Dates | 18 April 2009 (2009-04-18) – 24 May 2009 (2009-05-24) |
---|---|
Administrator(s) | Board of Control for Cricket in India |
Cricket format | Twenty20 |
Tournament format(s) | Double round-robin and knockout |
Host(s) | South Africa |
Champions | Deccan Chargers (1st title) |
Runners-up | Royal Challengers Bangalore |
Participants | 8 |
Matches | 59 |
Player of the series | Adam Gilchrist (Deccan Chargers) |
Most runs | Matthew Hayden (CSK) (572) |
Most wickets | R. P. Singh (Deccan Chargers) (23) |
Official website | www |
← 2008 2010 → |
The 2009 Indian Premier League season, abbreviated as IPL 2 or the 2009 IPL, was the second season of the Indian Premier League, established by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) in 2007. The tournament was hosted by South Africa and was played between 18[1] April and 24 May 2009.[2] It was the second biggest cricket tournament in the world, after the Cricket World Cup,[3] and was forecast to have an estimated television audience of more than 200 million people in India alone.[4]
As the second season of the IPL coincided with multi-phase 2009 Indian general elections, in the aftermath of the 3 March 2009 attack on the Sri Lanka national cricket team the Government of India refused to commit security by Indian paramilitary forces. As a result, the BCCI decided to host the second season of the league outside India.[5] On 24 March 2009, the BCCI officially announced that the second season of the IPL was to be held in South Africa.[6] Though India did not host the second season, the format of the tournament remained unchanged from the 2008 season format.[7]
The IPL injected approximately US$100 million into South Africa's local economy.[8] In addition, the BCCI signed an ₹ 82 billion (US$1.63 billion) contract with Multi Screen Media to broadcast matches live from South Africa to India.[9]
The IPL was hosted successfully in South Africa and was hailed as an "extraordinary" accomplishment.[10] The tournament was particularly praised for globalizing cricket[11] and had set record television viewership.[12] The tournament was won by Deccan Chargers, who beat the Royal Challengers Bangalore in the final.[13]
Durban | Centurion | Johannesburg | Cape Town |
---|---|---|---|
Kingsmead Capacity: 25,000 Matches: 16 |
SuperSport Park Capacity: 20,000 Matches: 12 (Including Semifinal) |
New Wanderers Stadium Capacity: 34,000 Matches: 8 (Including Semifinal & Final) |
Newlands Capacity: 25,000 Matches: 8 |
| |||
Port Elizabeth | East London | Kimberley | Bloemfontein |
St George's Park Capacity: 19,000 Matches: 7 |
Buffalo Park Capacity: 15,000 Matches: 3 |
De Beers Oval Capacity: 11,000 Matches: 3 |
OUTsurance Oval Capacity: 20,000 Matches: 2 |
Some of the rules were changed for the 2009 edition of the IPL. The number of international players allowed in any one squad was increased from 8 to 10 although the number allowed in any playing 11 remained at 4.[14] The IPL sanctioned franchises to spend a further US$2 million during the auction taking the total salary cap for each franchise to US$7 million for the 2009 tournament.[15] The BCCI also negotiated with England Cricket Board (ECB) to allow English cricketers to participate in the tournament. English players were allowed to play for 21 days in between their tour to West Indies and the subsequent return tour.[16]
At the halfway point of each innings, a seven-and-a-half-minute television timeout was now held.[17] The change proved controversial, as critics and players felt that it broke the flow of the game, and because two-thirds of the break were devoted purely to additional advertising time. The timeout rules were revised for the 2010 season.[18]
The format is the same as previous season. Points in the group stage were awarded as follows:
Results | Points |
---|---|
Win | 2 points |
No result | 1 point |
Loss | 0 points |
If the match ends with the scores tied and there must be a winner, the tie is broken with a one over per side "Eliminator"[19] or "Super Over":[20][21]
Pos | Team | Pld | W | L | NR | Pts | NRR |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Delhi Daredevils | 14 | 10 | 4 | 0 | 20 | 0.311 |
2 | Chennai Super Kings | 14 | 8 | 5 | 1 | 17 | 0.951 |
3 | Royal Challengers Bangalore (R) | 14 | 8 | 6 | 0 | 16 | −0.191 |
4 | Deccan Chargers (C) | 14 | 7 | 7 | 0 | 14 | 0.203 |
5 | Kings XI Punjab | 14 | 7 | 7 | 0 | 14 | −0.483 |
6 | Rajasthan Royals | 14 | 6 | 7 | 1 | 13 | −0.352 |
7 | Mumbai Indians | 14 | 5 | 8 | 1 | 11 | 0.297 |
8 | Kolkata Knight Riders | 14 | 3 | 10 | 1 | 7 | −0.789 |
(C) = Eventual champion; (R) = Runner-up.
