2019 Global T20 Canada

The 2019 Global T20 Canada was the second edition of the Global T20 Canada, a 20-over Professional cricket tournament, played at the CAA Centre, Brampton, Ontario.[1][2] It started on 25 July 2019, and concluded with the final on 11 August 2019.[3] It was slightly later in the calendar than the previous tournament, to avoid clashing with the 2019 Cricket World Cup.[4] Vancouver Knights are the defending champions.[5] A new team named New York Legends were announced to replace Cricket West Indies B Team.[6] However, the idea was later cancelled,[2] and the Brampton Wolves were named as the sixth franchise team in June 2019.[7]

2019 Global T20 Canada
Dates25 July – 11 August 2019
Administrator(s)Cricket Canada
Cricket formatTwenty20
Tournament format(s)Round-robin and playoffs
Host(s)Canada
ChampionsWinnipeg Hawks (1st title)
Participants6
Matches played22
Player of the seriesJP Duminy (Winnipeg Hawks)
Most runsJP Duminy (Winnipeg Hawks) (332)
Most wicketsIsh Sodhi (Brampton Wolves) (12)
Official websitewww.gt20.ca

On 26 July 2019, the start of the match between Montreal Tigers and Winnipeg Hawks was delayed by 90 minutes due to a bomb threat, when a suspicious package was found in the venue. The package was removed, with the match being reduced to twelve overs per side.[8]

The final, between the Winnipeg Hawks and the Vancouver Knights, finished in a tie.[9] Winnipeg Hawks won the match in the Super Over, to win their first title.[10]

Teams and squads

The following teams, squads and coaches were announced for the tournament.[7][11][12] More than 1,000 cricketers from 42 nations were on the list for the players' draft.[13]

Brampton Wolves
Coach Phil Simmons
Edmonton Royals
Coach: Stephen Fleming
Montreal Tigers
Coach: Tom Moody
Toronto Nationals
Coach: Geoff Lawson
Vancouver Knights
Coach: Donovan Miller
Winnipeg Hawks
Coach: Lalchand Rajput

In July 2019, Steven Taylor, Jasdeep Singh and Timil Patel withdrew from the tournament, after signing central contracts with USA Cricket.[15] In early August, the majority of the Emirati cricketers were recalled to play in the Twenty20 International (T20I) series against the Netherlands.[16] On 5 August 2019, Brendon McCullum announced his retirement from cricket, with the tournament being his final matches.[17]

Points table

Team[18] Pld W L T NR Pts NRR
Brampton Wolves 641019+1.951
Vancouver Knights 631028+0.769
Toronto Nationals 633006+0.271
Winnipeg Hawks 623015–0.722
Montreal Tigers 623015–1.667
Edmonton Royals 614013–0.548
  • The top four teams qualified for the playoffs
  •   Advanced to Playoff 1
  •   Advanced to Knockout

League stage

The full fixtures were confirmed on 25 June 2019.[19]

Round 1

25 July 2019
12:30
Scorecard
Toronto Nationals
159/5 (20 overs)
v
Vancouver Knights
162/2 (17.2 overs)
Heinrich Klaasen 41 (20)
Saad Bin Zafar 1/7 (2 overs)
Rassie van der Dussen 65* (43)
Mark Montfort 1/33 (4 overs)
Vancouver Knights won by 8 wickets
CAA Centre, Brampton
Umpires: Bijal Patel (Can) and Leslie Reifer (WI)
Player of the match: Chadwick Walton (Vancouver Knights)
  • Vancouver Knights won the toss and elected to field.

26 July 2019
16:30 (D/N)
Scorecard
Montreal Tigers
135/3 (12 overs)
v
Winnipeg Hawks
111/5 (12 overs)
Sunil Narine 59 (30)
Dwayne Bravo 1/16 (3 overs)
Umar Akmal 49 (30)
Mohammad Naveed 2/26 (3 overs)
Montreal Tigers won by 24 runs
CAA Centre, Brampton
Umpires: Arnold Maddela (Can) and Carl Tuckett (WI)
Player of the match: Sunil Narine (Montreal Tigers)
  • Winnipeg Hawks won the toss and elected to field.
  • The match was reduced to 12 overs per side due to a bomb threat.[8]

27 July 2019
12:30
Scorecard
Edmonton Royals
191/6 (19 overs)
v
Toronto Nationals
192/8 (17.5 overs)
Ben Cutting 43* (24)
Chris Green 3/33 (4 overs)
Heinrich Klaasen 45 (39)
Shadab Khan 2/42 (4 overs)
Toronto Nationals won by 2 wickets
CAA Centre, Brampton
Umpires: Harry Grewal (Can) and Vishal Sudhalkar (Can)
Player of the match: Manpreet Gony (Toronto Nationals)
  • Toronto Nationals won the toss and elected to field.
  • The match was reduced to 19 overs per side due to rain.

