A RetroSearch Logo

Home - News ( United States | United Kingdom | Italy | Germany ) - Football scores

Search Query:

Showing content from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One-Day_Cup_(Australia) below:

One-Day Cup (Australia) - Wikipedia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Australian cricket tournament

Cricket tournament

The One-Day Cup[a], for which the prize was renamed the Dean Jones Trophy from the 2024–25 season,[3] is an Australian domestic List A 50-over limited-overs cricket tournament. It has had many different names, formats and teams since the inaugural 1969-1970 season. Initially a knockout cup, the competition now features a single round-robin followed by a finals series.

The tournament is contested between teams representing the six states of Australia, who also compete in the first-class Sheffield Shield. Three other teams have also played in the tournament for short periods of time: New Zealand's national team competed from 1969–70 until the 1974–75, Australian Capital Territory participated from 1997–98 until 1999–2000, and a select Cricket Australia XI took part as the seventh team for three seasons from 2015–16 until 2017–18. The current champions are South Australia.

England was the first country to introduce a domestic one-day limited-overs competition with its Gillette Cup in 1963. Australia was the next country to do so when this competition was established in 1969–70. It has been held every summer since, under a wide variety of names and formats. It is a List A cricket competition. It was the first List A competition to feature numbers on player's shirts when they were introduced for the 1995–96 season and numbers were also subsequently introduced for the ODI series later in the season. In September 2017, former Australian Test cricketer Jason Gillespie suggested that Papua New Guinea should be added to the competition.[4] In August 2024, Cricket Australia launched a campaign to rename the trophy presented to the winner of the competition after a former player, with fans being able to vote to select the trophy's new name.[5]

Seasons and competition formats[edit]

Cricket team

Cricket team

Cricket team

Cricket team

Cricket team

Cricket team

Cricket team

Cricket team

Cricket team

Cricket team

Team Colour Limited-Overs Cricket Team Home Cricket Ground/s Since 1969/1970 City/Cities Est. First Season Last Season First Title Last Title Titles (total) Runners-up   Australian Capital Territory Manuka Oval,
Various Others[a] Canberra 1928 1997/98 1999/00 - - 0 0   Cricket Australia XI Allan Border Field,
Hurstville Oval[a] Brisbane,
Sydney 2015 2015/16 2017/18 - - 0 0   New South Wales Sydney Cricket Ground,
Various Others[a] Sydney 1856 1969/70 Present 1984/85 2020/21 12 10   New Zealand None
None [b] None
None [b] 1894 1969/70 1974/75 1969/70 1974/75 3 2   Northern Territory Marrara Oval,
Various Others[a] Darwin 1978 None None - - 0 0   Queensland Brisbane Cricket Ground, Various Others[a] Brisbane 1882 1969/70 Present 1975/76 2013/14 10 8   South Australia Adelaide Oval,
Various Others[a] Adelaide 1887 1969/70 Present 1983/84 2024/25 4 7   Tasmania Bellerive Oval, TCA Ground,
Various Others[a] Hobart 1851 1969/70 Present 1978/79 2009/10 4 6   Victoria[6]
Melbourne Cricket Ground, Various Others[a] Melbourne 1851 1969/70 Present 1971/72 2018/19 6 11   Western Australia[7]
WACA Ground,
Perth Stadium[a] Perth 1893 1969/70 Present 1970/71 2023/24 17 11

a Each team has used several venues to host matches. For a full list, see list of cricket grounds in Australia.
b New Zealand did not play home games in this series.

Competition placings[edit]

For a complete list of finals with short scorecards and crowd figures, see Australian Domestic One-Day Cricket Final.