Winner, runner-up and best-performing semi-finalist in the group stage qualify for the 2009 Champions League Twenty20.
Horizontal team won | Vertical team won |
Win | Loss | No result |
18 April |
Mumbai Indians |
v |
Chennai Super Kings |
Sachin Tendulkar59* (49) |
Matthew Hayden 44 (35) |
Mumbai won by 19 runs |
Royal Challengers Bangalore |
v |
Rajasthan Royals |
Rahul Dravid 66 (48) |
Ravindra Jadeja 11 (10) |
Bangalore won by 75 runs |
19 April |
Kings XI Punjab |
v |
Delhi Daredevils |
Karan Goel 38 (21) |
Virender Sehwag38* (16) |
Delhi won by 10 wickets (D/L) |
Kolkata Knight Riders |
v |
Deccan Chargers |
Brad Hodge 31 (34) |
Herschelle Gibbs43* (26) |
Deccan won by 8 wickets |
Chennai Super Kings |
v |
Royal Challengers Bangalore |
Matthew Hayden 65 (35) |
Jacques Kallis 24 (19) |
Chennai won by 92 runs |
21 April |
Kings XI Punjab |
v |
Kolkata Knight Riders |
Yuvraj Singh 38 (28) |
Chris Gayle44* (26) |
Kolkata won by 11 runs (D/L) |
v |
||
|
|
Match abandoned without a ball bowled |
Deccan Chargers |
v |
Royal Challengers Bangalore |
Adam Gilchrist 71 (45) |
Virat Kohli 50 (32) |
Deccan won by 24 runs |
23 April |
Delhi Daredevils |
v |
Chennai Super Kings |
AB de Villiers 105* (54) |
Matthew Hayden 57 (27) |
Delhi won by 9 runs |
Rajasthan Royals |
v |
Kolkata Knight Riders |
Yusuf Pathan 42 (21) |
Sourav Ganguly 46 (30) |
Match tied |
Royal Challengers Bangalore |
v |
Kings XI Punjab |
Jacques Kallis 62 (46) |
Ravi Bopara 84 (59) |
Punjab won by 7 wickets |
25 April |
Deccan Chargers |
v |
Mumbai Indians |
Herschelle Gibbs 58 (44) |
Jean-Paul Duminy 47 (40) |
Deccan won by 12 runs |
v |
||
|
|
Match abandoned without a ball bowled |
26 April |
Royal Challengers Bangalore |
v |
Delhi Daredevils |
Kevin Pietersen 37 (40) |
Tillakaratne Dilshan 67 (47) |
Delhi won by 6 wickets |
Kings XI Punjab |
v |
Rajasthan Royals |
Kumar Sangakkara 60 (51) |
Ravindra Jadeja 37 (44) |
Punjab won by 27 runs |
27 April |
Chennai Super Kings |
v |
Deccan Chargers |
Matthew Hayden 49 (35) |
Herschelle Gibbs 69 (56) |
Deccan Chargers won by 6 wickets |
Mumbai Indians |
v |
Kolkata Knight Riders |
Sachin Tendulkar 68 (45) |
Saurav Ganguly 34 (30) |
Mumbai won by 92 runs |
Delhi Daredevils |
v |
Rajasthan Royals |
AB de Villiers 50 (40) |
Yusuf Pathan 62 (30) |
Rajasthan won by 5 wickets |
29 April |
Kolkata Knight Riders |
v |
Royal Challengers Bangalore |
Morne van Wyk43* (35) |
Shreevats Goswami 43 (46) |
Bangalore won by 5 wickets |
Kings XI Punjab |
v |
Mumbai Indians |
Kumar Sangakkara45* (44) |
Jean-Paul Duminy 59 (63) |
Punjab won by 3 runs |
30 April |
Deccan Chargers |
v |
Delhi Daredevils |
Dwayne Smith 48 (28) |
Tillakaratne Dilshan52* (46) |
Delhi won by 6 wickets |
Chennai Super Kings |
v |
Rajasthan Royals |
Suresh Raina 98 (55) |
Rob Quiney 28 (31) |
Chennai won by 38 runs |
1 May |
Mumbai Indians |
v |
Kolkata Knight Riders |
Jean-Paul Duminy 52 (37) |
Brad Hodge 73 (60) |
Mumbai won by 9 runs |
Royal Challengers Bangalore |
