daredevils in Champions League". IPLPulse.
  9. (2010-08-31). "Champions League Twenty20 has challenges - Sundar Raman". CricInfo.
  10. "Champions League Twenty20, 2009/10 / Records / Most runs". [[Cricinfo]].
  11. "Champions League Twenty20, 2009/10 / Records / Most wickets". [[Cricinfo]].
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