27 July 2019
16:30 (D/N)
Scorecard
Montreal Tigers
101 (18.2 overs)
v
Brampton Wolves
102/0 (6.4 overs)
Kyle Coetzer 26 (18)
Ish Sodhi 5/8 (4 overs)
Brampton Wolves won by 10 wickets
CAA Centre, Brampton
Umpires: Arnold Madeldela (Can) and Bijal Patel (Can)
Player of the match: Ish Sodhi (Brampton Wolves)
  • Montreal Tigers won the toss and elected to bat.

28 July 2019
12:30
Scorecard
Vancouver Knights
208/5 (20 overs)
v
Winnipeg Hawks
210/3 (15.2 overs)
Chris Gayle 45 (27)
Rayad Emrit 3/40 (4 overs)
JP Duminy 77* (38)
Ali Khan 1/42 (3 overs)
Winnipeg Hawks won by 7 wickets
CAA Centre, Brampton
Umpires: Leslie Reifer (WI) and Vishal Sudhalkar (Can)
Player of the match: JP Duminy (Winnipeg Hawks)
  • Winnipeg Hawks won the toss and elected to field.

28 July 2019
16:30 (D/N)
Scorecard
Brampton Wolves
207/5 (20 overs)
v
Edmonton Royals
180/9 (20 overs)
Shahid Afridi 81* (40)
Shadab Khan 3/34 (4 overs)
James Neesham 33 (18)
Zahoor Khan 3/21 (3 overs)
Brampton Wolves won by 27 runs
CAA Centre, Brampton
Umpires: Bijal Patel (Can) and Carl Tuckett (WI)
Player of the match: Shahid Afridi (Brampton Wolves)
  • Brampton Wolves won the toss and elected to bat.

29 July 2019
12:30
Scorecard
Toronto Nationals
216/7 (20 overs)
v
Winnipeg Hawks
217/7 (20 overs)
Rodrigo Thomas 65 (46)
Dwayne Bravo 4/39 (4 overs)
Chris Lynn 89 (48)
Chris Green 2/40 (4 overs)
Winnipeg Hawks won by 3 wickets
CAA Centre, Brampton
Umpires: Leslie Reifer (WI) and Vishal Sudhalkar (Can)
Player of the match: Chris Lynn (Winnipeg Hawks)
  • Winnipeg Hawks won the toss and elected to field.

29 July 2019
16:30 (D/N)
Scorecard
Vancouver Knights
276/3 (20 overs)
v
Montreal Tigers
Chris Gayle 122* (54)
Dillon Heyliger 1/47 (3 overs)
No result
CAA Centre, Brampton
Umpires: Harry Grewal (Can) and Carl Tuckett (WI)
  • Montreal Tigers won the toss and elected to field.
  • No play was possible after Vancouver Knight's innings due to rain.

31 July 2019
12:30
Scorecard
Edmonton Royals
153 (19.3 overs)
v
Montreal Tigers
154/6 (19.4 overs)
Faf du Plessis 55 (20)
Dillon Heyliger 3/14 (4 overs)
Kyle Coetzer 62 (52)
Kyle Phillip 4/38 (4 overs)
Montreal Tigers won by 4 wickets
CAA Centre, Brampton
Umpires: Harry Grewal (Can) and Arnold Maddela (Can)
Player of the match: Dillon Heyliger (Montreal Tigers)
  • Montreal Tigers won the toss and elected to field.

1 August 2019
12:30
Scorecard
Winnipeg Hawks
116 (18.5 overs)
v
Brampton Wolves
122/3 (14.3 overs)
Shaiman Anwar 31 (18)
Ish Sodhi 2/16 (4 overs)
Colin Munro 53* (31)
Mohammad Irfan 2/27 (4 overs)
Brampton Wolves won by 7 wickets
CAA Centre, Brampton
Umpires: Vishal Sudhalkar (Can) and Carl Tuckett (WI)
Player of the match: Colin Munro (Brampton Wolves)
  • Brampton Wolves won the toss and elected to field.

2 August 2019
12:30
Scorecard
Edmonton Royals
165/9 (20 overs)
v
Vancouver Knights
166/4 (16.3 overs)
Ben Cutting 72 (41)
Hayden Walsh Jr. 2/20 (4 overs)
Chris Gayle 94 (44)
Ben Cutting 3/27 (4 overs)
Vancouver Knights won by 6 wickets
CAA Centre, Brampton
Umpires: Harry Grewal (Can) and Verdayne Smith (WI)
Player of the match: Chris Gayle (Vancouver Knights)
  • Vancouver Knights won the toss and elected to field.