v |
Kings XI Punjab |
Roelof van der Merwe 35 (19) |
Yuvraj Singh 50 (34) |
Bangalore won by 8 runs |
2 May |
Deccan Chargers |
v |
Rajasthan Royals |
Tirumalsetti Suman 41 (35) |
Lee Carseldine 39 (32) |
Rajasthan won by 3 wickets |
Chennai Super Kings |
v |
Delhi Daredevils |
Subramaniam Badrinath 45 (34) |
Dinesh Karthik 52 (31) |
Chennai won by 18 runs |
3 May |
Kolkata Knight Riders |
v |
Kings XI Punjab |
Brad Hodge70* (43) |
Mahela Jayawardene52* (41) |
Punjab won by 6 wickets |
Mumbai Indians |
v |
Royal Challengers Bangalore |
Sanath Jayasuriya 52 (43) |
Jacques Kallis69* (59) |
Bangalore won by 9 wickets |
Chennai Super Kings |
v |
Deccan Chargers |
M.S. Dhoni58* (37) |
Dwayne Smith 49 (23) |
Chennai won by 78 runs |
5 May |
Rajasthan Royals |
v |
Kings XI Punjab |
Graeme Smith 77 (44) |
Yuvraj Singh 48 (37) |
Rajasthan won by 78 runs |
Kolkata Knight Riders |
v |
Delhi Daredevils |
Morne van Wyk 74 (48) |
Gautam Gambhir 71 (57) |
Delhi won by 9 wickets |
Deccan Chargers |
v |
Mumbai Indians |
Rohit Sharma 38 (36) |
Jean-Paul Duminy 52 (48) |
Deccan won by 19 runs |
7 May |
Royal Challengers Bangalore |
v |
Rajasthan Royals |
Robin Uthappa 17 (20) |
Naman Ojha52* (38) |
Rajasthan won by 7 wickets |
Chennai Super Kings |
v |
Kings XI Punjab |
Matthew Hayden 89 (58) |
Yuvraj Singh58* (36) |
Chennai won by 12 runs (D/L) |
Mumbai Indians |
v |
Delhi Daredevils |
Dwayne Bravo 35 (30) |
AB de Villiers50* (38) |
Delhi won by 7 wickets |
9 May |
Deccan Chargers |
v |
Kings XI Punjab |
Andrew Symonds60* (36) |
Mahela Jayawardene 43 (28) |
Punjab won by 3 wickets |
Chennai Super Kings |
v |
Rajasthan Royals |
Subramaniam Badrinath59* (41) |
Graeme Smith 30 (33) |
Chennai won by 7 wickets |
10 May |
Mumbai Indians |
v |
Royal Challengers Bangalore |
Ajinkya Rahane62* (49) |
Mark Boucher48* (33) |
Mumbai won by 16 runs |
Kolkata Knight Riders |
v |
Delhi Daredevils |
Saurav Ganguly 44 (45) |
AB de Villiers 40 (32) |
Delhi won by 7 wickets |
Deccan Chargers |
v |
Rajasthan Royals |
Dwayne Smith 47 (32) |
Swapnil Asnodkar 44 (39) |
Deccan won by 53 runs |
12 May |
Royal Challengers Bangalore |
v |
Kolkata Knight Riders |
Ross Taylor81* (33) |
Brendon McCullum84* (64) |
Bangalore won by 6 wickets |
Kings XI Punjab |
v |
Mumbai Indians |
Sunny Sohal 43 (23) |
Dwayne Bravo70* (59) |
Mumbai won by 8 wickets |
Delhi Daredevils |
v |
Deccan Chargers |
Dinesh Karthik44* (23) |
Adam Gilchrist 64 (33) |
Delhi won by 12 runs |
14 May |
Chennai Super Kings |
v |
Royal Challengers Bangalore |
Matthew Hayden 60 (38) |
Ross Taylor 46 (50) |
Bangalore won by 2 wickets |
Rajasthan Royals |
v |
Mumbai Indians |
Rob Quiney 51 (40) |
Sachin Tendulkar 40 (30) |
Rajasthan won by 2 runs |
Delhi Daredevils |
v |
Kings XI Punjab |
Dinesh Karthik 32 (29) |
Kumar Sangakkara 47 (43) |
Punjab won by 6 wickets |
16 May |
Mumbai Indians |
v |
Chennai Super Kings |
JP Duminy 62 (40) |
Matthew Hayden 60 (57) |
Chennai won by 7 wickets |
