2009 Champions League Twenty20


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 12 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 consisted of the 12 domestic teams from seven countries as determined by the domestic Twenty20 tournaments of those countries. The tournament has 23 matches, and is divided into three stages: the group, league and knockout stages. If a match ends in a tie, a Super Over will be played to determine the winner.
The [|group stage] has the teams divided into four equal groups, with each playing a round-robin tournament. The top two teams of each group advances to the [|league stage]. The league stage merges the remaining teams from Groups A and B to form League A, and the remaining teams from Groups C and D to form League B. Another round-robin tournament is played in each league. Teams that have faced each other from the group stage will not play each other again, but have the result from their first meeting carried forward. The top two teams from each league advance to the knockout stage. The knockout stage consists of two semi-finals, with the top team of one league facing the second-placed team from the other. The winners of the semi-finals play the final to determine the winners of the competition.
Points awarded in group and league stages:
ResultPoints
Win2 points
No result1 point
Loss0 points

Prize money

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. The prize money was distributed as follows:
This tournament featured 12 teams, an increase from the eight teams for the planned 2008 tournament, with the added participation of teams from Sri Lanka, New Zealand and the West Indies. Pakistan's participation was removed due to the decline between Pakistan and India's cricket boards arising from the 2008 Mumbai attacks, which caused the 2008 tournament to be cancelled. Lalit Modi, the chairman of the tournament, claimed the Pakistan government was unwilling to give Pakistan players clearance to travel to India. Representatives of the Pakistan Cricket Board claimed they were not contacted on the matter.
Domestic tournamentTeams fromTeams
2009 Indian Premier LeagueIND3
2008–09 KFC Twenty20 Big BashAUS2
2008–09 Standard Bank Pro20RSA2
2009 Twenty20 CupENG2
2008–09 State Twenty20NZL1
2008 Stanford 20/20WIN1
2008–09 Inter-Provincial Twenty20SRI1

Teams

There are players who are a part of more than one qualified team. In that case, a player can play for his "home" team without consequence. If he plays for any other team, that team must pay the home team US$200,000 as compensation. Only Dirk Nannes was named in more than one preliminary squad – that of the Delhi Daredevils and his "home" team the Victorian Bushrangers. Delhi paid Victoria US$200,000 to retain Nannes.
TeamDomestic tournamentPositionGroup
New South Wales Blues 2008–09 KFC Twenty20 Big BashWinnersB
Victorian Bushrangers 2008–09 KFC Twenty20 Big BashRunners-upD
Cape Cobras 2008–09 Standard Bank Pro20WinnersC
Diamond Eagles 2008–09 Standard Bank Pro20Runners-upB
Otago Volts 2008–09 State Twenty20WinnersC
Deccan Chargers 2009 Indian Premier LeagueWinnersA
Royal Challengers Bangalore 2009 Indian Premier LeagueRunners-upC
Delhi Daredevils 2009 Indian Premier LeagueThird placeD
Trinidad and Tobago 2008 Stanford 20/20WinnersA
Wayamba 2008–09 Inter-Provincial Twenty20WinnersD
Sussex Sharks 2009 Twenty20 CupWinnersB
Somerset Sabres 2009 Twenty20 CupRunners-upA


Reception

The tournament was low in popularity due to the lack of team recognition outside the three teams from the host nation India. Matches not involving these teams drew low television ratings and attendances. The Indian teams also had poor performances.

Fixtures

Group stage

Group A

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Group B

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Group C

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Group D

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League stage

League A

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League B

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Knockout stage

Semi-finals

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Final

Final standings

Statistics

Most runs

Most wickets