Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy Explained

Tournament Name:Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy
Country:India
Administrator:Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI)
Cricket Format:Twenty20
First:2006–07
Last:2023–24
Tournament Format:Round-robin and knockout
Participants:38
Champions:Punjab (1st title)
Most Successful:Tamil Nadu (3 titles)
Most Runs:Harpreet Singh Bhatia (2,215 runs)
Most Wickets:Siddharth Kaul (120 wickets)
Website:BCCI

The Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy[1] is a domestic Twenty20 cricket championship in India, organized by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI). It is named after former Test cricketer Syed Mushtaq Ali.

It is played by the teams from the Ranji Trophy, which is the premier domestic first-class cricket championship in the country. In 2006–07, the inaugural competition was won by Tamil Nadu under the captaincy of Dinesh Karthik. The 2023–24 tournament was won by Punjab, who defeated Baroda in the final. Tamil Nadu has been the most successful team, winning the trophy three times.

History

The tournament is played under Twenty20 (T20) rules. Originally known as the Inter-State T20 Championship, it was inaugurated by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) for the 2006–07 season. Except in 2016–17, the tournament has been contested by teams involved in the Ranji Trophy, 27 at first and currently (2023) 38. The format begun with a round-robin stage with the teams divided into zonal groups, with the top teams in each group qualifying for a knockout stage culminating in the final tie. In 2012–13, the BCCI decided to replace the knockout with a Super League consisting of two groups, the winners of which qualified for the final. In June 2016, the BCCI relaunched the competition using zonal teams, as in the Duleep Trophy, but they reverted to the Ranji teams in 2017. Since then, the number of competing teams have increased to 38 and the knockout stage has been restored.[2]

Format

The 38 teams are divided into five Elite groups, namely A, B, C, D, and E. There used to be a Plate group for newer teams but it has been discontinued. There are eight teams in groups A, B, and C who play seven matches each. Groups D and E have seven teams who play six matches each. The top-ranked teams in each group qualify for the knockout stage along with the three best runners-up. The knockout consists of four quarter-final matches, two semi-finals and the final.[3]

Current teams

The competition features the following 38 domestic teams, listed by their 2023–24 groups.[3]

Winners

SeasonsWinnersRunners-upWinning CaptainLosing Captain
2006/07Tamil NaduPunjabDinesh KarthikPankaj Dharmani
2009/10MaharashtraHyderabadRohit MotwaniAmol Shinde
2010/11BengalMadhya PradeshManoj TiwaryMohnish Mishra
2011/12BarodaPunjabPinal ShahHarbhajan Singh
2012/13GujaratPunjabParthiv PatelMandeep Singh
2013/14BarodaUttar PradeshAditya WaghmodeAkshdeep Nath
2014/15GujaratPunjabManpreet JunejaGurkeerat Singh
2015/16Uttar PradeshBarodaSuresh RainaIrfan Pathan
2016/17East ZoneCentral ZoneManoj TiwaryNaman Ojha
2017/18DelhiRajasthanPradeep SangwanAniket Choudhary
2018/19KarnatakaMaharashtraManish PandeyRahul Tripathi
2019/20KarnatakaTamil NaduManish PandeyDinesh Karthik
2020/21Tamil NaduBarodaDinesh KarthikKedar Devdhar
2021/22Tamil NaduKarnatakaVijay ShankarManish Pandey
2022/23MumbaiHimachal PradeshAjinkya RahaneRishi Dhawan
2023/24PunjabBarodaMandeep SinghKrunal Pandya

Tournament records

Team records

Team records[4]
Most Trophy wins 3 Tamil Nadu
Most consecutive wins including league 14
Most consecutive defeats 22 Jammu and Kashmir
Largest margin of victory (by runs) By 179 runs Andhra vs Nagaland
Largest margin of victory (by wickets) By 10 wickets 30 times
Largest margin of victory (by balls remaining) 100 balls Jharkhand vs Tripura

Highest totals

ScoreByAgainstVenueDate
275/6
258/4
252/4
250/3
246/5

Lowest totals

Highest Individual score

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy . ESPNcricinfo . 22 January 2021.
  2. Web site: BCCI revamps Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy structure . ESPNcricinfo . 24 June 2016 . 24 June 2016.
  3. https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Events/Tables/38/Syed_Mushtaq_Ali_Trophy_2023-24.html Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, 2023–24 Tables
  4. Web site: Overall First-Class Records. CricketArchive. 24 January 2021. 22 February 2007. https://web.archive.org/web/20070222083748/http://www.cricketarchive.co.uk/Archive/Records/Firstclass/Overall/index.html. dead.
  5. Web site: Highest totals . ESPN. ESPNcricinfo. 8 January 2019.
  6. Web site: Lowest totals . ESPN. ESPNcricinfo. 8 January 2019.
  7. Web site: Batting Most Runs Innings. ESPN. ESPNcricinfo. 8 January 2019.