1969–70 to present[edit] Season First Second Third Fourth Fifth Sixth Seventh 1969–70 New Zealand Victoria New South Wales Western Australia Queensland South Australia Tasmania 1970–71 Western Australia Queensland South Australia New Zealand Tasmania Victoria New South Wales 1971–72 Victoria New Zealand South Australia Western Australia Queensland New South Wales Tasmania 1972–73 New Zealand Queensland South Australia New South Wales Tasmania Western Australia Victoria 1973–74 Western Australia New Zealand South Australia New South Wales Victoria Tasmania Queensland 1974–75 New Zealand Western Australia Queensland Tasmania New South Wales Victoria South Australia 1975–76 Queensland Western Australia South Australia Tasmania — — — 1976–77 Western Australia Victoria Queensland New South Wales 1977–78 Western Australia Tasmania New South Wales Victoria 1978–79 Tasmania Western Australia Queensland Victoria 1979–80 Victoria New South Wales Western Australia 3 Tasmania 4 1980–81 Queensland Western Australia South Australia 3 Victoria 4 1981–82 Queensland New South Wales Western Australia 3 Victoria 4 1982–831 Western Australia New South Wales Queensland Victoria 1983–84 South Australia Western Australia New South Wales Tasmania 1984–85 New South Wales South Australia Victoria Western Australia 1985–86 Western Australia Victoria New South Wales Queensland 1986–87 South Australia Tasmania Victoria Western Australia 1987–88 New South Wales South Australia Tasmania Victoria 1988–89 Queensland Victoria New South Wales Western Australia 1989–90 Western Australia South Australia New South Wales Queensland 1990–91 Western Australia New South Wales Queensland Victoria 1991–92 New South Wales Western Australia Queensland Tasmania 1992–93 New South Wales Victoria Western Australia Queensland Tasmania South Australia 1993–94 New South Wales Western Australia South Australia Queensland Victoria Tasmania 1994–95 Victoria South Australia Western Australia Queensland Tasmania New South Wales 1995–96 Queensland Western Australia New South Wales South Australia Tasmania Victoria 1996–97 Western Australia Queensland New South Wales Victoria Tasmania South Australia 1997–98 Queensland New South Wales Western Australia South Australia Tasmania Aus. Cap. Territory Victoria 1998–99 Victoria New South Wales Queensland South Australia Western Australia Aus. Cap. Territory Tasmania 1999–00 Western Australia Queensland New South Wales South Australia Victoria Tasmania Aus. Cap. Territory 2000–01 New South Wales Western Australia South Australia Queensland Tasmania Victoria — 2001–02 New South Wales Queensland South Australia Western Australia Victoria Tasmania 2002–03 New South Wales Western Australia Queensland Tasmania Victoria South Australia 2003–04 Western Australia Queensland Victoria New South Wales South Australia Tasmania 2004–05 Tasmania Queensland Victoria Western Australia South Australia New South Wales 2005–06 New South Wales South Australia Victoria Western Australia Tasmania Queensland 2006–07 Queensland Victoria Western Australia South Australia Tasmania New South Wales 2007–08 Tasmania Victoria South Australia Queensland Western Australia New South Wales 2008–09 Queensland Victoria South Australia Tasmania Western Australia New South Wales 2009–10 Tasmania Victoria Queensland New South Wales Western Australia South Australia 2010–11 Victoria Tasmania New South Wales Western Australia South Australia Queensland 2011–12 South Australia Tasmania New South Wales Queensland Victoria Western Australia 2012–13 Queensland Victoria South Australia New South Wales Tasmania Western Australia 2013–14 Queensland New South Wales Victoria Tasmania Western Australia South Australia 2014–15 Western Australia New South Wales Queensland Tasmania Victoria South Australia 2015–16 New South Wales South Australia Victoria Tasmania Western Australia Queensland Cricket Australia XI 2016–17 New South Wales Queensland Victoria Western Australia Tasmania South Australia Cricket Australia XI 2017–18 Western Australia South Australia Victoria New South Wales Queensland Tasmania Cricket Australia XI 2018–19 Victoria Tasmania Western Australia South Australia New South Wales Queensland — 2019–20 Western Australia Queensland South Australia Tasmania Victoria New South Wales 2020–21 New South Wales Western Australia Queensland Tasmania Victoria South Australia 2021–22 Western Australia New South Wales Tasmania Queensland South Australia Victoria 2022–23 Western Australia South Australia Victoria Queensland New South Wales Tasmania 2023–24 Western Australia New South Wales Victoria Tasmania Queensland South Australia 2024–25 South Australia Victoria New South Wales Queensland Tasmania Western Australia Leading run-scorers and wicket-takers for each team[edit]

Career statistics include all matches up to the end of the 2024–25 season.[8]

Player of the tournament[edit] Records and statistics[edit]

Last updated on 9 October 2023[24]

Points are awarded as follows:

The top two teams at the end of the pool matches play-off in the final. The higher-placed team has the home ground advantage.

Television coverage[edit]

In 2006–07, the Ford Ranger One Day Cup was televised on Fox Sports. 25 out of the 31 games were televised including the final. Prior to Fox Sports' broadcasting of the domestic cricket competition, Nine was the host broadcaster. In India STAR Cricket shows the telecast with the help of Fox Sports. In 2011–12 Fox Sports broadcast all 25 games of the Ryobi One Day Cup live. The Nine Network became the rights holder once again from season 2013–14 to the 2016–17 season, primarily showing matches Live on GEM and simulcasting via Cricket Australia's website. There are negotiations in place with ITV to televise the competition in the UK.[25]

For the 2017–18 season, the Nine Network dropped its coverage of the JLT One Day Cup. All matches were streamed live and free on Cricket Australia's own website and app.[26]

From the 2018–19 season, Fox Sports broadcast 13 matches of the tournament each year for six years on the new Fox Cricket channel. All remaining matches were streamed live on Cricket Australia's website and app.[27]

  1. ^ Has had many different names previously, was known as the One-Day Cup, name prefaced by various sponsors, from 2010-2024.

For match results and individual scorecards, see:

Cricket in Australia Cricket Australia National teams Members (teams) Franchise teams Tournaments First-class One Day Twenty20 Other Grounds International Domestic Honours Lists Other

RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue

Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo

HTML: 3.2 | Encoding: UTF-8 | Version: 0.7.4