2009 ACC Twenty20 Cup explained

2009 ACC Twenty20 Cup
Administrator:Asian Cricket Council
Cricket Format:Twenty20
Tournament Format:Group Stage with Finals
Host: United Arab Emirates
Count:2
Participants:12
Matches:38
Most Runs:268 Khalid Butt (Kuwait)
Most Wickets:16 Mohammad Nabi (Afghanistan)
Website:Tournament Site
Previous Year:2007
Previous Tournament:2007 ACC Twenty20 Cup
Next Year:2011
Next Tournament:2011 ACC Twenty20 Cup

The 2009 ACC Twenty20 Cup was played between 22 and 30 November 2009 in the United Arab Emirates.

The twelve competing teams were: Afghanistan, Bahrain, China, Hong Kong, Kuwait, Malaysia, Nepal, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Singapore and the UAE.[1]

Afghanistan defeated the United Arab Emirates in the final to win the tournament for the second time, following their joint victory with Oman in 2007. In the third place playoff Oman defeated Kuwait, meaning they will join Afghanistan and the United Arab Emirates for the cricket tournament at the 2010 Asian Games,[2] along with the national teams of Bangladesh, China, India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka.

Group stage

Group A

width=175 TeamMWLPtswidth=20 abbr="Net run rate" NRR
550104.46
54183.81
53260.11
5234−0.01
5142−0.81
5050−6.23

Results

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Group B

width=175 TeamMWLPtswidth=20 abbr="Net run rate" NRR
550102.56
53261.45
5326−0.02
5326−0.09
5142−1.10
5050−3.33

Results

------------------------------------------------------------

Semi-finals and Playoffs

Semi-finals

--------

3rd place playoff and Final

Final

Final standings

width=50 Poswidth=175 Teamwidth=275 Promotion
1st Will take part in the 2010 Asian Games
2nd
3rd
4th
5th
6th
7th
8th
9th
10th
11th
12th 2010 Asian Games hosts

Statistics

Most RunsMost Wickets
width=160 width=40 align=center 268width=160 width=40 align=center 16
align=center 255align=center 14
align=center 236align=center 13
align=center 208align=center 12
align=center 204align=center 12

See also

External links

International cricket in 2009-10

Notes and References

  1. Web site: ACC, retrieved 18 July 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090819133007/http://www.asiancricket.org/cnt_09_2020.cfm . 19 August 2009 . dead . 2009-07-18 .
  2. Web site: Cricinfo, retrieved 18 July 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121106110916/http://www.cricinfo.com/other/content/story/404176.html?CMP=OTC-RSS . 6 November 2012 . live . 2009-07-18 .