3 August 2019
12:30
Scorecard
Brampton Wolves
222/6 (20 overs)
v
Toronto Nationals
211/7 (20 overs)
George Munsey 66 (36)
Yuvraj Singh 1/14 (2 overs)
Yuvraj Singh 51 (22)
Nawab Singh 2/41 (3 overs)
Brampton Wolves won by 11 runs
CAA Centre, Brampton
Umpires: Bijal Patel (Can) and Verdayne Smith (WI)
Player of the match: George Munsey (Brampton Wolves)
  • Toronto Nationals won the toss and elected to field.

3 August 2019
16:30 (D/N)
Scorecard
Winnipeg Hawks
195/6 (20 overs)
v
Edmonton Royals
198/2 (17.4 overs)
Shaiman Anwar 62 (35)
Shadab Khan 3/23 (4 overs)
Anshuman Rath 87* (50)
Kaleem Sana 1/25 (2 overs)
Edmonton Royals won by 8 wickets
CAA Centre, Brampton
Umpires: Arnold Maddela (Can) and Carl Tuckett (WI)
Player of the match: Anshuman Rath (Edmonton Royals)
  • Edmonton Royals won the toss and elected to field.

4 August 2019
12:30
Scorecard
Brampton Wolves
138 (19.5 overs)
v
Vancouver Knights
139/2 (15.5 overs)
Babar Hayat 34 (32)
Daniel Sams 4/25 (3.5 overs)
Chadwick Walton 53* (45)
Cecil Pervez 1/11 (2 overs)
Vancouver Knights won by 8 wickets
CAA Centre, Brampton
Umpires: Harry Grewal (Can) and Bijal Patel (Can)
Player of the match: Daniel Sams (Vancouver Knights)
  • Vancouver Knights won the toss and elected to field.

4 August 2019
16:30 (D/N)
Scorecard
Montreal Tigers
136/9 (20 overs)
v
Toronto Nationals
137/6 (17.3 overs)
Kyle Coetzer 26 (27)
Salman Nazar 2/23 (4 overs)
Chirag Suri 52 (37)
Alasdair Evans 2/21 (3 overs)
Toronto Nationals won by 4 wickets
CAA Centre, Brampton
Umpires: Arnold Maddela (Can) and Carl Tuckett (WI)
Player of the match: Chris Green (Toronto Nationals)
  • Toronto Nationals won the toss and elected to field.

Round 2

6 August 2019
12:30
Scorecard
Brampton Wolves
v
Edmonton Royals
Match abandoned
CAA Centre, Brampton
  • No toss.
  • No play was possible due to rain.

6 August 2019
16:30 (D/N)
Scorecard
Vancouver Knights
v
Winnipeg Hawks
Match abandoned
CAA Centre, Brampton
  • No toss.
  • No play was possible due to rain.

7 August 2019
12:30
Scorecard
Toronto Nationals
189/5 (20 overs)
v
Montreal Tigers
154 (19.3 overs)
Rodrigo Thomas 70 (56)
Thisara Perera 2/24 (3 overs)
Matthew Cross 39 (26)
Chris Green 3/26 (4 overs)
Toronto Nationals won by 35 runs
CAA Centre, Brampton
Umpires: Arnold Maddela (Can) and Verdayne Smith (WI)
Player of the match: Heinrich Klaasen (Toronto Nationals)
  • Montreal Tigers won the toss and elected to field.
  • The start of the match was delayed by three hours due to protests by players over wage payments. Bombay Sports publicly denied that this was the case, claiming that it was due to technical issues.[14]

Playoffs

  Playoff 1 / Knockout Playoff 3 Final
                           
1 Brampton Wolves 103 (13.4 overs)  
2 Vancouver Knights 170/4 (16 overs)         2 Vancouver Knights 192/6 (20 overs)
      1 Brampton Wolves 200/7 (20 overs)   4 Winnipeg Hawks 192/8 (20 overs)
  4 Winnipeg Hawks 201/3 (20 overs)  
3 Toronto Nationals 238/5 (20 overs)
4 Winnipeg Hawks 201/5 (17.1 overs)  
Playoff 1
8 August 2019
12:30
Scorecard
Vancouver Knights
170/4 (16 overs)
v
Brampton Wolves
103 (13.4 overs)
Shoaib Malik 46* (26)
Shahid Afridi 1/17 (3 overs)
Colin Munro 62 (25)
Saad Bin Zafar 4/22 (4 overs)
Vancouver Knights won by 77 runs (DLS method)
CAA Centre, Brampton
Umpires: Bijal Patel (Can) and Carl Tuckett (WI)
Player of the match: Saad Bin Zafar (Vancouver Knights)
  • Brampton Wolves won the toss and elected to field.
  • The match was reduced to 16 overs per side due to rain. Brampton Wolves were set a revised target of 181 runs from 16 overs.