Kolkata Knight Riders |
v |
Deccan Chargers |
Brad Hodge 48 (41) |
Adam Gilchrist 43 (31) |
Deccan won by 6 wickets |
17 May |
Kings XI Punjab |
v |
Deccan Chargers |
Kumar Sangakkara 56 (43) |
Rohit Sharma 42 (26) |
Punjab won by 1 run |
Delhi Daredevils |
v |
Rajasthan Royals |
AB de Villiers 79 (55) |
Johan Botha 37 (31) |
Delhi won by 14 runs |
Chennai Super Kings |
v |
Kolkata Knight Riders |
Suresh Raina 52 (37) |
Brendon McCullum 81 (48) |
Kolkata won by 7 wickets |
Delhi Daredevils |
v |
Royal Challengers Bangalore |
Dinesh Karthik 31 (29) |
Jacques Kallis58* (56) |
Bangalore won by 7 wickets |
20 May |
Rajasthan Royals |
v |
Kolkata Knight Riders |
Naman Ojha 22 (12) |
Laxmi Shukla48* (46) |
Kolkata won by 4 wickets |
Chennai Super Kings |
v |
Kings XI Punjab |
Parthiv Patel 32 (23) |
Luke Pomersbach 26 (32) |
Chennai won by 24 runs |
21 May |
Mumbai Indians |
v |
Delhi Daredevils |
Ajinkya Rahane 56 (41) |
Virender Sehwag 50 (27) |
Delhi won by 4 wickets |
Royal Challengers Bangalore |
v |
Deccan Chargers |
Manish Pandey 114* (73) |
Herschelle Gibbs 60 (43) |
Bangalore won by 12 runs |
Semi-finals | Final | |||||||
22 May — SuperSport Park, Centurion | ||||||||
1 | Delhi Daredevils | 153/8 (20 overs) | ||||||
24 May — New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg | ||||||||
4 | Deccan Chargers | 154/4 (17.4 overs) | ||||||
SF1W | Deccan Chargers | 143/6 (20 overs) | ||||||
23 May — New Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg | ||||||||
SF2W | Royal Challengers Bangalore | 137/9 (20 overs) | ||||||
2 | Chennai Super Kings | 146/5 (20 overs) | ||||||
3 | Royal Challengers Bangalore | 149/4 (18.5 overs) | ||||||
Delhi Daredevils |
v |
Deccan Chargers |
Tillakaratne Dilshan 65 (51) |
Adam Gilchrist 85 (35) |
Deccan won by 6 wickets |
Chennai Super Kings |
v |
Royal Challengers Bangalore |
Parthiv Patel 36 (27) |
Manish Pandey 48 (35) |
Bangalore won by 6 wickets |
Deccan Chargers |
v |
Royal Challengers Bangalore |
Herschelle Gibbs 53 (48) |
Roelof van der Merwe 32 (21) |
Deccan won by 6 runs |
Player | Team | Inns | Runs | HS |
---|---|---|---|---|
Matthew Hayden | Chennai Super Kings | 12 | 572 | 65 |
Adam Gilchrist | Deccan Chargers | 16 | 495 | 85 |
AB de Villiers | Delhi Daredevils | 13 | 465 | 105* |
Suresh Raina | Chennai Super Kings | 14 | 436 | 100 |
Tillakaratne Dilshan | Delhi Daredevils | 13 | 418 | 67* |
The tournament's leading scorer wore an orange cap when fielding.[26]
Player | Team | Matches | Wickets | Best bowling |
---|---|---|---|---|
R.P. Singh | Deccan Chargers | 16 | 23 | 4/22 |
Anil Kumble | Royal Challengers Bangalore | 16 | 21 | 5/5 |
Ashish Nehra | Delhi Daredevils | 13 | 19 | 3/27 |
Lasith Malinga | Mumbai Indians | 13 | 18 | 3/11 |
Pragyan Ojha | Deccan Chargers | 15 | 18 | 3/21 |
The tournament's leading wicket taker wore a purple cap when fielding.[27]
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Finals |
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