2010 Champions League Twenty20


The 2010 Champions League Twenty20 was the second edition of the Champions League Twenty20, an international Twenty20 cricket tournament. The tournament, which was held from 10 to 26 September 2010 in South Africa, featured 10 domestic Twenty20 teams from India, Australia, Sri Lanka, New Zealand, the West Indies and South Africa.
The Chennai Super Kings emerged the winners of the tournament, defeating the Warriors in the final. Murali Vijay from the Chennai Super Kings won the Golden Bat Award and was declared the Man of the Match of the final, while Ravichandran Ashwin was awarded the Golden Wicket Award and declared the Player of the Tournament.
The song "I Like It" by Enrique Iglesias was taken as the official song for the 2010 Champions League Twenty20. Enrique performed the song along with "Be With You" at the opening ceremony of the tournament.

Host selection

In February 2010, Cricket South Africa announced that South Africa was chosen as the host of the tournament. This was later denied by tournament chairman Lalit Modi, who listed South Africa, Australia, England, India and the Middle East all as possible contenders for hosting the tournament. On 25 April 2010, at the conclusion of the 2010 Indian Premier League, it was announced that South Africa was officially chosen as the host of the tournament. South Africa had previously hosted other senior Twenty20 tournaments, including the 2007 ICC World Twenty20 and the 2009 Indian Premier League.

Format

The tournament consisted of the ten top domestic teams from six countries as determined by the domestic Twenty20 tournaments of those countries. The tournament consists of 23 matches, and is divided into a [|group stage] and a knockout stage. 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 two equal groups, with each playing a round-robin tournament. The top two teams of each group advance to the knockout stage. The knockout stage consists of two semi-finals, with the top team of one group facing the second from the other. The winners of the semi-finals play the grand final to determine the winner of the competition.
ResultPoints
Win2 points
No result1 point
Loss0 points

Prize money

Unchanged from the previous edition, the total prize money for the competition is US$6 million. In addition to the prize money, each team receives a participation fee of $500,000. The prize money will be distributed as follows:
Controversies arose after the conclusion of the tournament, when teams reported to have not received their tournament prize money, which was due to be paid by the end of January 2011. As of 9 March 2011, the full $6 million has yet to be paid to the teams. The participation fees have also yet to be paid.

Teams

This tournament had two teams less compared to the previous edition due to the absence of English county teams because the tournament dates clashed with the end of England's domestic season. The England national team also had a One Day International series with Pakistan during the tournament period. The format of the tournament was modified to accommodate this.
Apart from England, Pakistan is the only other top-eight Test-playing nation not to be represented in the tournament. In February 2010, Ijaz Butt, the chairman of the Pakistan Cricket Board, had reportedly refused participation in the tournament due to the snubbing of Pakistani cricketers in the 2010 Indian Premier League player auction. The auction resulted in none of them being bought for the league. Butt later stated his comments were misunderstood, but the Champions League administrators had already decided to leave out Pakistan due to Butt's statements. Champions League officials have made contradicting statements as to whether a Pakistan team would have been considered regardless of Butt's statement. Pakistan was also absent from the previous edition due to the deterioration of relations between host nation India and Pakistan.
Domestic tournamentTeams fromTeams
2010 Indian Premier LeagueIND3
2009–10 Standard Bank Pro20RSA2
2009–10 KFC Twenty20 Big BashAUS2
2009–10 HRV CupNZL1
2009–10 Inter-Provincial Twenty20SRI1
2010 Caribbean Twenty20WIN1

The tournament featured only three teams from the previous edition. Other teams failed to qualify, including the 2008 champions and runners-up, the New South Wales Blues of Australia and Trinidad and Tobago.
TeamDomestic tournamentPositionAppearanceGroup
Chennai Super Kings 2010 Indian Premier LeagueWinner1stA
Mumbai Indians 2010 Indian Premier LeagueRunner-up1stB
Royal Challengers Bangalore 2010 Indian Premier LeagueThird place2ndB
Warriors 2009–10 Standard Bank Pro20Winner1stA
Highveld Lions 2009–10 Standard Bank Pro20Runner-up1stB
Victorian Bushrangers 2009–10 KFC Twenty20 Big BashWinner2ndA
Southern Redbacks 2009–10 KFC Twenty20 Big BashRunner-up1stB
Central Districts Stags 2009–10 HRV CupWinner1stA
Wayamba Elevens 2009–10 Inter-Provincial Twenty20Winner2ndA
Guyana 2010 Caribbean Twenty20Winner1stB

Squads

Several teams were missing star players that helped them qualify for the tournament, mostly due to their commitment to another qualified team or to their national team. In the case of a player being a part of more than one qualified team, he 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. The Royal Challengers Bangalore were the only team to pay the compensation, forcing three international players to play for them instead of their home team. Jacques Kallis, Cameron White and Ross Taylor were obligated to play for Bangalore as their contracts stated Bangalore had first rights over them should they qualify for the tournament with another team.

Venues

The tournament was hosted at four venues across South Africa. All four venues were used in the group stage. Both the Warriors and Highveld Lions played some of their group stage matches at their respective home grounds of St George's Park and Wanderers Stadium. The semi-finals were held at Sahara Stadium Kingsmead and Supersport Park while the final was held at Wanderers Stadium.

Fixtures and results

Group stage

Group A

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Group B

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Knockout stage

;Semi-finals
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;Final

Final standings

Statistics

Most runs

Most wickets