Knockout
8 August 2019
16:30 (D/N)
Scorecard
Toronto Nationals
238/5 (20 overs)
v
Winnipeg Hawks
201/5 (17.1 overs)
Heinrich Klaasen 106* (49)
Kaleem Sana 2/35 (4 overs)
JP Duminy 85* (41)
Sandeep Lamichhane 2/34 (4 overs)
Winnipeg Hawks won by 2 runs (DLS method)
CAA Centre, Brampton
Umpires: Verdayne Smith (WI) and Vishal Sudhalkar (Can)
Player of the match: JP Duminy (Winnipeg Hawks)
  • Winnipeg Hawks won the toss and elected to field.
  • Rain stopped play during Winnipeg Hawk's innings setting the par score 200 runs from 17.1 overs.

Playoff 3
10 August 2019
14:00
Scorecard
Brampton Wolves
200/7 (20 overs)
v
Winnipeg Hawks
201/3 (20 overs)
Darren Sammy 33 (22)
Rayad Emrit 3/43 (4 overs)
Shaiman Anwar 52 (23)
Shahid Afridi 1/28 (3 overs)
Winnipeg Hawks won by 7 wickets
CAA Centre, Brampton
Umpires: Verdayne Smith (WI) and Vishal Sudhalkar (Can)
Player of the match: Shaiman Anwar (Winnipeg Hawks)
  • Brampton Wolves won the toss and elected to bat.

Final

11 August 2019
14:00
Scorecard
Winnipeg Hawks
192/8 (20 overs)
v
Vancouver Knights
192/6 (20 overs)
Shaiman Anwar 90 (45)
Andre Russell 4/29 (4 overs)
Shoaib Malik 64 (36)
Rayad Emrit 2/37 (4 overs)
Match tied
(Winnipeg Hawks won the Super Over)

CAA Centre, Brampton
Umpires: Bijal Patel (Can) and Carl Tuckett (WI)
Player of the match: Shaiman Anwar (Winnipeg Hawks)
  • Vancouver Knights won the toss and elected to field.

References

  1. "Second Edition of Global T20 Canada League to begin from July last week". Inside Sport. Retrieved 7 April 2019.
  2. "Brampton to host second edition of Global T20 Canada". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 5 May 2019.
  3. "Global T20 Canada's season season set to start on July 25". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 30 April 2019.
  4. "Global T20 Canada League to begin in July last week of July". The Times of India. Retrieved 7 April 2019.
  5. "Chris Gayle-led Vancouver Knights win inaugural Global T20 Canada cricket title". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 16 July 2018.
  6. "Global T20 Canada dates announced. New York franchise added". Emerging Cricket. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
  7. "Toronto Nationals sign up Yuvraj Singh for Global T20 Canada". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 20 June 2019.
  8. "Bomb threat delayed GLT20 Canada fixture". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 28 July 2019.
  9. "Russell's all-round heroics in vain". International Cricket Council. Retrieved 12 August 2019.
  10. "Winnipeg Hawks overcome Superman Russell to clinch title". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 12 August 2019.
  11. "Global T20 draft streamed live". Canada Cricket Online. Retrieved 20 June 2019.
  12. "Montreal Tigers for GT2019. @MontrealTigers #GT2019 #montrealtigers #t20cricket #canadacricket". GT20 Canada via Twitter. Retrieved 22 June 2019.
  13. "60 Associates in GT20 Canada squads, Sandeep top AM pick". Emerging Cricket. Retrieved 22 June 2019.
  14. "Toronto Nationals and Montreal Tigers refuse to take field over unpaid wages". ESPNCricinfo. Retrieved 8 August 2019.
  15. "Five USA players get 12-month contracts; three pull out of Global T20 Canada". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 21 July 2019.
  16. "Young Dutch squad face UAE in four match T20 series". Emerging Cricket. Retrieved 4 August 2019.
  17. "Brendon McCullum to retire after Global T20 Canada". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 5 August 2019.
  18. "Global T20 Canada 2019 - Points Table". ESPNCricinfo. Retrieved 25 July 2019.
  19. "Schedule - Global T20 Canada". GT20.com. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.