Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy
The Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy[1] is a domestic T20 cricket championship in India, organized by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), among the teams from the Ranji Trophy. It is named after Indian former test cricketer Syed Mushtaq Ali. The 2006-2007 inaugural season of this trophy was won by Tamil Nadu under the captaincy of Dinesh Karthik, and Rohit Sharma scored the first ever T20 century by an Indian in the T20 format, in it.
Countries | India |
---|---|
Administrator | BCCI |
Format | Twenty20 |
First edition | 2006–07 |
Latest edition | 2022–23 |
Next edition | 2023–24 |
Tournament format | Round-robin, then knockout |
Number of teams | 38 |
Current champion | Mumbai (1st title) |
Most successful | Tamil Nadu (3 titles) |
Most runs | Kedar Devdhar, (Baroda) (2215 runs) |
Most wickets | Piyush Chawla, (Gujarat) (85 wickets) |
2023–24 | |
Website | BCCI |
Mumbai is the current champion and Tamil Nadu is the most successful team of the tournament, winning it thrice.
History
The BCCI launched this premier domestic T-20 tournament with a structure in 2006-07 season, in which 27 Ranji teams divided in five Zones with the name of Inter-State T20 Championship which was renamed and relaunched as the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy. Rohit Sharma scored the first T20 century by an Indian Which is in the first edition of SMAT trophy while chasing a target of 140+ vs Gujarat he scored for Mumbai in the very 2nd match while he scored 40+ notout in first match. The winners and runners-up of each Zone qualify for the knockout stage. In the 2012-13 season, the knockout stage was replaced with a Super League where Zonal winners and runners-up are divided into two groups and the winner of each group played the final. In 2015-16 season, the teams didn't compete on Zonal basis, and were drawn into four groups, unlike the previous seasons. In the 2016-17 season, Combined Zonal teams played the super league instead of Zonal winners. In June 2016, the BCCI announced that the championship would be scrapped and replaced with a zonal-based competition.[2] The very next season, the BCCI reverted to include all the domestic teams.
After 9 new teams were included into the domestic structure in the 2018-19 season, the zonal system was abolished and teams are drawn into five groups with group winners and runners up qualifying for the Super League. The 10 teams are divided into two groups and the Super League group winners play the Final.
The 2021 season of the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy is began on 20 October 2021, with the final to be played on 12 November 2021.[3]
Format
The 38 teams have been divided into five Elite groups, namely A, B, C, D, E, comprising six teams each, and one Plate group with eight teams. Each team will play a total of five league matches, regardless of the number of teams in the group, with all 38 teams playing the same number of matches. A total of 6 teams from the top ranked teams in each group (5 elites and 1 plate) will make it to the knockout stage, and the 2nd ranked teams from the 5 elite groups will join to make a total of 8 teams.
Current teams
The competition features all 38 Domestic Teams of India.
|
Winners
Tournament records
Team Records
Team records[4] | ||
---|---|---|
Most Trophy wins | 3 | Tamil Nadu |
Most consecutive wins including league | 14 | Karnataka |
Most consecutive defeats | 22 | Jammu & Kashmir |
Largest margin of victory (by runs) | By 130 runs | Vidarbha vs Sikkim |
Largest margin of victory (by wickets) | By 10 wicket | Jharkhand vs Tripura |
Largest margin of victory (by balls) | By 100 balls | Jharkhand vs Tripura |
Highest team score
Score | By | Against | Venue | City | Year | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
250/3 | Karnataka | Services | Dr PVG Raju ACA Sports Complex | Vizianagaram | 2019 | [5] |
243/3 | Mumbai | Punjab | Lalabhai Contractor Stadium | Surat | 2019 | [6] |
233/3 | Gujarat | Kerala | Emerald High School Ground | Indore | 2013 | [7] |
233/7 | Saurashtra | Vidarbha | Holkar Cricket Stadium | Indore | 2021 | [8] |
230/6 | Meghalaya | Mizoram | Guru Nanak College Ground | Chennai | 2021 | [9] |
Lowest team score
Score | By | Against | Venue | City | Year | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
30 | Tripura | Jharkhand | Tata Digwadih Stadium | Dhanbad | 2009 | [10] |
58 | Andhra | Hyderabad | Gymkhana Ground | Hyderabad | 2011 | [11] |
58 | Bengal | Tamil Nadu | Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium | Hyderabad | 2012 | [12] |
Highest Individual score
Score | Name | From | Against | Venue | Year | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
147 | Shreyas Iyer | Mumbai | Sikkim | Indore | 2019 | [13] |
146* | Puneet Bisht | Meghalaya | Mizoram | Chennai | 2021 | [13] |
135 | Mohammed Azharuddeen | Kerala | Mumbai | Mumbai | 2021 | [13] |
References
- "Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
- "BCCI revamps Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy structure". ESPNcricinfo. 24 June 2016. Retrieved 24 June 2016.
- "BCCI announces India's domestic season for 2021-22". SportsTiger. 3 July 2021. Retrieved 3 July 2021.
- "Overall First-Class Records". CricketArchive. Archived from the original on 22 February 2007. Retrieved 24 January 2021.
- "Karnataka vs Services". ESPNcricinfo.
- "Punjab vs Mumbai".
- Gujarat vs Kerala
- Saurashtra vs Vidarbha
- Meghalaya vs Mizoram
- Jharkhand vs Tripura
- Hyderabad vs Andhra
- Bengal vs Tamil Nadu
- "Syed Mushtaq Ali Troph High scores". ESPN cricinfo. 2012. Retrieved 17 November 2022.