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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Winners  





3 Current structure  





4 References  





5 Further reading  














CSA One-Day Cup






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Standard Bank Cup)

CSA One-Day Cup
CountriesSouth Africa
AdministratorCricket South Africa
FormatList A cricket
First edition1981–82
Latest edition2023–24
Tournament formatDouble round-robin and playoffs
Number of teams15
Current championWestern Province (Division 1)

The CSA One-Day Cup (formerly known as the Standard Bank Cup, the MTN Domestic Championship, and the Momentum One-Day Cup) is the premier domestic one-day cricket competition of South Africa, its matches having List A status. Matches are usually played partly under lights as day-night matches and occasionally get larger crowds than the Test matches.[1]

History[edit]

The tournament has been played since the 1982–83 season when five teams competed in the Benson and Hedges Series. The tournament gradually expanded, with eleven teams taking part from 1994–95 onwards, as more and more teams were promoted from the B groups of South African cricket. Two seasons later, it was renamed the Standard Bank League, and then the Standard Bank Cup, but the same teams competed, until Namibia were admitted in 2002–03.

To reflect the wider structural changes that were happening across South African cricket, from the 2004-05 season the competition was re-organised to mirror both the Four-Day and T20 leagues. The six newly created, entirely professional, franchises would take part in the tournament, with the former provincial teams continuing in a separate semi-professional CSA structure. In the 2007–08 season, Zimbabwe took part in the competition as a seventh side, playing both home and away fixtures.[2]

Domestic cricketing reforms were introduced in 2020 that discontinued the six franchise team format and began a return to the more traditional provincial based system. Fifteen teams, split over the two divisions, now compete in the One-Day tournament.

In Division 1, five of the six teams who competed in the 2020–21 CSA Four-Day Franchise Series opted to retain their franchise brand, with only the former Cape Cobras reverting to their traditional Western Province name. They were joined in Division 1 by Boland and North West. Matches featuring either LimpopoorMpumalanga, both in Division 2, do not have List A status.

On 30 March 2022, in the Division One match between Titans and North West, Titans scored 453/3 from their 50 overs, setting a record for the highest total in a List A match in South Africa.

Winners[edit]

Current structure[edit]

The 15 teams that take part are:

Division One
Team Location Province
Dolphins Kingsmead, Durban KwaZulu-Natal
Knights Mangaung Oval, Bloemfontein Free State
Warriors St George's Park, Port Elizabeth Eastern Cape
Titans Super Sport Park, Centurion Gauteng
Lions Wanderers Stadium, Johannesburg Gauteng
North West Dragons Senwes Park, Potchefstroom North West
Boland Boland Park, Paarl Western Cape
Western Province Newlands, Cape Town Western Cape
Division Two
Team Location Province
South Western Districts Recreation Ground, Oudtshoorn Western Cape
KwaZulu-Natal (Inland) City Oval, Pietermaritzburg KwaZulu-Natal
Northern Cape De Beers Diamond Oval, Kimberley Northern Cape
Limpopo Polokwane Cricket Club, Polokwane Limpopo
Easterns Willowmoore Park, Benoni Gauteng
Mpumalanga Landau Recreation Club, Witbank Mpumalanga
Border Buffalo Park, East London Eastern Cape

Points system:

In the event of teams finishing on equal points, the top three places are determined in the following order of priority: (taken from Cricket South Africa Summer Handbook 2011–2012[4])

References[edit]

  1. ^ Cricket in South Africa – SouthAfrica.info Archived 14 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved 10 December 2005
  • ^ "MTN Domestic Championship 2008 Results". www.espncricinfo.com. Retrieved 29 November 2011.
  • ^ "Final: Cape Cobras v Lions at Cape Town, Feb 28, 2016 – Cricket Scorecard – ESPN Cricinfo". Retrieved 22 September 2016.
  • ^ http://www.cricket.co.za/docs/CSA/Summer%20Handbook%202011-2012.pdf Archived 31 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved 30 November 2011
  • Further reading[edit]


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